The progress of women into top leadership roles has stalled. Fortune reports that the share of female CEOs in its Fortune 500 list plateaued in 2025 and is expected to shrink in 2026, arresting decades of slow but steady momentum. At the same time, data from LinkedInâs global user base suggests that women currently represent just 30.6% of VP or C-suite positions globally â up only 0.2 percentage points from 2022. The outlook for women on boards is no better. According to a 2026 Women on Boards report, the female share of new board appointments has hit something of a wall. In the third quarter of last year, women made up just 22.5% of 448 new seats in the Russell 3000; the lowest rate in the past decade, the report says.
Meanwhile, there are signs that the female leadership pool may be shrinking. Global non-profit Catalyst finds that almost half a million American women quit their jobs in 2025; an alarming attrition of talent in the US labor market with its roots in pay inequity, inflexible work schedules, and caregiving responsibilities, coupled with the high cost of childcare, according to their survey. Another survey, this one by Deloitte Global, reveals that only 5% of women plan to remain with their current employer for more than five years â a function, say most, of work-life imbalance, rigid working hours, and pay and benefit issues.
Organizations everywhere should be paying close attention to these cues and signals. Because when women stop progressing in the workplace, when they donât make it into the executive echelons of decision-making and direction-setting â when they exit the workforce altogether â the impact on business is invariably negative.
Studies show a consistent correlation between greater gender parity and stronger outcomes. In terms of hard stats alone, McKinsey research shows that companies in the top 25% for gender diversity are 27% more likely to outperform the industry average. Those with women in their executive committees earn almost twice as much (47% more) return on equity than others. Companies led by women as well as men are more competitive. Theyâre also more agile, more innovative, and more resilient.
There is evidence that in the age of AI, women increasingly possess capabilities that organizations will need â including greater multidomain and cross-functional experience, as well as non-linearity and its corollary adaptability, giving them the breadth and ambidexterity to navigate change and volatility.
Women are arguably ahead in the capabilities the future demands. But they are clearly behind in access to the roles that convert capability into power. Organizations that fail to progress female talent to the highest levels of decision-making may be holding back the very talent they need to secure a competitive edge, to sustain growth, and move forward in our digitally disrupted future.
So, what measures can forward-looking decision-makers take to redress this balance?