LEADERSHIPNEWS

Executive Roles Still Elude Women in Kenya

Share
Women in executive roles Kenya
The findings paint a picture of strong representation at entry levels.
Share

McKinsey & Company has released its latest Women in the Workplace report, extending its landmark research series to Kenya, Nigeria, and India. Launched at the Africa CEO Forum 2025 today — the continent’s largest private sector convening — the report presents new evidence on the progress and persistent challenges facing women in formal workforces across Kenya.

The report surveyed 324 organisations across the three countries employing roughly 1.4 million people, and reveals a critical finding: while Kenya achieves near parity at the entry level, representation sharply declines at successive stages of leadership. Despite a strong start, with women holding 40% of entry-level roles in Kenya’s private sector and 46% in the public sector, representation declines sharply at each leadership level culminating in only 27% of C-suite roles being held by women.

“Kenya demonstrates strong gender representation at entry level, but that early progress is not translating into equitable leadership outcomes,” said Mayowa Kuyoro, Partner at McKinsey & Company and co-author of the report. “This is not simply a matter of pipeline strength — it is a structural challenge tied to advancement and retention. Addressing these barriers is essential if organisations are to fully harness the leadership potential of Kenya’s female workforce.”

“The data is clear: while Kenyan women are well-represented at entry levels, structural challenges in advancement, promotion, and retention are preventing that early momentum from translating into leadership equity,” said Kartik Jayaram, Senior Partner at McKinsey & Company and co-author of the report. “Solving this requires more than good intentions — it calls for institutional commitment, rigorous tracking, and targeted interventions to build pathways to the top.”

Key findings

Private sector: Women’s representation falls from 40% at the entry-level to 34% at the managerial level, and just 28% at the C-suite – a “double dip” decline.

Public sector: Women maintain steady representation at both entry and management levels (46%), but leadership representation falters to a mere 27% at the C-suite.

The findings paint a picture of strong representation at entry levels for Kenya followed by systemic barriers later on —particularly at the pivotal manager-to-senior executive transition. While Kenya’s strong entry-level representation is encouraging; momentum must be reinforced by structural supports to translate to early parity into senior leadership representation.

> Inside Nairobi’s Purple Tower’s Eco-Friendly Features

Written by
BT Reporter

editor [at] businesstoday.co.ke

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

PAST ARTICLES AND INSIGHTS

Related Articles
Opening an Online Sportsbook in Kenya
SMART MONEY

What to Know When Opening an Online Sportsbook in Kenya

Now Africa's third-largest gambling market, narrowly trailing behind South Africa and Nigeria,...

JONATHAN MUEKE, PRINCIPAL SECRETARY, STATE DEPARTMENT FOR AGRICULTURE
AGRICULTUREBUSINESS

Kenya launches KSh 1.081 trillion (US$8.4 billion) 5-Year Agri-food investment plan

Kenya's Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development has unveiled an ambitious National...

CMA Chief Executive Wycliffe Shamiah
BUSINESS

CMA Raises Red Flag over Special Funds with ‘Abnormal’ Returns

(CMA)Capital Markets Authority) has warned managers of fast-growing Special Funds against unethical...

Saba Saba protester being arrested
NEWS

10 Arrested as Saba Saba Protests End Without Major Incidents

10 people were arrested during the Saba Saba protests in Nairobi on...