CII Honors Top Firms Driving Gender Parity in Business Strategy

The Confederation of Indian Industry Centre for Women Leadership has recognized leading corporates for embedding gender parity across leadership, workforce, and business strategy. Industry leaders highlighted that inclusion is increasingly viewed as a driver of business performance rather than a standalone agenda. The awards honored organizations including Hindustan Zinc Limited, Bharti Airtel, Diageo India, Mondelez India, Hindustan Unilever Limited, Sumerpur Factory, and Godrej Properties Limited. Discussions underscored that gender parity is moving from the margins to the mainstream of economic strategy as India aims to sustain high economic growth.

Key Points: CII Awards Gender Parity Leaders in Business

  • CII Centre for Women Leadership recognizes top firms for gender parity
  • Inclusion viewed as driver of business performance
  • Awards honor Hindustan Zinc, Bharti Airtel, Diageo India, Mondelez India, HUL, Sumerpur Factory, Godrej Properties
  • Focus shifts from entry-level participation to creating advancement pathways
2 min read

CII honours top firms for gender parity as inclusion becomes core to business growth strategy

CII Centre for Women Leadership honors Hindustan Zinc, Bharti Airtel, Diageo India & more for embedding gender parity in leadership and strategy.

"Companies that move early and decisively on inclusion are seeing tangible gains not just in representation, but in resilience and performance. - Rumjhum Chatterjee"

Mumbai Apri, l 28

The Confederation of Indian Industry Centre for Women Leadership on Tuesday recognised leading corporates for embedding gender parity across leadership, workforce and business strategy.At the Edge: Inclusion & Competitiveness Summit and the CII Gender Parity Business Awards, industry leaders highlighted that inclusion is increasingly being viewed as a driver of business performance rather than a standalone agenda as per a press release by the CII.

The awards honoured organisations, including Hindustan Zinc Limited, Bharti Airtel, Diageo India, Mondelez India, Hindustan Unilever Limited, Sumerpur Factory and Godrej Properties Limited, who have translated intent into measurable outcomes by strengthening leadership pipelines, improving workforce participation and integrating gender parity into market-facing strategies.Addressing the event, Rumjhum Chatterjee, Chairperson, CII Centre for Women Leadership, said, "There is growing alignment between policy direction and business priorities on women's economic participation. Companies that move early and decisively on inclusion are seeing tangible gains not just in representation, but in resilience and performance."Vaishali Nigam Sinha, Co-Chair, CII Centre for Women Leadership, noted that "As sectors such as platform work, healthcare and clean energy expand, the focus is shifting from entry-level participation to creating pathways for advancement. This is where both policy frameworks and corporate action will need to converge more sharply,"Seema Arora, Deputy Director General, CII, said, "India's growth ambitions will increasingly depend on how effectively we bring more women into the workforce and enable their advancement. Industry has a critical role to play in building inclusive talent pipelines, particularly in emerging sectors such as manufacturing, energy and new-age services."Uber, Urban Company, Kotak Mahindra Bank and KPMG India were among other participants at the Summit, which discussed challenges including access to finance, safety concerns and retention, along with solutions to address these barriers.

CII said discussions underscored that as India aims to sustain high economic growth, gender parity is moving from the margins to the mainstream of economic strategy, driven by both policy signals and business imperatives.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Ramesh W
In our factory in rural Maharashtra, we've seen firsthand that when women are given equal opportunities, productivity actually goes up. But safety concerns remain a big issue - companies need to invest in transport and infrastructure before expecting women to join night shifts. Good initiative but implementation is key.
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David E
As an expat working in Bangalore, I've noticed the difference. The Indian companies I work with are now actively discussing inclusion at board level, not just HR meetings. The shift from 'doing good' to 'good for business' is real. But we need more data on retention - hiring is easy, keeping talent is the challenge.
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Arun Y
CII should also recognise SMEs and startups who are doing great work without big budgets. In my experience, smaller companies often have more flexible policies. But I appreciate the focus on 'measurable outcomes' - tokenism has hurt the cause more than helped. Now if only we could get 30% women in Parliament too! 😄
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Lisa P
I work in a tech MNC and see the difference. But it's not just about numbers - it's about culture change. When women are in decision-making roles, product designs become more inclusive, marketing becomes more sensitive. That's where the real ROI is. Though I wish we talked more about intersectionality - women from lower castes and rural areas face double barriers.
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Varun X
Read the full list of winners - good to see a mining company like Hindustan Zinc getting recognised. Traditionally male-dominated sectors need this push. But my concern is: are we measuring the right metrics? Number of women on boards doesn't mean they have real power. Need more qualitative data on decision-making influence

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