P&G’s declaration came as part of the P&G and UN Women co-hosted regional#WeSeeEqual Summit withe quality advocates
Mary Kom,Bonang Matheba, Amina Khalil,Neha Dhupia, Angad Bedi&Richa Chadha
Mumbai, India, 19February 2019:Procter & Gamble (P&G) today announced a new commitment around a number of initiatives that will promote gender equality across the Indian Subcontinent, Middle East and Africa (IMEA) region. The declaration, which was made by P&G’s IMEA and APAC President, Magesvaran Suranjan during the company’s inaugural #WeSeeEqual Summit in partnership with UN Women in Mumbai, is part of the company’s citizenship focus on being a Force for Good and Force for Growth.
“Gender equality is a core belief at P&G. Creating a world free of bias with equal representation and equal voice for everyone is both the right thing to do and the right business choice.” explained Magesvaran Suranjan. “We also want to spark conversations and change mind sets as champions for the cause of gender equality across the region. We will leverage the full strengths of our business and operations, and our advertising voice to tackle gender bias and encourage women’s economic empowerment.”
Over the next 3 years:
- P&G aims to spend $100 million on deliberately working with Women-Owned Businesses in IMEA
- P&G will educate more than 23 million adolescent girls on puberty and hygiene across IMEA
- P&G and its brands will use the company’s voice in forums such as the #WeSeeEqual Summit,brand advertising like Ariel, Whisper, Always & Gillette and multi-stakeholder efforts to spark conversation and motivate change
Co-hosted with UN Women, P&G’s first IMEA #WeSeeEqual Summit brought together business and government leaders, and influencers to share inspiration and surface insights around the myths that prevent us from accelerating our progress for gender equality.
Dr. Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, Under-Secretary General of the United Nations and Executive Director of UN Women, said “To get irreversible progress in gender equality takes sustained, intentional action. We need to work together on this wherever those inequalities are present – in schools and offices; in the media; in sports arenas, farms, factories and houses of parliament. We’re driving for practical changes, like supply chain agreements that bring good business to women-owned companies, at the same time as we change the narratives about the place and power of girls and women in society – so they are both seen and treated as equals.”
Guest Speakers included:
- India’s Mary Kom, Olympian and 5 Time World Boxing Champion
- South Africa’s television star, business woman and philanthropist Bonang Matheba,
- Egypt’s actress and philanthropist Amina Khalil,
- Award Winning Indian Actress Richa Chadha,
- Actress & TV Personality India’s Neha Dhupia
- Indian Actor & Model Angad Bedi
P&G has been steadily working to improve gender equality by leveraging its unique strengths. Some of P&G’s achievements globally and in the region include:
- Leveraging its voice in advertising and media to tackle gender bias, spark conversations and motivate change. This includes Always ‘Like A Girl’, Ariel ‘Share The Load’, Always ‘Saudi Generation of Firsts’, and Whisper ‘Touch the Pickle’ advertising campaigns
- Focusing on removing barriers to education for girls and economic opportunities for women through the company’s social impact programs and advocacy efforts in partnership with organizations such as UN Women, WeConnect International,CARE, Sesame Workshop and Galli Galli Sim Sim. Examples of current P&G programs include:
- Puberty education campaignssuch as Always Keeping Girls in School in South Africa, Kenya & Nigeria and P&G Shiksha in India
- Deliberate intention to hire Women Owned Businesses in South Africa, UAE, Egypt, India & Nigeria are long standing examples of this focus.
- Internally, P&G is working to create an inclusive, gender-equal environment with 50-50 representation of men and women at all levels and all parts of the company. P&G hires 50% women into management across the world, and an increasing proportion of women gets promoted into leadership roles into their next assignments at the same progression as men. This is consistent with P&G’s history in IMEA.
In the Gulf, P&G has been a proponent in promoting active discourse on gender equality, both within the organization as well as with communities across the region. P&G hires an equal ration of women and men in Dubai, for its operations as its regional headquarter. P&G was the first FMCG Company in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to obtain a license to employ women, with 20% of its leadership team comprising of Saudi female nationals. The company is promoting positive perceptions of change through its advertising voice; released last year, Always ‘Saudi Generation of Firsts’ campaign was the first to be directed and produced only by women. P&G is supporting wider efforts to ensure that we move the issue of gender to the top of the region’s priorities in 2019 and beyond.
“We believe that by playing our part in areas such as #WeSeeEqual Summit and taking an active role both within the company and outside will collectively help move forward our shared vision of empowering equality in IMEA and the world,” concluded Suranjan.
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