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Project management has often been characterized as a macho profession. In the 20th century, a successful project manager was a tough, hard-working guy who impressed his team and the stakeholders with his mental and physical power.
Following literally the quote “actions speak louder than words,” a project manager would have also lent a hand with the realization of the necessary tasks himself.
Times have changed within the last 20 years.
Today, a successful project manager can manage relationships, deal with complexity and uncertainty, and cope with different cultures.
Other attributes required include an ability to show emotional intelligence, listen carefully, and a capability to able to build up trust and solve conflicts.
We observe a shift in the profession from technological planning and control based discipline towards the focus on interactions and inter-human competencies, which women commonly exhibit.
By nature, women tend to be good natural team players with psychological competencies, good intuition and the capability to integrate. They are creative and flexible and are good in many competence areas of today's interconnected project life.
The bi-annual career and income study in Project Management in Germany and Austria show that female project managers are better educated and higher qualified than their male colleagues. However, women still fail in climbing the project career ladder, and they remain in the lower management positions with lower incomes.
Obviously, good education and profound competencies are not sufficient to reach senior management positions.
Corporations and economies cannot afford to waste these talents any longer. In their annual study on Women in the Workplace 2016, McKinsey and LeanIn found that 87% of the researched companies' CEOs see gender equality as their top priority.
Why are they doing so? Having more women as project managers will lead to different approaches to how projects are planned and directed. Women change the way how projects are managed.
This includes leadership and communication style, team development processes, and coping with new challenges in projects. All of these skills can be further improved by the courses the Institute provides.
The 2nd IPMA Diversity in Project Management conference (June 7th – 9th in Croatia) will address many of these issues. The theme of the conference is “Celebrating Differences makes the Difference”.
It will address:
We look forward to the insights and the takeaways from the conference for these emerging trends.
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