Dorothy Robertson (pictured) has just been made RLF鈥檚 first female partner in the firm鈥檚 100-year history. She talks to Matthew Parsons about smashing the glass ceiling
What鈥檚 your advice to women starting out in construction?
When you start out you鈥檙e a rare commodity, you have to prove yourself 20 times over.
It is a challenge: technically it鈥檚 a male dominated industry. It鈥檚 not for the faint hearted.
RLF has a moderate view 鈥 they鈥檙e ahead of a lot of firms. In the industry there aren鈥檛 many female partners. When I started as a surveyor 20 years ago, female QSs were very few and far between.
Thank goodness the industry has moved on, so you can have a good career. And women are proving they can do the job.
I think the construction industry should be publicised more, and more needs to be done to recruit women. If more companies shared the same view as RLF, the industry would be able to attract and retain more women.
It鈥檚 important women see that you can run a family and a career in parallel.
What work are you overseeing?
I鈥檓 responsible for QS delivery and oversee all of the projects in the Glasgow office. The highest profile job I鈥檓 on is Jordan Hill School for the Scottish executive. Plus there鈥檚 lots of Scottish Enterprise work. I have more to do on the management side now, but at the same time I have to be hands on. We look after the west side of Scotland while the Edinburgh office looks after the other side.
How did the promotion come about?
For a year I was being groomed, so it鈥檚 been a smooth transition. I鈥檝e been in the Glasgow office for 10 years, so I鈥檓 well known. I was previously associate partner. I鈥檝e always worked in Scotland and I鈥檝e had a great team behind me. The back-up is great.
How did you enter the profession?
I did a quantity surveying BSc at Glasgow College of Technology 鈥 now Caledonian University. Quantity surveying was definitely a career choice. It鈥檚 also in the family: my father was a mechanical consultant, my brother is a project manager, my niece is studying to be an architect and my nephew is training to be an engineer.
You鈥檝e said that as a women you have to prove yourself 20 times over. Why?
When I was in college, there were 60 of us in total, with just eight girls. So I鈥檝e always been in a male dominated environment. After that I dealt with the fact it was unusual for a woman to walk on to a site. There鈥檚 that initial shock.
I don鈥檛 know how to say this, but men, by nature, might say 鈥渨hat do women know about building?鈥. But it鈥檚 only when you start to talk about something that they realise you know what you鈥檙e doing. On a recent job I was the QS, and the architect and PM were also women. The contractor didn鈥檛 know which way to turn.
Source
QS News
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