Close Menu
    • ABOUT
    • BOOK STORE
    • ENTREPRENEURSHIP
    • ESG
    • EVENTS & AWARDS
    • POLITICS
    • GADGETS
    • CONTACT
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    Business explainerBusiness explainer
    Subscribe
    • TRENDING
    • EXECUTIVES
    • COMPANIES
    • STARTUPS
    • GLOBAL
    • AGRICULTURE
    • DEALS
    • ECONOMY
    • MOTORING
    • TECHNOLOGY
    Business explainerBusiness explainer
    Home » BUHLE HANISE: The Hidden Architecture of Corporate Power
    EXECUTIVES

    BUHLE HANISE: The Hidden Architecture of Corporate Power

    March 4, 2026
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Buhle Hanise, National Head of Business Restructuring at BDO South Africa and Advisory Council Member of AWCA
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Business restructuring is not symbolic work. It is about solvency, capital preservation and survival, when companies enter distress, restructuring professionals operate at the intersection of liquidity crises, operational fragility and stakeholder conflict. The work is technical and high-pressure, capital modelling, creditor negotiation, strategic redesign, often executed under severe time constraints.

    Which is why the conversation about women in restructuring must move beyond representation and toward system design.

    The issue is not capability. Women have long been present in finance and advisory. The issue is how opportunity is allocated. On headline measures, South Africa performs well. BDO’s Women in Business report shows women hold roughly 47% of senior management positions locally, among the highest globally. Board representation is similarly strong: women occupy approximately 38% of JSE-listed board seats, with executive committee representation closer to 31%.

    But ultimate authority tells a different story. CEO roles across major listed entities remain overwhelmingly male. Women are underrepresented in core Profit & Loss leadership and in complex turnaround mandates, the assignments that build reputational capital and succession credibility.

    Globally, the pattern persists. The UK has surpassed 40% female board representation across the FTSE 350, yet female CEOs remain in the low teens. The entry pipeline is healthy. The progression architecture is not.

    McKinsey’s research on the “broken rung” highlights that women are promoted at lower rates than men at the first critical management step. Each subsequent promotion compounds that early imbalance. If women represent nearly half of senior management but only a third of executive leadership, something in the design of advancement is filtering them out. This is not a supply problem. It is structural.

    South Africa’s low-growth environment amplifies the stakes. Corporate distress remains elevated amid fiscal pressure and operational instability. The quality of restructuring decisions affects employment, creditor recoveries and capital efficiency, these are systemic economic issues, not internal HR concerns.

    International research, including studies from the IMF and Credit Suisse, has linked gender-diverse leadership to stronger governance and improved risk oversight. While correlation is not causation, the evidence that diversity strengthens decision-making robustness is substantial. In distressed environments, where groupthink can carry material cost, diversity of perspective is a risk-mitigation asset. Leadership composition, therefore, is not symbolic. It is strategic.

    Most senior women can identify mentors who offered guidance. Far fewer can point to sustained sponsorship and the distinction matters enormously.

    A mentor advises. A sponsor allocates opportunity. Sponsorship means recommending a woman for a complex mandate, backing her name in succession conversations, attaching institutional credibility to her advancement. In capital markets, backing determines access. Careers operate no differently. Without advocacy in the rooms where decisions are made, progression stalls, regardless of competence.

    If firms are serious about leadership diversity, sponsorship must be embedded into leadership accountability, not left to individual discretion.

    The “glass ceiling” metaphor suggests a barrier waiting to be shattered. But in corporate finance, durable change comes from redesign, not from force.

    Restructuring professionals understand that flawed systems cannot be patched indefinitely. When governance frameworks no longer support viability, they are rebuilt. Leadership pipelines require the same discipline: transparent criteria for high-impact mandates; formal tracking of succession pipelines; measurable sponsorship accountability; public reporting on executive progression. Transformation that cannot be measured cannot be managed.

    South Africa cannot afford symbolic transformation. In an economy under strain, every restructuring decision carries consequence namely jobs preserved or lost, capital recovered or destroyed, confidence restored or eroded. Leadership in that environment is not ceremonial. It is economic infrastructure.

    Women already sit across board tables and executive committees in significant numbers. Yet when the most consequential mandates arise, the distressed asset, the turnaround, the high-risk Profit & Loss, authority remains disproportionately concentrated. If nearly half of senior management is female but ultimate executive power remains overwhelmingly male, the issue is not ambition. It is architecture.

    Markets reward efficient allocation of capital. Institutions should be no less disciplined in allocating leadership opportunity.

    The next decade will test South Africa’s corporate resilience. Growth will remain constrained. Capital will remain cautious. Governance scrutiny will intensify. In that environment, excluding capable leadership is not conservative, it is costly.

    The question is no longer whether women can lead in complex financial environments. The question is whether corporate South Africa is prepared to redesign its systems, not to accommodate women, but to compete effectively in a demanding economy.

    Because in the end, this is not about breaking ceilings. It is about building institutions strong enough to outlast them.

    Written by Buhle Hanise National Head: Business Restructuring at BDO South Africa | Advisory Council Member, AWCA

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleAisha Mohamed Appointed as Managing Director
    Next Article Hilux Leads as Toyota Strengthens Grip

    Related Posts

    Naspers SA CEO Honoured With Honorary Doctorate

    April 14, 2026

    Malcolm Melville Says Middle East Ceasefire Unlikely to Shift Long-Term Oil Price Outlook

    April 12, 2026

    Domaine Rautenbach Says Portfolio Versatility is the Next Growth Lever

    April 10, 2026
    Top Posts

    Construction Boom Delivers 176,000 Jobs as Unemployment Eases

    November 11, 2025

    Growthpoint Dominates with 19 SACSC Footprint Awards

    November 14, 2025

    Volkswagen Chief Praises Chinese Competition for Sparking Innovation

    November 7, 2025

    Seven Families Sue OpenAI In ChatGPT Suicide Scandal

    November 10, 2025
    Don't Miss

    Letshego’s Core Profit Surges 362%

    COMPANIES

    Letshego Africa Holdings has reported a sharp divergence between its statutory results and underlying performance,…

    Over R600 Million to Boost Eastern Cape Agricultural Productivity

    April 15, 2026

    Strait of Hormuz Crisis Hits SA Businesses

    April 15, 2026

    Fundraising Guide to Bridge Africa’s Pre-Seed Knowledge Gap

    April 15, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    About Us
    About Us

    From the latest product launches and company earnings to economic trends and industry disruptions, we distill the most critical details and implications – breaking through the jargon and wordiness to give you just what matters most.

    Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    Categories
    • TRENDING
    • EXECUTIVES
    • COMPANIES
    • STARTUPS
    • GLOBAL
    • AGRICULTURE
    • DEALS
    • ECONOMY
    • MOTORING
    • TECHNOLOGY
    contact us
    • Get In Touch
    © 2026 Business Explainer
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.