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Breaking the Rainbow Ceiling

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What to expect

A compelling look at the challenges facing LGBTQ+ professionals as they navigate their careers – with advice from many senior figures who have smashed their own rainbow ceilings.

There are currently only four LGBTQ+ CEOs across all Fortune 500 and FTSE 100 companies who are out at work, and just 0.8% of Fortune 500 board positions are filled by LGBTQ+ people. This deficit, occurring across sectors and around the world, reveals a diversity gap playing out in today’s workplace: LGBTQ+ people are less likely to reach the top jobs. But what is holding LGBTQ+ people back at work – and what can be done?

Breaking the Rainbow Ceiling explores the hidden differences that cause LGBTQ+ people to be underrepresented at the most senior levels of professional life. Combining data with personal insights from over 40 prominent LGBTQ+ trailblazers, from CEOs to Ambassadors, Layla McCay reveals the challenges that LGBTQ+ people commonly encounter as they find their way in work environments, and provides the practical strategies that can help empower LGBTQ+ people to reach their full professional potential.

The book explores how everyone – from boards, CEOs, managers, HR professionals and colleagues, through to LGBTQ+ people navigating their own career paths – can recognize and address the barriers, achieve their career goals, and build a more inclusive workplace where everyone can thrive and succeed.

Critics Review

  • Layla is right that the challenges to opportunity exist disproportionately across minority communities – I am thrilled that she’s not only highlighting these disparities for the LGBTQ+ community but is providing insights and solutions to overcome these challenges.

    author of the New York Times and Sunday Times bestselling leadership book, The Promises of Giants
  • This much-needed and engaging book will resonate with LGBTQ+ people on every step of the career ladder and leave everyone who reads it with a little extra knowledge, insight, inspiration and a sense of hope.

    Former CEO of Lloyds of London
  • As CEO of the premier non-profit organization working exclusively on LGBTQ+ workplace equity, inclusion, and belonging, it is such a pleasure to find a book so full of personal insights, research and practical actions on these topics. This book makes it clear how the rainbow ceiling was built, and how to break it down, with anecdotes from people all over the world that make it funny, sad, surprising, and real. Required reading for LGBTQ+ people pursuing their careers as well as for anyone seeking to build a more inclusive workplace.

    CEO of Out & Equal
  • Employers can ignore the rainbow ceiling or deny its existence altogether as self-identification and representation estimates remain rare. Consequently, LGBTQ+ people are often not part of the decisions that shape their lives. Through fascinating interviews with business, diplomatic, and administrative senior professionals, Layla McCay has pinpointed the subtle mechanisms of exclusion behind this phenomenon and how to mitigate them. Her book honours the experience of a generation of resilient and exemplary LGBTQ+ leaders who often had to overcome significant hurdles and do twice the work for half the recognition. But perhaps more importantly, it provides a guide to overcoming these obstacles for LGBTQ+ people and their employers today. Breaking the rainbow ceiling is crucial in filling the representation gap – Layla McCay’s book brings us one step closer to this goal.

    Founder and Executive Director, Association of LGBTQ+ Corporate Directors
  • Coming out is often a challenging and frightening experience. In some jurisdictions, it is still illegal to be openly LGBTQ and in other places, despite no legal restrictions, coming out can expose individuals to harassment, bullying and violence.

    Closer to home, although less pronounced and largely less dangerous, discrimination and prejudice is still with us. For many, being openly LGBTQ in the workplace still presents a challenge. The rainbow ceiling loomed large in my professional career and was one of the reasons I remained in the closet for so long. I was outed by a tabloid newspaper in 2007, resigned as CEO of BP, and began to build a new life in the world I had feared since my youth. After the initial pain, I found it to be life-giving. Coming out enabled me to think bigger and aim higher.

    Layla McCay’s Breaking the Rainbow Ceiling picks up where I left off. Much has changed for the better in the decade since I told my own story in The Glass Closet, but we are still not where we should be. This book is essential reading for those who are building up the courage to bring their authentic self into the workplace, for those who have already taken that leap, and for those who stand ready to support them. No one should be held back on the grounds of their sexual orientation or imprisoned by their own fear. This book is a reminder that the rainbow ceiling can and will be broken.

    Group CEO of BP (1995–2007) and author of The Glass Closet: Why Coming Out Is Good Business
  • A brilliantly researched book packed full of insight, advice and inspiration for those who want to be able to live, work and succeed as their authentic and fabulous LGBTQ+ selves.

    Founder & CEO of Involve and Audeliss, and author of How To Get Your Act Together: A Judgement-Free Guide to Diversity and Inclusion for Straight White Men

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