A new survey shows that there is one group of potential employees that should not be overlooked: young women. Women in Manufacturing, a group of nearly 500 women dedicated to attracting, retaining and advancing women in the manufacturing sector, co-produced the survey with Plante Moran.
The survey of over 870 women, including both experienced women currently working in manufacturing and young women who are just beginning to consider their career options, offers several promising findings for the future of women in the manufacturing sector. Most importantly, the survey found that there is significant overlap between the top factors young women are seeking in careers and the factors manufacturing careers offer.
In the survey, young women ranked compensation as the most important factor they are seeking in a career, followed closely by work that is interesting and challenging. At the same time, more than 80 percent of women in manufacturing today say that their work is interesting and challenging and half of women in manufacturing say that compensation is the most significant benefit of the sector.
The survey also found that 74 percent of women working in manufacturing believe that the sector offers multiple career paths for women and that more than half of women in manufacturing today think that the sector is a leading industry for job growth for women. In addition, 64 percent of women working in manufacturing reported that they would recommend a career in manufacturing to a young woman.
But despite these high numbers, young women remain largely unaware of the opportunities available to them in the manufacturing sector. Less than half of young women believe that manufacturing offers the interesting and challenging work they're seeking and less than 10 percent placed manufacturing among the top five career fields that they feel offer the most opportunity for young women today.
The survey results were presented on the first day of the fourth annual WiM Summit in Schaumburg, Ill. This year's Summit is the largest gathering in the organization's history, bringing together a record number of women in the manufacturing sector.
"Our survey is particularly relevant with [the proximity to] Manufacturing Day [on Oct. 3], a day focused on introducing manufacturing to young people and their parents," said WiM Director Allison Grealis. "Because the survey focused both on women who are already in the manufacturing sector and young women outside the sector who are considering the wide array of career options available to them, the results are forward-looking and poised to benefit recruitment efforts."
"On the whole, these survey results should be seen as a call to action in a space where there is great opportunity," Grealis continued. "When we know what young women are looking for in careers, we are in a better position to demonstrate how manufacturing can help them meet their aspirations. We have long known that women are good for manufacturing; and these survey results go a long way to showing that manufacturing is good for women, too."
Learn more about the WiM survey and its results: Download the Survey Fact Sheet and the Survey Report.