There is a phrase we use too casually in leadership conversations: “women in the Nigerian workplace.”
As though the Nigerian workplace is one thing.
As though a woman building a career in banking, healthcare, law, telecoms, consulting, or pharmaceuticals is navigating the same institutional reality simply because they share a passport.
The newest research from McKinsey & Company suggests otherwise.
In its 2025 report on women in the workplace across India, Nigeria, and Kenya, McKinsey analyzed 324 organisations, 1.4 million employees, and dozens of executive interviews. What emerges from the data is not one leadership pipeline, but multiple pipeline architectures operating inside the same country. And those architectures behave very differently.
RESOURCE FOR THE WEEK
The Transition Decision Scorecard maps the evidence for your three options — and tells you which path your answers point to.
A Nigerian lawyer is not navigating the same career as a Nigerian banker.
A healthcare executive is not hitting the same structural wall as a woman in corporate finance.
The sector matters more than most professionals realise.
And for senior African women thinking about career progression, reinvention, or strategic repositioning, this changes the diagnostic question entirely.
The question is no longer:
“Which country offers more opportunities for women?”
The better question is:
“Which sector inside my current geography has a different leadership pipeline shape, and how transferable are my credentials into it?”
Two weeks ago, I wrote about the leadership cliff: the structural gap between qualification and leadership for senior African women. The new McKinsey data confirms that the cliff is real, measurable, and deeply sector-specific.
The problem is not “women in leadership.”
The problem is that different sectors produce different cliffs.
RESOURCE FOR THE WEEK
The Transition Decision Scorecard maps the evidence for your three options — and tells you which path your answers point to.
And generic advice applied to sector-specific problems is one reason so much career guidance fails.
The Financial Services Cliff
The financial services data is the clearest example of a structural leadership funnel narrowing aggressively over time.
Across all three countries in the report, the pattern repeats:
| Country | Entry Level | Senior Leadership / C-Suite | Drop |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nigeria | 47% | 28% | -19 percentage points |
| Kenya | 50% | 26% | -24 percentage points |
| India | 31% | 13% | -18 percentage points |
Different starting points. Same pattern.
Women enter financial services in meaningful numbers, then progressively disappear as leadership seniority increases.
In Nigeria specifically, McKinsey identified the steepest drop between the senior-manager and VP transition alone.
That matters because pipeline leakage is not random. It clusters around specific leadership transitions.
One Nigerian financial-services executive in the report described the early-career structure this way:
“The rigid schedule took a toll on my health, leaving me constantly exhausted.”
That sentence reframes the entire conversation.
RESOURCE FOR THE WEEK
The Transition Decision Scorecard maps the evidence for your three options — and tells you which path your answers point to.
This is not a motivation problem.
Not a competence problem.
Not a confidence problem.
It is an institutional design problem.
The Western leadership toolkit often treats women’s advancement as though the same interventions work everywhere: mentorship, sponsorship, flexible work, confidence-building, visibility coaching.
Those tools matter.
But the sectoral data suggests the barriers themselves are shaped differently across industries.
In financial services, the issue appears concentrated around endurance structures, schedule rigidity, leadership timing expectations, and promotion pathways that narrow sharply at senior transitions.
Which means effort alone is not a sufficient strategy.
And this is where many high-performing women become trapped.
Women trained in endurance cultures continue applying the same intensity regardless of sectoral return. They stay loyal to a pipeline shape that statistically narrows against them.
But the data suggests something uncomfortable:
Some sectors reward the same capabilities differently.
The Healthcare Pattern
Healthcare reveals a different type of cliff.
In Nigeria, women enter healthcare at near parity:
- 51% at entry level
But representation drops to 38% at senior levels.
The striking detail is where the drop happens.
McKinsey identifies a 10-percentage-point decline specifically between manager and senior manager.
One level.
One transition.
One institutional bottleneck.
A Nigerian healthcare CEO quoted in the report described the experience this way:
“I have faced a lot of pressure to perform better than my male counterparts.”
Again, the structure matters.
Healthcare often attracts women strongly at entry because the profession itself aligns culturally with care, service, stability, and educational pathways already accessible to women.
But the senior leadership architecture changes the equation.
At higher levels, the role becomes less clinical and more political:
- budget ownership
- institutional influence
- operational leadership
- executive stakeholder management
- systems-level decision-making
And many organisations still evaluate those capacities through historically masculine leadership norms.
The result is a delayed cliff.
Women are welcomed into the profession.
They are not always equally advanced through the executive infrastructure of the profession.
That distinction matters enormously for career strategy.
Because a woman can misread sectoral inclusion at entry level as evidence of long-term leadership parity.
The pipeline shape says otherwise.
The Legal Exception
Then comes the legal sector — the anomaly in the dataset.
