Invention

Glass ceiling

Marilyn Loden named the barrier in 1978. Nearly fifty years later it still has the same name.

United States · 1978
This entry is undergoing enhanced source verification. All research is complete and citations are being verified to our full sourcing standard.

In 1978, Marilyn Loden, a management consultant at New York Telephone, used the phrase "glass ceiling" during a panel discussion at the Women’s Exposition in New York. She described an invisible barrier that prevented women from advancing beyond a certain level in corporate hierarchies, regardless of qualifications or performance.1

The metaphor was precise. A glass ceiling is invisible to anyone not pressing against it. It is structural, not individual. It cannot be overcome by working harder, because the barrier exists above the level where individual effort is the determining factor.2

The phrase entered wide public circulation in 1986, when Carol Hymowitz and Timothy Schellhardt published a Wall Street Journal article describing the phenomenon in corporate America. That article introduced the term to a national audience.3

In 1991, the U.S. Congress established the Federal Glass Ceiling Commission under the Civil Rights Act of 1991 to study barriers to advancement for women and minorities in the workforce. The commission reported in 1995 that white men held 97 percent of senior management positions at Fortune 1000 companies.4

97%
Senior management positions at Fortune 1000 companies held by white men, per the 1995 Glass Ceiling Commission report

The phrase generated variations. "Bamboo ceiling" described barriers facing Asian Americans. "Stained-glass ceiling" described barriers in religious institutions. "Concrete ceiling" described barriers facing women of color, for whom the obstacle was neither transparent nor fragile.5

As of 2024, women held 10.4 percent of CEO positions at Fortune 500 companies, up from zero in 1995. The number first exceeded 10 percent in 2023.6

1978
Marilyn Loden uses the phrase “glass ceiling” during a panel at the Women’s Exposition in New York.
1986
The Wall Street Journal article by Hymowitz and Schellhardt brings the term to a national audience.
1991
Congress establishes the Federal Glass Ceiling Commission under the Civil Rights Act.
1995
The commission reports that white men hold 97 percent of senior management positions at Fortune 1000 firms.
1 Marilyn Loden, interview, BBC, July 2017.
2 Loden, interview, 2017.
3 Carol Hymowitz and Timothy Schellhardt, "The Glass Ceiling," The Wall Street Journal, March 24, 1986.
4 Federal Glass Ceiling Commission, Good for Business: Making Full Use of the Nation’s Human Capital (Washington: GPO, 1995).
5 Jane Hyun, Breaking the Bamboo Ceiling (New York: HarperBusiness, 2005).
6 Fortune, "Fortune 500 CEOs," fortune.com, 2024.
Explore all entries →