The latest "Women in the Workplace" report from McKinsey & Co sounds an alarm: for the first time, women are showing a notable decline in ambition to advance. But the data tells a different story. It's not that women are losing ambition—they're rejecting a system that was never built for them.
The System is Broken
The report itself provides the evidence. For every 100 men promoted to manager, only 93 women are promoted—and just 60 Black women. Entry-level women have sponsors at half the rate of men. Most damning: 60% of senior-level women report frequent burnout, compared to 50% of men at the same level. Women who work remotely are penalized for it; men are not. This isn't a failure of women's ambition. It's a failure of corporate America's structure.
The Fractional Flywheel
In response, women are not retreating. They're building something new. Fractional work—where skilled professionals serve multiple companies on a part-time basis while remaining embedded in strategy and execution—has exploded. According to Women in Revenue, the market has grown 57% since 2020, with 25% of US businesses already using fractional hiring, projected to reach 35% by 2025.
The Hidden Economy
This is where the real work is being done. The Bee Suite, a collective of builders working in synchronized purpose, captures the spirit of this movement. With the audacious tagline, "You're not overqualified. You're overpriced for a dying model," it positions fractional work not as a compromise, but as a strategy
Redefining Ambition
The decline in ambition that Lean In reports is real. But it's not a retreat. It's a redirect. Women are not less ambitious; they're investing their ambition differently. They're choosing to build rather than climb, to create rather than conform, to lead from multiple tables rather than fight for one seat at a broken one.
The question is no longer whether fractional work will become mainstream. It already is. The question is whether corporate America will adapt fast enough to matter.