Summary
Women are
less likely to be in media everywhere in the world which reinforces harmful
gender stereotypes. BBC has tried to have positive gender representation by
taking more consideration about who they are putting in front of the camera and are trying to get
to 50:50 gender representation. There are three ways that managers can help improve
equality in representation: start with yourself, follow the data, and believe in
other people’s ability to change.
Women represented in the media
Women are
only represented in the television, radio, and print news a quarter of what men
are. A 2015 report showed that only 19% of experts in news stories were women
and 37% were women reporters globally. Behavioral scientists study women’s
underrepresentation in the workplace and have noticed that it reinforces harmful
gender stereotypes.
BBC’s efforts to close this gender gap of representation in
the media
BBC has
tried to have positive gender representation by considering who they are
putting in front of the camera and are trying to get to 50:50 gender
representation. BBC has 500 shows that have joined the 50:50 project. Surprisingly
this project was started by a British white man, which caused some skepticism.
Ros Atkins started this movement and in 4 months took the women on air to 50%. To
understand the effects Harvard Business Review has “conducted over 35 hours of
interviews with more than 25 journalists, producers, presenters, and top
leaders at the BBC. We’ve found three key lessons that are relevant for any
manager or leader aiming to shake up the status quo and improve diversity,
equality, and inclusion in their organization.”
The 3 ways to increase diversity, equality, and inclusion in your organization
The first
way is to start with yourself. Ros Atkins and his colleagues believed that
women should be represented equally in journalism, but they also realized that
it was not possible. This is a very common problem in every organization
because people might want to make the change, but they never really commit and
make the change concrete. Ros Atkins believes that asking yourself “what can I
do different” is the key to change. He talks about how psychologically the
difference between bystanders and confronters. Bystanders usually don’t act
because they are unsure of many things, such as, if they are the right person,
if it is the right time, or if someone else will act. Confronter will act and
make the needed changes. Ros Atkins was able to shift his team from bystanders
into confronters. The newsmakers don’t have a lot of control over who is
featured in stories; however, they do have a lot of control over the
contributors, experts, and reporters. Atkins made his team focus on keeping
track of the contributors and if they were meeting their goals. The main rule
was to put the best person on the air regardless of gender, so they focus on
women who were the best in their field.
The second
way is to follow the data. Atkins did not tell anyone about the project until
his team proved it could be accomplished. This allowed any excuse to be
dismissed because there was proof that it could be done relatively easily. Collecting
data allows the team to see with real results how good of a job they are doing in
regard to equal representation. Since the 50:50 data collection method is
simple and does not take a lot of time, it is easy to implement.
The third
way is to believe in others' ability to change their behavior. BBC said they are
not trying to change anyone but to encourage people to change themselves. It
is their belief that people can change if they have the opportunity, tools, and
support. It was not mandatory for teams to join the project, and nobody was
rewarded or punished for joining or not joining. However, since top leadership
supported this challenge many of the teams joined in.
Conclusively this article has shown that it is possible and easy to include more women representation in media. This will allow the negative stereotypes to slowly disappear as more people see the positive and that lots of women hold the same roles as men are just as knowledgeable.
Reference
Rattan, A., Chilazi, S.,
Georgeac, O., & Bohnet, I. (2019, July 8). Tackling the
underrepresentation of women in media. Harvard Business Review. Retrieved
March 30, 2022, from
https://hbr.org/2019/06/tackling-the-underrepresentation-of-women-in-media
You are paying attention to a very important and urgent social problem. The representation of women in the media is stereotypical and many people don't notice it, thus it's important to raise this issue. It's also impressive that you offer ways to solve the problem that will help girls and justify the media representation. You did indeed a very good job!
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