From visibility to velocity

OpinionBusiness & Finance
6 May 2026 • 12:29 AM MYT
The Manila Times
The Manila Times

One of the longest-running English broadsheets in the Philippines

From visibility to velocity

THE most enduring change often happens quietly: through what we repeatedly see, who consistently advocates and what organizations choose to institutionalize.

P&A Grant Thornton recently released Women in Business 2026: The value of visibility. An initiative of Grant Thornton International, the study tracked the representation of women in senior management, where and how gender equality is embedded in strategy and how these choices show up in performance and culture.

The research confirmed something the Philippines can be proud of. We continue to be a regional and global bright spot when it comes to women in senior leadership. Women now hold 44.5 percent of senior management roles in the Philippines, well ahead of the global average of 32.9 percent and above the Asean benchmark of around 39.5 percent. Even more telling, only 1.1 percent of Philippine businesses report all-male leadership teams compared with 5.7 percent globally.

Visibility is the signal and velocity is the system behind it: turning representation into real decision-making power, stronger culture and sustained performance. From where I sit, progress in the Philippines shows up most clearly in three ways: in how visibility shapes mindset, how champions create access and how systems build up velocity.

When women see women lead, possibility expands

At a women’s leadership event, a moderator asked a panelist how she dealt with the glass ceiling. She smiled and replied, “What glass ceiling?” I loved the bravery of that answer — not because it denied reality but because it reflected a mindset shaped by lived experience, not limitation.

Personally, I have been fortunate to work closely with women leaders across many arenas. I didn’t just see them in curated moments — I saw them making a real impact. It made the idea that “there is no glass ceiling” feel less like a motivational phrase and more like an observable reality. It also revealed how invisible limits form. The value of visibility closes a quiet gap: not capability but imagination. It is proof of what is possible.

With women occupying nearly half of senior management roles in the Philippines, leadership diversity is no longer an exception. It is something people expect to see and this is demonstrated in the roles women lead. They are well represented in roles such as chief financial officer (58 percent) and human resources officer (67 percent). Meanwhile, representation continues to evolve at the very top, with women holding only 15.9 percent of CEO roles. Progress is real but may be uneven. That honesty is important as we continue to support the representation of women leaders in all kinds of roles.

Advocacy beyond mentorship accelerates velocity

Mindset shows the doors of possibilities. Champions help open the right door and stand there long enough for us to step through with confidence.

In my own journey, I’ve learned that believing something is possible is very different from being invited to act on it. I owe much of my growth to women leaders and male champions who pushed me to evolve, sometimes before I felt ready. Mentors encouraged me to take my space in leadership discussions despite my nerves. Principals built up my introduction with confidence, even when it made me uncomfortable, opening conversations where I could be seen and heard.

Globally, 25.6 percent of businesses set explicit targets for mentoring while 25.3 percent set targets for networking. In the Philippines, 36.8 percent of the respondents include targets for mentoring and 32.2 percent for networking, signaling that systems are in place and continue to be prioritized towards the guidance of female leaders.

Institutionalizing development turns visibility into velocity

What ultimately determines whether progress lasts is not intention but design. Progress does not move at speed through individual excellence or occasional luck — it accelerates when it is designed into the system. Velocity comes from organizations that make inclusion repeatable, not accidental.

That demand is already clear. Today, four out of 10 Philippine businesses report candidates asking about the gender balance of senior leadership, a sharp year-on-year increase. Globally, 93 percent of business leaders say they consider a company’s gender equality initiatives when applying. For 22.4 percent it is a priority. When that question is raised at the hiring stage, it is not curiosity — it is due diligence. It signals that leadership diversity has become a factor in employer choice, trust and credibility.

This scrutiny is not confined to talent. Partner organizations (34.1 percent) and potential clients (33 percent) are among the most frequent requestors of gender balance data, reinforced by increasing disclosure through sustainability and governance reporting. More than an internal culture story, gender-balanced leadership has become part of how credibility is assessed in business relationships.

Encouragingly, Philippine organizations are responding by embedding gender equality into their systems. The Women in Business data shows that more firms now integrate equality into senior leadership appointments (60.9 percent) and recruitment and selection (56.3 percent), with 55.2 percent extending this to employee bonus structures. In addition, 80.7 percent of Philippine businesses reviewed their DE&I initiatives in 2025, often as part of regular governance processes rather than one-off programs.

The performance link is equally clear. Philippine businesses that maintain and introduce gender equality initiatives are the most likely to report growth. Seventy-three percent recorded revenue growth of more than 5.0 percent while 56.2 percent reported growth in staff numbers. Inclusion, when institutionalized, becomes a growth lever, not a “nice to have.”

The impact is not only commercial but cultural. Organizations report employees feeling treated more fairly, benefiting from visible role models and seeing bias addressed more openly. When systems are in place, progress does not stall when individuals move on: it compounds. That is how leadership momentum is sustained.

From Philippine progress to an Asean conversation

The Philippines has shown that gender-balanced leadership can move from aspiration to operating reality. The progress we see is not accidental. It is the result of a mindset shaped by visibility, access created by champions and momentum sustained by systems.

This grounding matters beyond our borders. The Philippine experience offers a practical reference point for Asean. It shows that advancing women’s leadership is not a tradeoff against performance, but a contributor to it, and that inclusion can be embedded without losing competitiveness.

The opportunity now is to turn what we have learned into regional dialogue: to share what works, be candid about where progress remains uneven and contribute meaningfully to the conversation on leadership, governance and talent development.

The call to action is clear. Know our baseline. Embed equality into decision systems — appointments, hiring, incentives and succession. Build champions who sponsor, not just mentor. Institutionalize development so leadership potential is recognized, invested in and trusted.

When these come together, progress doesn’t just show, it moves. Our leadership journey becomes not only a national strength but a regional contribution.

Marose Anatalio is a director for the Business Development Group at P&A Grant Thornton.