The business case for male allyship
Why organisations that engage men in gender equality perform better
For many organisations, male allyship is still spoken about as a moral good rather than a business necessity. It sits alongside values statements, culture campaigns, or International Women’s Day activity. While all undoubtedly important, they’re often treated as optional, seasonal, or symbolic.
The reality is different. When done well, male allyship is not a “nice to have”. It is a strategic lever for performance, retention, leadership effectiveness, and long-term organisational health.
At Male Allies UK, we work with organisations across sectors to move allyship from intent to impact. What we see consistently is this: the organisations that understand the business case for male allyship stop treating it as a diversity initiative and start treating it as leadership infrastructure.
What we mean by male allyship (and what we don’t)
First, let’s make sure we understand what we mean when we talk about male allyship.
- Male allyship is not men ‘saving’ women
- It’s not performative actions which don’t have any real impact done for praise or personal gain
- It’s not asking men to lose out or disengage
Effective male allyship is about men using their influence responsibly to make change happen. Men working alongside women to co-create fairer systems – both at work and at home. In terms of male allyship at work: it’s about removing the friction that prevents teams and organisations from performing at their best.
The performance case: better decisions, better outcomes
Organisations with more inclusive cultures, and diverse teams, consistently outperform those without them. Research by the Women’s Foundation in 2021 found that gender diversity ‘leads to higher profitability, smarter decision-making, better value creation, increased employee retention and satisfaction, higher market value, and improved innovation’. This is because a more diverse team is better able to spot and mitigate risks as well as bringing different life experience and ways of working.
Diverse teams have varying perspectives due to their differences in thoughts, mindset, communication style, and experience. All of this gives them a competitive advantage against traditional teams because they see, do and review things differently. In fact, according to a UK-based Cloverpop study conducted in 2017, diverse teams make better business decisions 87% of the time. The Great Place To Work organization’s June 2020 research found that diverse teams – people from different cultures, age groups, genders, and ethnic groups – show 11% higher revenue growth than traditional teams, i.e. people with similar backgrounds.
How To Lead People Who Are Not Like You – Stephanie Chung, 2024
The result is a win-win. Diversity not only shows you’re an inclusive company, it makes you a higher-performing one. Companies like these not only attract the best talent, they keep it too.
The retention case: keeping talent you’re already losing
Many organisations focus on attracting diverse talent, while quietly losing it through everyday experiences that go unchallenged.
Research and lived experience show that women are more likely to leave environments where bias is ignored. Furthermore, under–represented employees disengage when they carry the burden of calling out issues alone and silence from senior men is often interpreted as endorsement of the status quo. This leaky pipeline costs businesses, not only in terms of recruitment fees, but in knowledge, expertise, and diversity.
As some 80% of leaders and 60% of line managers, men are in a powerful position to drive change. Research shows that when they engage in these efforts, they make a significant difference for the better.
All For One: Engaging Men As Allies – Brussels Binder, 2024
Male allyship matters here because men still hold a disproportionate amount of positional power, informal influence, and cultural sway. When men actively act as allies women report greater safety, teams are more cohesive and effective, and businesses see improved retention.
The leadership case: inclusion as a core leadership skill
Leadership today is not just about technical competence or delivery. It requires navigating complexity, holding tension, and leading across difference. We talk about allyship as a skill because engaging in male allyship develops all these skills.
Men who engage meaningfully in allyship build:
- greater self–awareness,
- stronger relational intelligence
- and more effective use of influence
This isn’t theoretical. We regularly see male leaders who communicate more clearly, manage conflict more constructively, and lead with greater credibility after developing allyship capability.
Many respondents mentioned they had become more open-minded and considerate of others’ opinions, with someone stating: “I am more considerate, balanced, and open to changing my mind. I have become less prone to feeling offended if I am proven wrong.”
All For One: Engaging Men As Allies – Brussels Binder, 2024
In other words, allyship is not extra leadership work. It’s leadership development, done in real conditions.
The culture case: how norms actually change
Most workplace culture is shaped not by policy, but by what is tolerated, what is rewarded, and who speaks when things go wrong.
Male allyship plays a critical role in norm–setting because:
- men are often perceived as having greater licence to challenge peers
- their intervention can reset expectations without escalating conflict
- and their silence can unintentionally reinforce harmful behaviour
When men consistently act as allies, inclusive norms become visible rather than aspirational. Inappropriate behaviour is less likely to repeat and responsibility for culture stops sitting with a few individuals.
Culture doesn’t change because of statements. It changes because behaviour shifts – especially from those with power.
How are you using your privilege to create meaningful, sustainable societal change? Allyship should be more than virtue signalling and positive brand relations; it should extend beyond an individualistic mindset.
The Allyship Challenge – Dr Kimberly Harden, 2021
The sustainability case: allyship that lasts
One of the biggest challenges organisations face is not starting allyship – it’s sustaining it. Initial enthusiasm often fades due to fear of making mistakes, lack of reinforcement, or unclear expectations.
This is why Male Allies UK focuses on allyship as a system, not a moment.
When organisations equip men with skills (not just awareness), normalise learning rather than perfection, and share responsibility across teams, allyship becomes more consistent, less performative, and far more resilient over time. Sustained allyship reduces burnout – for everyone involved.
Why engaging men is not optional
Risk: doing nothing is not neutral
Some organisations hesitate to engage men in allyship because they fear backlash, discomfort, or “getting it wrong”. But doing nothing carries its own risks.
When allyship is absent or unclear, bias goes unchallenged, frustration builds beneath the surface, and trust erodes quietly. We increasingly see:
- reputational damage from internal experiences becoming external stories
- disengagement from employees who no longer believe change is possible
- and leaders caught off–guard by issues they didn’t realise were brewing
Male allyship, done well, is not risky. But ignoring it is.
Men are an essential component to achieving gender equity
Gender equality cannot be achieved around men. It must be achieved with them.
Not because men are the solution – but because:
- they are part of the system
- they shape everyday norms
- and their engagement accelerates progress rather than slowing it
Organisations that sideline men in this work:
- limit their own impact
- overburden women
- and miss a significant leadership opportunity
Men comprise the majority representatives of boardrooms, c-suites and senior roles across the city. Without the avid support of men, who generally comprise the most influential and powerful stakeholder group in most organisations, significant progress toward ending gender inequality is unlikely.
Engaging Men as Gender Equality Allies: Understanding the Barriers and Taking Action – The Women’s Foundation, 2021
The Male Allies UK perspective
At Male Allies UK, we don’t believe in guilt–based engagement, performative allyship, or one–size–fits–all solutions. We believe in practical skills, shared responsibility, and designing conditions where allyship actually works.
The business case for male allyship is not abstract. It shows up in:
- stronger teams
- better leaders
- lower attrition
- healthier cultures
- and organisations that are fit for the future
That’s not ideology, that’s organisational reality. If your organisation is serious about performance, culture, and leadership – it’s time to take male allyship seriously.