Entertainment

Mary Portas: We need to change the business world so women feel empowered by it

The retail expert and presenter was speaking at the Music Industry Trusts Award event in London.
The retail expert and presenter was speaking at the Music Industry Trusts Award event in London. The retail expert and presenter was speaking at the Music Industry Trusts Award event in London.

Mary Portas has made an emotive call for businesses to become places where women can feel “empowered”.

The retail expert and TV presenter, 58, said the business world currently forces women into a “construct” that prevents them from being themselves.

Portas, who was speaking at the Music Industry Trusts Award event in London, told the Press Association making business less hostile to women would also benefit men.

Music Industry Trusts Awards 2018
Music Industry Trusts Awards 2018 Mary Portas and her wife Melanie Rickey attend the Music Industry Trusts Award event in London

Asked whether she felt enough female voices were heard in the business world, she said: “No, not enough. This is ridiculous. We are in 2018 and we are going ‘wow’, isn’t this great. No, it’s really unacceptable.

“Here’s the thing. We need to change the culture of business. We need business to be a place where women feel empowered and can be themselves and don’t have to fit into a construct. That will benefit men as well, if we change it.”

Asked whether she was shocked by the allegations of sexual misconduct levelled at Topshop owner Sir Philip Green, she replied: “I don’t know about the sexual stuff. I’m not surprised that his business manner is one of hierarchical power, and ‘you do as I say’.”

Music Industry Trusts Awards 2018
Music Industry Trusts Awards 2018 The retail expert said a change needed to occur in the business world (Jonathan Brady/PA)

Green took out an injunction against the Daily Telegraph to prevent it from publishing what the newspaper called “alleged sexual harassment and racial abuse of staff”.

She continued: “It’s quite simply dated. The more we call this stuff out and the more young people say, ‘you know what, that’s not the type of place I want to work,’ that could change the face of business to be more about collaboration, to be about empowerment, to be sometimes about vulnerability and saying it’s okay to be vulnerable.

“What [the workplace] shouldn’t be about is bullying, and what it shouldn’t be about is suppressing people. Everybody should have a voice otherwise why be in business in the first place?”