The Biggest Business Wins for Women in 2018

This article originally appeared on InHerSight.com, a website where women rate the female friendliness of their employers and get matched to companies that fit their needs.

In 2018, women busted through glass ceilings at Fortune 500 companies and won groundbreaking elections in record numbers. They made big strides in representation on the national stage and saw their workplace abusers held accountable. There's so much to celebrate.

But, in the busy day-to-day and with the 24-hour news cycle's constant churn, that good news can easily get lost or too quickly replaced by other headlines.

Illustration of a woman in a business suit and cape, who is also holding a briefcase, flying through the air.
Illustration of a woman in a business suit and cape, who is also holding a briefcase, flying through the air.

Image source: Getty Images.

After all, 2018 was the year when U.S. Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh faced public allegations of sexual assault, but still was named to the high court.

It was the year when some men on Wall Street avoided women at all costs, worried they'd face a #MeToo accusation and, in the process, making it even trickier for women in finance to do their jobs and move up the ladder.

And 2018 is when McKinsey's annual report on Women in the Workplace revealed that companies might just be paying lip service to their commitments to build gender diversity because the proportion of women in their organizations has barely budged.

And now you might wonder, "Wait, what exactly is there to celebrate?"

Plenty, as it turns out.

Taking a look back, more women are rising to the top levels of leadership in business and politics. And there's more accountability for men, major corporations, and institutions who have, for so long, silenced women who have suffered on the job.

So, let's focus on that good news.

Wins in boardrooms and at the ballot box

In the business world, women earned top jobs in 2018. Consider these job announcements.

Heineken named Maggie Timoney as CEO, breaking the glass ceiling in the U.S. beer industry.

● Betty Liu joined the New York Stock Exchange as an executive vice chairman. Her appointment came just a few weeks after Stacey Cunningham was named the first female leader of the NYSE.

● Dhivya Suryadevara became the first female CFO of General Motors. With CEO Mary Barra, the multinational corporation now has two senior leadership members who are female.

● Katie Haun became the first female partner of venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, a step in the right direction in an industry where women have struggled to reach the top.

● Land O'Lakes named Beth Ford as its president and CEO, making her one of 25 women running a Fortune 500 company. Ford will also be one of three openly gay Fortune 500 CEOs and the only openly lesbian CEO.