Ford drops use of ‘chairman’ title, adopts other gender-neutral language

Because words matter.

Ford Motor Company notified federal regulators that the 118-year-old automaker has officially replaced the use of “chairman” with “chair.”

And they’re not the only ones making language changes.

The Board of Directors voted on July 8 to amend Ford’s bylaws effective immediately and adopt gender-neutral language throughout, including the title “chair” in place of “chairman” as well as various others revisions. The company filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission dated July 9 shows the actual editing of the original company document with the use of markups.

So now Bill Ford is known as executive chair rather than executive chairman of the  company his great-grandfather founded.

Bill Ford, who now goes by executive chair rather than chairman, stands next to Linda Zhang, chief engineer of F-150, after Ford Motor Co. unveils the electric F-150 Lightning at its World Headquarters in Dearborn on May 19, 2021.

Ford spokeswoman Marisa Bradley told the Free Press on Monday, “Our roles at Ford aren’t gender-exclusive and these changes help limit ambiguity, and drive the inclusive and equitable culture we’re striving for.”

The company had to file notice because it’s publicly traded and investors must be alerted to any modifications to bylaws, regardless of what the updates are.

Back in mid-March, JPMorgan Chase & Co. updated its bylaws to reflect gender-neutral language, replacing “chairman” with “chair” and gender-specific pronouns like “he” and “his” with non-gender-specific terms such as “director.”

President Joe Biden tours the Ford Rouge EV Center on May 18, 2021, in Dearborn. From left, Corey Williams, plant manager, Biden, Bill Ford, executive chairman of Ford Motor Company, and Ford FEO Jim Farley.

The largest U.S. bank “scrubbed its gender designations as pressure grows from both society and investors on global businesses to show they are diversifying and becoming more inclusive,” Bloomberg reported.

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This is part of an ongoing pivot from non-corporate gender-specific terms such as fireman, policeman, stewardess, mailman and waitress to firefighter, police officer, flight attendant, mail carrier and server. 

Meanwhile, General Motors is no longer using “chairman” either. Spokesman David Barnas, company spokesman, said the automaker made the transition back in May. While the bylaws haven’t been changed or submitted to the SEC, company protocol has changed and the updates are made on the GM website.

“Mary Barra’s title adjustment from chairman and CEO to chair and CEO is just one of many changes at General Motors in our journey to be the most inclusive company in the world,” Barnas said.

General Motors CEO Mary Barra meets with plant employees at the GM Fort Wayne Assembly plant on May 30, 2019 in Roanoke, Indiana. She has switched from using "chairman" to "chair," which is part of a corporate trend toward gender neutral language in titles. GM made the change in May.

In 2015, when Barra was named CEO and chairman, the New York Times made news for breaking rank and choosing instead to refer to her as “chairwoman.” But the company stuck with chairman at the time.

“Leading news outlets, ranging from the Wall Street Journal to Automotive News to Forbes.com, had no problem using Barra’s actual new title. News organizations typically these days will refer in gender-neutral fashion to a ‘chair’ or ‘chairperson,’ but that’s not what the Times did,” Forbes said in 2016.

GM spokesman Pat Morrissey told reporter Dale Buss that company leaders did engage in some “discussion around the title. But the standard practice as evidenced by the numerous women on the Fortune Most Powerful List indicates the official title of chairman is the accepted practice. This was approved by the board.”

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