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More women across India are increasingly applying for leadership, governance and technical roles, signalling a shift in career ambitions as they aim for decision-making positions within organisations.
Something subtle but significant is changing in India’s job market. More women are not just looking for employment, they are applying for positions that carry authority, responsibility and influence inside organisations.A new workforce analysis by Apna.co, released ahead of International Women’s Day 2026, shows that women are increasingly applying for senior management, governance and technical roles. The data suggests a shift in ambition: women are no longer limiting themselves to entry-level or support functions but are actively pursuing positions higher up the corporate ladder.The trend may appear incremental at first glance. But it raises an important question about the future of work in India: if women are now aiming for leadership roles in greater numbers, will companies truly make space for them?
A noticeable push toward leadership
The platform’s analysis shows a 43% year-on-year increase in applications from women for Strategic and Top Management roles, while applications for Risk Management and Compliance positions rose 51%.
This suggests that many women entering the job market are no longer satisfied with being confined to junior roles. They are seeking positions where decisions are made and where careers have real upward mobility.In simple terms, women are not just looking for a seat at the table anymore. They are applying for the seats where strategy is shaped.
Full-time careers, not temporary work
Another pattern emerging from the data is women’s preference for long-term employment.
Applications for full-time roles increased 33% year on year, compared with 21% growth in part-time positions. The number of freshers applying for jobs rose 18%, while applications from experienced professionals increased by 11%.This signals something important: women entering the workforce today appear to be planning careers rather than short stints of employment.That matters in a country where women’s workforce participation has often been disrupted by social expectations, caregiving responsibilities and limited career progression.
Companies are beginning to respond
The rise in applications is also being mirrored, to some extent, by hiring trends. According to the report, women-only postings for strategic and top management roles increased 52%, while women-focused hiring in risk management and compliance rose 57%.Applications for project and program management roles also doubled, indicating that more women are pursuing roles that sit closer to leadership pipelines.The increase suggests that companies are trying, at least on paper, to bring more women into senior positions.But there is a difference between creating opportunities and actually changing workplace power structures. Diversity hiring initiatives have existed in India for years, yet women remain underrepresented in leadership roles across many sectors.
Technology fields are seeing rising participation
Another interesting development is the rise in women applying for technical and analytical roles. Applications from women for Data Science and Analytics positions rose 86% year on year, while Research and Development roles saw an 88% increase.
Quality Assurance applications grew 90%, and Product Management participation climbed 62%.On the hiring side, women-focused postings in Data Science and Analytics increased by 118%. These roles require specialised skills and training, suggesting that more women are entering areas that shape innovation and product development, not just administrative or support functions.The unexpected story is coming from smaller cities. Perhaps the most striking part of the data is where this growth is happening.Women’s job applications from Tier-2 cities grew 27% year on year, compared with 10% growth in Tier-1 markets. Cities such as Indore, Noida, and Kanpur have seen strong increases in women applying for professional roles.What is notable is that this growth is not limited to entry-level work. Applications in Banking, Financial Services and Insurance rose 41%, alongside a similar increase in women-focused job postings.
Finance and Accounting roles grew nearly 30%.In other words, smaller cities are slowly becoming centres for professional employment, and women there are stepping forward to claim those opportunities.
National labour data reflects a similar shift
The broader employment picture also points to gradual progress. According to the National Statistical Office’s Periodic Labour Force Survey for July–September 2025, female labour force participation rose to 33.7%, slightly higher than the previous quarter’s 33.4%.The female Worker Population Ratio reached 32.0%, while overall unemployment declined to 5.2%. These numbers may appear modest, but they indicate a steady increase in women participating in the workforce, something economists have been tracking closely for years.
Ambition is rising. Will opportunity follow?
The Apna analysis is based on data from more than 1.3 crore women users on the platform, offering a large snapshot of how women across India are approaching the job market.What the numbers show is clear: women are applying for leadership roles, technical jobs and long-term careers in growing numbers.But the more difficult question lies ahead. Will companies promote women into those leadership positions? Will workplaces evolve to support women through mid-career stages, where many still drop out? And will India’s corporate culture recognise women as decision-makers rather than just employees?The ambition is clearly visible now.Whether that ambition translates into power inside boardrooms will depend on how seriously organisations respond to the moment.




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