Shelley Zalis

“Embrace your inner girl” is not a phrase you’ll hear very often, particularly in the macho world of business where “manning up” is more de rigueur.

Yet if you attend any major business conference this year, then you’re likely to come across “The Girls’ Lounge”.

It might sound like a name dreamt up by an unimaginative spa owner or an all-female pop-band, but in reality it’s a professional networking space for women.

On the eve of the World Economic Forum in Davos – a place where male attendees outnumber females five to one, the space is just being prepared.

A peek through the windows show that it’s all white sofas and cushions, some adorned with glitter pink writing. The decor is soft and unashamedly feminine.

Lounges at previous conferences have included beauty treatments, such as face masks and manicures.

Aside from the patronising use of the word “girl”, surely the idea that women need a separate mingling space, and such a stereotypically feminine one to boot, is doing little to further the case for female equality?

Shelley Zalis – who started The Girls’ Lounge five years ago – is unapologetic:

“This is their boys’ club – for women to get to know other women.

“There are masculine and feminine styles of leadership and we encourage women to find and lead with their strengths. We need both [styles] or we’re all the same,” she says.

Changing a mindset

Ms Zalis resolutely refuses to apologise for using the word “girl”, arguing the word “woman” is too associated with the traditional hierarchy where female leaders conform to male leadership styles.

Beyond Ms Zalis’ deliberately provocative and attention-grabbing approach, her point is that women need to take on leadership in whichever way they choose, not emulating the male, institutional model.

“We have to stop fixing the women. We have to fix our mindset and recalibrate our mindset on equality and understand men and women are all equal. Until society and corporations value the individual strengths of each person we won’t progress,” she says.

And in The Girls’ Lounge, underneath the seemingly fluffy interior, there’s plenty of hard facts.

In it, for example, there are ten clocks from various countries. Based on a nine to five day, they point to the time a woman should leave work according to the wage gap in the country.

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The US clock points to 3.20pm, highlighting the fact that women there earn only 79% of what men earn.

To make the same point, men in the Girls’ Lounge are charged $1 for a bar of chocolate, while women pay 79 cents.

While Ms Zalis’ initial aim was simply to provide a space for women to feel less isolated at male dominated business events, the Girls’ Lounge now hosts serious talks on addressing inequality and has attracted some heavyweight commercial partners including Unilever and Google.

The Girls’ Lounge is part of The Female Quotient, the firm founded by Ms Zalis which aims to advance workplace equality.

The firm has conducted research for consumer goods giant Unilever showing the extent to which underlying bias is holding back progress on the issue.

The study, published on Tuesday, showed that not only do an overwhelming 77% of men believe that a man is the best choice to lead an important project, but also the majority (55%) of women.

More so, men and women overwhelmingly believe that men don’t want women in top corporate positions, according to the research, which interviewed more than 9,000 men and women across eight markets.

 

 

[Source:- BBC]

By Adam