Nigeria legal sector:
- 55% at entry
- 49% at senior leadership
That is remarkably close to parity compared with other sectors.
Kenya shows a similar pattern.
What makes law different?
Three structural features stand out.
1. Sponsorship is embedded into the profession itself
In many legal environments, advancement already assumes apprenticeship, chambers, sponsorship, and partner-track visibility.
Mentorship is not an optional “women’s initiative.”
It is structurally integrated into progression.
2. Women can see women at senior levels
Visibility changes ambition calibration.
Where women consistently see female partners, senior counsel, managing partners, and practice leaders, leadership becomes culturally imaginable earlier.
Representation compounds.
3. Promotion pathways are more codified
Many legal structures rely on clearer performance metrics:
- billables
- case outcomes
- client acquisition
- partnership timelines
- credential visibility
That reduces some of the ambiguity and discretionary promotion culture that often disadvantages women in other sectors.
One Nigerian law-firm COO in the report described her experience this way:
“I succeeded through entrepreneurial drive, self-determination, and the support of a merit-based system.”
Notice what she names alongside personal effort:
A merit-based system.
Not merely ambition.
Not resilience alone.
Structure.
And this is the strategic insight many professionals miss.
Career outcomes are not only individual.
They are infrastructural.
The Strategic Move Most Women Are Not Evaluating
For senior African women, one of the most underused strategic levers today is sectoral re-evaluation.
Not necessarily emigrating.
Not necessarily starting over.
Not always changing industries completely.
Sometimes the smarter move is identifying a different pipeline shape adjacent to your existing expertise.
MOVE 1 · The Within-Sector Adjacency
This is the move from operational work into advisory or strategic work inside the same ecosystem.
Examples:
- Banking operations → investment banking
- Banking operations → asset management
- Clinical healthcare → healthtech
- Clinical healthcare → healthcare consulting
The technical foundation transfers.
But the leadership architecture changes.
And younger or less institutional sectors often have more fluid advancement structures.
MOVE 2 · The Cross-Sector Credential Bridge
This is where sectoral analysis becomes especially powerful.
A woman leaving a steep-cliff sector does not lose all accumulated capital.
She can redeploy it.
Examples:
- Banking → regulatory affairs
- Finance → corporate law
- Healthcare → health policy
- Healthcare → health law
- Operations leadership → strategic advisory
The legal sector’s near-parity numbers are not just interesting data.
They may represent a strategic destination.
MOVE 3 · The Senior-Level Sectoral Pivot
For women already at senior level, the move is sometimes not upward inside the same sector — but across into sectors that value their institutional knowledge differently.
This often looks like:
- board appointments
- governance work
- regulatory leadership
- advisory portfolios
- fund deployment
- ecosystem strategy
- capital allocation roles
The key insight is this:
Your current sector may not be the highest-value interpreter of your capabilities.
The Diagnostic Table
Here is the pattern more clearly:
| Sector | Nigeria | Kenya | What the Pattern Suggests |
|---|---|---|---|
| Financial Services | 47% entry → 28% senior | 50% → 26% | Strong entry, steep leadership attrition |
| Healthcare | 51% → 38% | 55% → 39% | Mid-pipeline bottleneck at senior manager |
| Legal | 55% → 49% | 59% → 55% | Near-parity progression across levels |
The national average hides all of this.
And that is the core mistake.
We keep discussing “women in the workplace” as though country is the primary analytical unit.
But careers are lived inside sectors.
The sector determines:
- promotion logic
- visibility pathways
- sponsorship culture
- leadership timing
- flexibility norms
- credential transferability
- institutional politics
- executive access
The same woman could experience two entirely different leadership trajectories without ever leaving her country.
The Real Question
Many professionals stay attached to sectors because of identity, prestige, familiarity, or sunk-cost thinking.
But the data suggests sector choice is not merely descriptive.
It is strategic.
And for women especially, the difference between sectors can represent the difference between chronic friction and institutional acceleration.
So the real diagnostic question becomes:
- Which cliff are you currently on?
- Which sectors nearby have different pipeline shapes?
- Which of your credentials transfer more cleanly than you realise?
The national story is too broad to guide individual strategy now.
The sectoral story is where the signal lives.
And increasingly, it is where the future of leadership mobility will be decided.
My recent essay on orchestration capacities argued that the emerging 2026 leadership landscape increasingly rewards the exact cross-functional coordination skills many senior women already practice.
The sectoral data clarifies something further:
Some sectors recognise those capacities faster than others.
Legal sees it earlier.
Strategic advisory sees it next.
Traditional finance, often, sees it last.
The data is now in.
The question is no longer whether leadership cliffs exist.
The question is whether you are still treating your current sector as inevitable.
Lastly, the data raises an uncomfortable question:
Are you trying to solve a capability problem… inside what is actually a sector-design problem?
