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Facebook has a question on its office walls that can help solve a key problem at work

Sep 29, 2016, 20:37 IST

LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 23: Facebook, VP EMEA Nicola Mendelsohn speaks during The Facebook Creative Talks Part 1, as part of Advertising Week Europe, Piccadilly, on March 23, 2015 in London, England.Tim Whitby/Getty Images for Advertising Week

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There is a question that on the office walls at Facebook that could help bring greater gender equality across all workforces.

Speaking at the FT Women at the Top event in London, vice president EMEA at Facebook, Nicola Mendelsohn asked the audience: "What would you do if you weren't afraid?"

She said "it's the question on the walls of our offices and well you can shrug it off as a 'cute slogan' or 'wall art,' but it represents something important."

"It is something important, an aspiration, an attitude to work and life and so I ask people this a lot."

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"The point is here, is that this really represents us [Facebook] as our culture and cultivating [this type of culture' can help you rise to the top. Supporting women, driving full employment, and [creating] gender equality is good for our country, companies, and for our homes," she said.

"It is time to tackle the structural and behavioural barriers that prevent women - and an increasing number of men - from occupying senior corporate leadership positions."

Mendelsohn joined Facebook in 2013 and is currently the co-chair of the Creative Industries Council. She was also the first woman president of the influential advertising industry trade body IPA. She was also the former president of the Women in Advertising and Communications London club (WACL). Her work has earned her the award of Commander of the British Empire (CBE).

Lianna Brinded/Business Insider

She pointed out that "we now just have seven CEOs in the FTSE 100, pretty much the same as we did five years ago."

But she noted that Facebook has room to improve its gender equality.

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"Our numbers are not that great either," said Mendelsohn.

"67% [of the workforce] are men, and at a senior level 27% of the workforce are women."

Facebook has actively been addressing gender inequality at the company for years. In 2013, Facebook hired Maxine Williams as its global director of diversity and under her role, Facebook released its annual diversity numbers for the first time in the summer of 2014.

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