If you are a Indra Nooyi or Ginni Rometti or Meg Whitman to
name some of the world’s best known CEOs, their age is neither a conversation
starter nor a deal breaker. Their incredible minds, inspirational addresses and
perhaps their immaculate power dressing are what matter.
In India while we actively and happily participate in global
conversations about cryto-currencies, artificial intelligence #metoo campaign,
womens’ rights, women breaking the glass ceiling etc, we distinctly lack enthusiasm
in leading conversations about older women in the workplace. We boast of our
demographic dividend, revere our ageing politicians, worship a pantheon of
goddesses while slyly indulging in female foeticide. Our cauldron of contradictions
and hypocrisy is apparently bottomless. And this extends to the women in the
workplace narrative as well. We blithely borrow from patter in popular
magazines to breathlessly state to some hapless woman who is clearly trying not
to be an ‘age’ victim …. …oh rest assured my dear 50 is the new 30 and 60 is
the new 40 and so on …. all in cocktail conversations in sanitised environs of
self-consciously modern drawing rooms.
Like marketers elsewhere in the world, we worship at the
altar of our millennial population and our aha! moments are when we crack the
code of the latest pop culture movement. Because that’s how we get our marketing
brilliance validated. And of course these great ideas come from a millennial,
but where else. If we need to stretch a point, we can sometimes grudgingly
accommodate the odd notions of cool from the sauve, smartly ageing man. Women in their fifties or those approaching 60
can never, please note never have great ideas or brainwaves that are relevant
to the hip Gen X leave alone Gen Z.
Men and younger women in the Indian workplace believe the
following unwritten tenets are never to be challenged or reviewed. Woman of a certain age are unlikely to be fit
and therefore need to be moth balled and treated as having one foot in the
geriatric ward. So let’s instead put on a show of good manners and say “Yes
Ma’am , No Ma’am” …. in respectful tones
heavily laced with derision, making sure to draw a clear line that is never to be
crossed. Elderly ladies, whatever be
their coolness quotient will always be….well ‘old’. And no, please refrain from
displaying your sharp agile mind or your smartness in coming up with solutions
faster than younger others.
If by some chance of good karma and or good genes you
display physically minimal signs of wear and tear or what’s worse, look like a
million bucks, then the word is out – she must be spending a fortune on face
jobs which in the office water cooler gossip routine is akin to smoking up or
snorting coke. The temerity of the woman to possibly try and compete in the
looks department with the girl gang is unpardonable. So let’s put a firm lid on
it and even if we are constrained to pay a compliment let’s always preface it
with …. For your age you umhhh.. look kinda ok.
The older woman colleague may have good ideas, several in
fact, but it wouldn’t serve us well to acknowledge that. So, lets just
attribute it to the decades of experience she has had, which not-so subtly
reinforces that she has been too long in the field. We will be of course be
very gracious and secretly heave a sigh of relief if she decides to drop dead
or call it quits. We will plan and give her a hip send off party that is awash
with hashtags, Instagram posts and other millennial social media detritus. Its a young, young world !
What confounds one is that the same nay sayers will salute
and proudly claim Nooyi as their own or clap when Padma Warrior strides
confidently on to a podium to stake her place as a successful professional ,
age notwithstanding. That is in an alien land and foreigners have decided to
recognize their merit and crown their abilities. The world is happy to entrust the running of a
country to an Angela Merkel or have Christine Lagarde steer IMF. Nobody dare
suggest that they are too old or imply they don’t have it in them anymore. That would be blasphemous ! So lets join in
the chorus from the sidelines. We will not imitate but only applaud from afar. But why pick on celebrity CEOs ? There are
thousands of successful women professionals the world over who are in their
fifties or sixties who are celebrated for the work they do and known to party
as hard as their male colleagues knocking back tequila shots with gay
abandon.
There is another slightly insidious ploy that is perpetrated
on older professionals, particularly women. It goes by the very haloed title of
“mentor”. If you aren’t careful once you’ve crossed a certain age , you may
suddenly wake up one morning to find yourself addressed as “mentor”. Now this can
be baffling especially since you know you are not an angel investor or VC, not
even a senior professor who qualifies as a doctoral thesis guide. Suddenly many unanswered questions will
assail you, the foremost being - why are you now a mentor to so many people not
necessarily of your choosing, when you don’t have the slightest inclination to
nurture talent right now. Even the most
well meaning and well intentioned professionals opt for this gambit. Because
after all these are senior women who should now stop creating inconvenient road blocks in the
sprint to the top of younger, cooler, hipper colleagues. And by turning them
into mentors, however unwilling and reluctant they may be, you have hit on a
sure-fire method of eliminating undesired competition. What’s unsaid is ‘listen you’ve had your time in the sun, now
move over and be grateful that we’ve kicked you up with mentor title.’ Some very fortunate ones are publicly called
out and recognized for their Lifetime Contribution!
Essentially while we in India have been leading the
discourse on women in the workplace, including encouraging women entrepreneurs
and gushing about successful women who come into the limelight, some aspects
are left deliberately unaddressed because we can tolerate the mandatory older
woman professional on the Board of companies, but not ready to encounter her daily in
the workplace corridors
Very succinctly put!
ReplyDeleteThis is so true like so many other issues like dark skin...castesism..gender bias in our daily lives!!
Yes, the obvious stuff periodically gets outed, but some never get discussed or debated
ReplyDeleteI love the spicy sarcasm and the juicy humour! Super cool!
ReplyDelete