A recent post by Reshma Saujani stopped me in my tracks: 455,000 women left the workforce last year, and nearly half cited caregiving responsibilities as the reason.

At the same time, a recent Fast Company article highlighted how Corporate America is crushing senior-level mothers, the very leaders that companies spent decades trying to elevate. Women described impossible schedules, “dystopian hacks,” and the exhausting pressure of trying to succeed professionally while carrying the invisible labor of caregiving personally.

This is not a pipeline problem. It is a workplace design problem. And the truth is, it’s not that complicated. If companies can redesign entire business models around AI in a matter of months, they can redesign workplace systems around humans too.

We know what people need: flexibility, support, trust, care infrastructure, and leadership that recognizes employees are human beings, not productivity machines. This is not about lowering standards; it is about modernizing systems.

For decades, companies have invested heavily in building female leadership pipelines through mentorship programs, sponsorship initiatives, leadership development tracks, and board readiness efforts. Yet just as women reach some of their most experienced and impactful leadership years, many are forced to step away because the infrastructure surrounding work has failed to evolve alongside life.

We are not losing women because they lack ambition. Rather, we are losing them because the workplace was designed for a world that no longer exists. The modern workplace was built over 100 years ago around a household structure where one person worked while another managed caregiving responsibilities at home. Today, most households require dual incomes, and both men and women are balancing careers alongside childcare, eldercare, family responsibilities, and personal wellbeing. Yet workplaces still operate as if life happens outside the office walls instead of alongside work itself.

And while government absolutely has a role to play in childcare, paid leave, and caregiving policy, we cannot continue waiting for government alone to solve a workforce problem that corporate America itself has the power to solve.

Caregiving is not a personal issue to be managed quietly at home. It is a business issue, a leadership issue, and increasingly, a competitiveness issue. The companies that recognize this first will not only retain women, they will build stronger, more sustainable workplaces for everyone.