Publication:
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Nation's Restaurant News Magazine
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Date:
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March 31, 2003
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Section:
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Special Report
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Page:
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25,26,27,28,32,36,38
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Byline:
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Carolyn Walkup
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It's the 21st century, and American career women have it
made. Or so the myth goes.
In actuality women continue
to struggle to reach the top rungs of the corporate ladder. Even in the
foodservice industry, where the most visible role that of servers is dominated
by women, female executives remain few and far between.
"There is so much
opportunity now, but people still need to understand there are still some
uncharted waters, and there is no textbook on how to do this," says Alice
Elliot, chief executive of The Elliot Group, a Tarrytown, N.Y.-based
foodservice executive search and consulting company.
According to the National
Restaurant Association Educational Foundation's recent "The State of the
Workforce" survey, 77 percent of servers are female.
Furthermore, 57 percent of
the 11.6 million foodservice workers in the United States are female. As women
work their way up at the unit level, however, the percentage of the ones who
ascend to the position of restaurant manager drops to 27 percent, the survey
shows.
When one considers the
executive levels in larger foodservice companies, the percentages fall
dramatically. Women accounted for just 14 percent of corporate officers and
held 8 percent of board-of-director seats at the parent companies of the 100
largest foodservice chains, according to a 2000 study by New York-based
Catalyst, a nonprofit research organization that works with business to advance
women.
Those percentages, while
low compared with the success achieved by males, represent progress, especially
in view of the fact that almost no women occupied those ranks a few decades
ago.
Women's progress has been
slow for several reasons, according to the Catalyst study, which was
commissioned by the Women's Foodservice Forum, a group dedicated to the
leadership development and career advancement of women in the foodservice
industry. The study found that the top four barriers holding women back are
lack of mentoring, exclusion from informal networks of communication, failure
of senior leadership to assume accountability for women's advancement, and male
stereotyping and preconceptions of women's roles and abilities.
The WFF currently is
working on a study intended for foodservice companies to use as a resource to
help them recognize and overcome the barriers and to develop programs to
attract, retain and promote the best female talent.
Joni Doolin, chief
executive and founder of People Report, a quarterly survey of human-resources
trends, says most foodservice companies are doing little to find women
management candidates beyond looking within their own ranks. "Very little
college recruiting is done by the chains," she says.
That lack of planning could
leave the industry with a serious management shortage in time, Doolin says.
Many people, especially women, drop out of the industry after reaching
assistant- manager positions, she notes.
"If you have a low
percentage of women district managers or general managers as role models, women
can be left feeling isolated," she says. "Successful companies are
the ones who actively seek out what the barriers are."
Doolin, Elliot and other
sources point to several major foodservice companies that have formal programs
intended to help women advance. They note that the companies that are making
significant progress in that area have chief executives who are committed to
the advancement of women as well as to the advancement of minorities.
Darden Restaurants Inc.,
the Orlando, Fla.-based parent company of Red Lobster, Olive Garden, Bahama
Breeze and Smokey Bones headed by Joe Lee, is one of those progressive
companies. It has had an evolving formal program in place since 1995.
"There is a culture
here that says any job is open to anybody who has the potential and is willing
to work toward getting the skills needed," says Paula Shives, Darden's
senior vice president and corporate counsel, who heads the company's diversity
program.
"We worked a few years
ago to articulate what our values are," she explains. "We have a
culture where we value the contributions of individuals. We spend a lot of time
in evaluating the leadership potential of the talent we have."
Darden recently pledged
$50,000 to support the WWF's 2003 programming as well as its mentoring
strategy. More than 100 Darden employees are WFF members, including Edna
Morris, Red Lobster president, who was the WFF's first founding chair in 1989.
The WFF is awarding her its 2003 Trailblazer Award.
Several companies in the
quick-service arena also have formal programs in place to help women grow in
their organizations. Louisville, Ky.-based Yum! Brands Inc., for example, began
to develop such a program in 1997, primarily in an effort to stem high turnover
rates at all levels. Yum's chains include Taco Bell, KFC, Pizza Hut, Long John
Silver's and A&W All-American Food.
In 1997 Taco Bell led
team-member turnover among the brands at 243 percent, which was higher than the
industry average of about 200 percent, says Valerie Davisson, Yum's vice
president of human-resources services. At the end of February 2003, team-member
turnover for all of the brands was 128 percent. At Taco Bell it was 133
percent.
Along with improving
recognition, mentoring, diversity training and other programs, Yum began
providing employees with better access to affordable, high-quality child care.
It did so after learning that 65 percent of its team members are the primary
breadwinners in their families, many of whom need day care in order to be able
to work.
As part of the company's
Focus on Family program, KFC created its KFC's Colonel's Kids program in
partnership with the YMCA, a major day-care provider. The program addresses the
issues of nontraditional hours and infant and toddler care as well as
traditional daytime hours.
"We have done things
to focus on retention, not just bringing people in, but growing them and
helping them as part of our talent base," Davisson says.
Atlanta-based AFC
Enterprises has been committed to building a more inclusive company since 1992,
when Frank Belatti came aboard as chief executive. The company's New Age of
Opportunity philosophy also addresses child-care and other family-friendly
policies, including part-time work, complete with benefits, and flexible work
arrangements.
"An absolute
commitment from the top, from Frank Belatti, has filtered down through our
culture," says Lisa Morse, vice president, legal and chief compliance
officer.
In fact, in a speech
Belatti made last spring, he said: "In eliminating the glass ceiling, we
are opening ourselves to a greater variety of solutions. Let's create cultures
where differences are celebrated and openness and tolerance are the norm."
