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Women on the Board

How much power do women wield in boardrooms around the world? Top female executives from Ireland and India give their views.

Do women wield any real power in the boardroom? Kim Chakanetsa gets together top female executives from India and Ireland to discuss.

Named one of India's most powerful women by Fortune India, Roopa Kudva has extensive experience of sitting on the board, both as a CEO and as an independent director. She currently leads the philanthropic investment firm, Omidyar Network, in India and also sits on the boards of Infosys and Tata AIA Life Insurance as an independent director. Roopa says companies should have more women on their boards for two simple reasons: 50% of their customers are women, and companies with diverse boards have been proven to perform better.

Adaire Fox-Martin joined the executive board of the global software solutions company SAP in 2017, where she is one of two women. The board area she is jointly responsible for is Global Customer Operations, and she oversees the whole of Europe as well as China. Adaire describes this board area as the 'Crown Jewels of the company'. While she is not necessarily a fan of quotas per se, she says she can see that regulation and legislation can begin to effect change further down the line, and lead to an increase in the numbers of women in senior management. This in turn means that more women are now breaking through to board level.

Image: (L) Adaire Fox-Martin. Credit: SAP
Image and credit: (R) Roopa Kudva. Credit: Omidyar Network

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27 minutes

Last on

Mon 15 Jan 201823:32GMT

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  • Mon 15 Jan 201800:32GMT
  • Mon 15 Jan 201803:32GMT
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  • Mon 15 Jan 201811:32GMT
  • Mon 15 Jan 201821:32GMT
  • Mon 15 Jan 201823:32GMT

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