The barriers preventing caregivers taking on leadership roles in PR
An Invisible Workforce is powering the PR industry, according to new research by Women in PR.
The Invisible Workforce is made up of parents and carers (‘caregivers’) who are balancing demanding professional roles with high volumes of unpaid work in their personal lives that goes unseen in the workplace, impacts progression and disproportionately impacts women.
Women in PR’s research, in partnership with Opinium, shows that the Invisible Workforce is maxed out on capacity – with women working an average of 91 hours per week.*
With almost two thirds of women’s time related to overservice in the form of unpaid overtime and the disproportionate impact of household responsibilities, a staggering 83% of women in PR say caregiving has affected their progression, significantly higher than the national average of 45%.
Katie Eborall, Women in PR, said: “Therapy appointments, hospital corridors, making lunches, remembering homework, sick children and school pickups are the lived reality that caregivers juggle around work every day. When you add the average day in PR – deadlines, the expectation to always be on, touchpoints with every part of business, pace, requirements in unsociable hours – it’s easy to see why this is such a challenge specifically in our industry. The truth is that caregiving while holding down a career in PR is hard and messy
“Added to this, women are disproportionately impacted yet make up two thirds of our workforce, meaning we have a bigger challenge than some industries. Our research shows how women are not only overloaded, but they are also quietly taxed on their progression, mental health and ambition."
Many of the biggest barriers facing caregivers are systemically built into the daily reality of working specifically in PR, from networking and industry events outside working hours (71%) to expectations to always be available (65%), being present in person (53%) and travel requirements (51%).