2 Sisters Food Group has published its Gender Pay Gap report and unveiled a series of initiatives to improve diversity, gender, equality pay and opportunity across its business.
At 2 Sisters, men and women are paid equally for doing equivalent jobs with equivalent experience and the gender balance and pay rates for its factory floor teams is comparable to UK manufacturing as a whole.
The company’s Gender Pay Gap is 9.7% (mean) and 4.1% (median), which compares to a 24.5% median pay gap in the private sector overall, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
However, looking to further strengthen the figures, 2 Sisters is launching a multi-intervention gender strategy as follows:
- Taking active steps to facilitate flexible, part-time working and ‘family-friendly’ policies for senior management level colleagues- 30% of senior leadership roles (executive level or above) to be occupied by women by 2021- A programme of sponsored MBA scholarships, available to female and male applicants- The launch of a 2 Sisters Food Group ‘women in leadership’ mentoring programme- Insisting that recruiters always provide balanced shortlists with the inclusion of female candidates as well as those from a range of backgrounds- Ensuring all internal shortlists have at least one female candidate- Establishing a set of metrics to regularly monitor its diversity performance and report externally on an annual basis
Ranjit Singh, president of Boparan Holdings Limited, owner of 2 Sisters Food Group, said: “I am interested in creating a real culture change on opportunity at our business that will lead the industry. We need to create an environment that works for all employees, both male and female. If we do this, we will see more women succeeding in senior management roles.
“I’m really proud of the extraordinary diversity at 2 Sisters Food Group and I’m determined that we should do everything we can to make ourselves a company where anyone can do well, regardless of their gender.
“These values mean that we always pay our men and women equally for doing the same role with the same level of experience. Unfortunately, like many other companies in our sector and the UK, we have more men than women in senior roles and this is what is driving our current gender pay gap.
“We have unveiled a series of initiatives designed to tackle this gap at the senior managerial levels of the organisation to ensure women are better represented and have a stronger voice, and I look forward to seeing solid progress as our new strategy beds in.”
This story was originally published on a previous version of the Meat Management website and so there may be some missing images and formatting issues.