Union
Amicus is
launching a campaign to encourage more women to work in IT.
The manufacturing, technical and skilled persons’ union has published its
Women in IT Charter which builds on the recommendations of the government’s
Women and Work Commission.
It calls for open, fair and transparent pay systems, equal treatment in pay
through equal pay audits, and promotion of work-life balance policies.
Peter Skyte, Amicus National Officer, said: ‘The IT sector is not attractive
to women with its poor image, long hours culture, and unsatisfactory work-life
balance.’
Skyte points out that it makes economic sense for the IT sector to attract
and retain more women.
‘Over the next ten years, of the available workforce, only 20 per cent will
be white males under 45 and able-bodied. This is a wake-up call,’ he said.
Although women from make up around 45 per cent of the overall UK workforce,
within the IT sector the figure is only 17 per cent. They also earn on average,
18 per cent less than their male counterparts who earn £642 gross per week.
Amicus showed its teeth over unfair pay for women when it won a couple of
cases against EDS this year without going to industrial tribunal.
It served equal pay questionnaires on the company which resulted in one woman
winning a pay increase of 15 per cent and moving to a higher pay grade, while
another who learned that her salary was less than that of a male colleague she
helped recruit got a 20 per cent pay increase at her next pay review.
‘There should be no secrecy about pay systems. Women should not get less for
doing the same job,’ said Skyte.
Other campaign objectives include promotion of flexible working, equality
proofing of employment policies, continual and regular training for managers on
diversity and flexibility issues, diversity compliant contracting to use
procurements to spread best practice and a target of 50 per cent of all large
company boards to be women.
Skyte says one of the biggest problems with IT culture is the long hard hours
put in because of project-based work, which is often unfriendly to women who
must balance working life with bringing up children.
‘Many IT workers become managers because they have technical expertise but
are not necessarily aware of work/life balance issues. They need regular
training,’ said Skyte.
‘Women need to be visible at a senior level. It makes good business sense for
employers as they will attract, retain and motivate better candidates.’
Skyte says the union will work with employers where they are progressive and
challenge employers where they are unwilling to change.
What do you think? Email us at
feedback@computing.co.uk
Further reading:
Outdated
attitudes are reinforcing IT's gender imbalance
Women
are vital to future of UK IT
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