Career Development for Employees with Disabilities: Breaking the Glass Ceiling
The Promotion Gap
People with disabilities are hired โ but they are not promoted at the same rate:
- Disability:IN: Disabled employees are 48% less likely to be in senior management roles than their non-disabled peers
- Scope (UK): The disability pay gap stands at approximately 13.8% (ONS, 2023)
- NOD (US): Only 4% of Fortune 500 board members disclose a disability
The pipeline narrows at every level: entry-level roles are relatively accessible, but mid-management, senior leadership, and executive positions are disproportionately non-disabled.
Root Causes
- Unconscious bias: Assumptions that disabled people are "grateful to have a job" and do not aspire to leadership
- Inaccessible development opportunities: Training, conferences, and networking events in inaccessible formats or venues
- "Potential" bias: Talent reviews that conflate neurotypical social skills, physical presence, and long hours with leadership potential
- Lack of role models: If disabled people do not see disabled leaders, they may not see a path forward
- Accommodation fatigue: Each career move requires a new round of accommodation negotiations