Empty boardroom, for article on women on U.K. boards

Women make up 40% of boards at top U.K. companies for first time

For the first time, women hold at least 40% of board seats across Britain’s 350 largest listed companies — reaching a milestone that campaigners had set as a 2025 target three years ahead of schedule. The achievement, confirmed in a government-backed report released in February 2023 C.E., marks a dramatic shift in who holds power at the top of British business.

At a glance

  • Women on boards: Women held 40.2% of board seats across FTSE 350 companies as of January 2023 C.E., up from roughly 37% the year before.
  • FTSE 100 representation: At Britain’s 100 largest listed companies, women occupied 40.5% of board positions, up from 39.1% in 2021 C.E.
  • Voluntary progress: Unlike France and Belgium, the U.K. has no mandatory quota system for women on company boards, making the pace of change all the more striking.

How the U.K. got here

Just over a decade ago, 152 of the FTSE 350 companies had no women on their boards at all. Today, every board includes at least one woman, and the vast majority have three or more.

The shift didn’t happen by accident. The business-led FTSE Women Leaders Review has set and tracked voluntary targets since 2011 C.E., pushing companies to see diversity as a strategic priority rather than a box-ticking exercise. In February 2022 C.E., the review raised its board target to 40% — with official backing from the Financial Conduct Authority, the regulator for listed companies.

The FCA’s involvement added real weight. The regulator also rolled out broader diversity and inclusion disclosure requirements, signaling that transparent reporting on representation had become a mainstream expectation for public companies.

Why boardroom diversity matters

Policymakers and investors increasingly argue that diverse boards make better decisions. A wider range of perspectives, lived experiences, and professional backgrounds reduces the risk of groupthink and reflects the customers, employees, and communities a company serves.

Research has consistently found links between gender-diverse leadership and stronger financial performance, better risk management, and more robust corporate governance. The McKinsey “Diversity Wins” research has documented this relationship across multiple industries and geographies.

For the U.K., reaching 40% voluntarily — through targets, transparency, and sustained advocacy rather than legal mandates — offers a potential model for other countries weighing how to address gender imbalances in corporate leadership.

The work still unfinished

The picture is brighter in the boardroom than in the executive suite. Women made up just 34.3% of leadership roles — defined as the executive committee and its direct reports — at FTSE 100 companies, and 33.5% across the FTSE 350. Both figures fall short of the 40% target.

That gap matters. Non-executive board seats, while important, carry less day-to-day operational power than executive roles. The real test of equitable representation will come when women hold an equal share of the positions that set strategy, manage budgets, and hire the next generation of leaders.

The pipeline question also remains open. Women are still underrepresented in several sectors — finance, engineering, and technology in particular — that feed the most senior corporate roles. Reaching 40% on boards is a real achievement; sustaining and deepening it will require attention to every level below.

A milestone worth marking

Progress this consistent and this fast rarely happens without people pushing for it. The FTSE Women Leaders Review, the investors who asked hard questions at annual general meetings, and the women who stayed and rose through organizations that weren’t always built with them in mind — all of them contributed to a number that, not long ago, seemed out of reach.

Three years ahead of the target date, 40% is now a floor, not a ceiling. The question for the next decade is whether the same energy and accountability can be brought to the executive ranks — and whether the gains on boards can be sustained as economic pressures and political winds shift.

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For more on this story, see: Reuters

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