Wallace Doolin, chief
executive of Dallas-based La Madeleine for the past year, is another white male
who long has advocated equal opportunities for women and minorities, including
during his prior stint as chief executive of Carlson Restaurants Worldwide. He
recently put together a new executive team that includes one man and three
women.
"I think to compete in
the marketplace today, you have to find the best talent and not all in only one
area. I'm looking for a team that can complement and challenge me, and
sometimes they don't look like me," Doolin says.
"Women are getting
hired in the management ranks because there is more awareness. There was none
when we started; that's for sure."
Diana Wynne, incoming WFF
chair as well as senior vice president and treasurer of Metromedia Restaurant
Group, also remembers when there were few, if any, women in what she calls the
"C" management ranks, like chief financial officer and chief
operating officer.
"Now there are 12
women who are presidents and CEOs. That's a huge accomplishment," she
says. "However, there is still certainly room to grow."
Citing Catalyst data, she
says it will take 39 years for women to occupy 50 percent of corporate officer
jobs at the present rate. "If you look at the same data set for women of
color, it's even worse," says Wynne, an African-American.
Wynne's own professional
background in finance, which she says has helped her to advance, came about
because of a mentor she met while she was pursuing a law degree. The professor,
who saw her aptitude for accounting and finance, encouraged her to pursue
accounting instead of law, which she did. That led to a job with one of the Big
8 accounting firms and eventually to the foodservice arena.
"There is no doubt
that finance is still underrepresented when it comes to women," Wynne
says. "There is an absolute requirement that women who get to the
executive level have a knowledge of finance."
She now shares that insight
and additional ones with other women through WFF's mentoring program.
Starlette Johnson,
executive vice president and chief strategic officer for Dallas-based Brinker
International, is another woman who works in an especially male-dominated area
of foodservice management. The "deal-making" skills that go into the
mergers-and-acquisitions portion of her job are things she learned by doing,
she says.
"I've had some good
leaders and role models who let me sit in on early mergers-and-acquisitions
discussions," Johnson says. "Brinker is very team-oriented and gives
you room to establish your own identity.
"I always liked working
whatever position I needed to help; I don't necessarily have to lead,"
says Johnson, an avid sports fan who also played on a lot of sports teams in
school. "I surprise the guys with how much I know about football."
Although Brinker is only in
the beginning stages of developing a diversity program, Johnson says, women
have nonetheless been pretty successful at the company. "It's a nonissue
whether you are male or female," she claims.
Women who work in the
back-of-the-house also have made progress but still have some catching up to
do, according to Ann Cooper, president of Women Chefs and Restaurateurs, an
organization dedicated to promoting the education and advancement of women in
the restaurant industry. Cooper is executive chef and director of wellness and
nutrition at The Ross School in East Hampton, N.Y., and author of "A
Woman's Place is in the Kitchen: The Evolution of Women Chefs."
"When you think about
great chefs in America now, women come to mind," Cooper says. "Twenty
years ago there was none, except maybe Alice Waters." She estimates that
women now account for about 20 percent of executive chefs.
The first woman graduated
from The Culinary Institute of America in 1970, when the school was 50 years
old. When Cooper graduated from The CIA in 1979, she was one of three women
graduates in a class of 72, and there were no women instructors, she recalls.
Today 24 percent of CIA
graduates are women, and 35 percent of the graduates of other culinary schools
are women. Females account for about 20 percent of culinary instructors today
across the United States, according to Cooper's research.
She predicts that the
number of women chefs who reach the top spots in restaurant kitchens will
increase, but it will take time. "It takes 15 years to get to the top in a
kitchen," she says.
WCR, which is 10 years old
this year, is now in a position to help younger women through a mentoring
program, scholarships and awards. "We are coming of age as a mature
organization that is able to give back to the industry," Cooper says.
"It's very exciting."
Sarah Stegner, head chef of
the Ritz-Carlton Dining Room in Chicago and a James Beard Award winner for Best
Chef-Midwest, says that as a novice intern 18 years ago, she benefitted from
working with Fernand Gutierrez, who was then executive chef and director of
food and beverage.
She now mentors other women
through WCR.
"I hire on the basis
of training and skill level," says Stegner, who notes she does not take an
applicant's sex into account. "If you have a strong desire to do it,
that's the key."
Stegner adds that she is
content being chef of the dining room and does not aspire to become executive
chef of the hotel's entire food-and-beverage operation.
"Some women choose not
to run kitchens," Cooper notes. "It's not easy to balance a family
and a chef's career if you're working nights, weekends and 60-plus hours a
week."
Jody Adams, chef-partner of
Rialto and two other restaurants in Cambridge, Mass., and Boston through her
Sapphire Restaurant Group, says she chose to be her own boss so that she can
set her own priorities and write her own schedule. "I don't do this
alone," she states.
With the help of three
business partners and husband Ken Rivard, who works at home and is the
"primary" parent for their two children, Adams is able to achieve an
acceptable degree of balance in her life. She also credits good communication
with her teams of sous chefs, cooks and managers for helping her succeed.
More and more young women
and men will be starting their own companies in the near future, predicts
People Report's Doolin. She notes that women already own one in four
foodservice firms, which include catering, bakeries and other specialty
businesses.
"With Generation X and
Y, you will see a phenomenal escalation in entrepreneurial businesses,"
Doolin says. Those generations in particular place more value on flexible
schedules and want more time for family and leisure, she notes.