Returning to work after childbirth is deeply personal and often overwhelming for new mothers. Looking back, I realise how important it is for organisations to allow women to transition back at their own pace.
I chose to resume work 90 days after childbirth, initially for shorter hours, and that gradual re-entry helped me reclaim my professional rhythm. The support from the Policybazaar leadership, my team and my family was instrumental in easing my return to work.
I strongly believe the responsibility from a leadership standpoint goes beyond maternity policies. It is about building a culture where motherhood is not seen as a career disruption, but as a life stage that can coexist with ambition. Flexible work models, empathetic managers, and outcome-driven performance evaluation make a meaningful difference. Even more important is removing the unspoken pressure to “prove commitment” after returning.
A career spans three to four decades — a few months or even a year of pause does not define long-term growth. In fact, motherhood builds resilience, patience, adaptability and sharper prioritisation — qualities that strengthen leadership.
When organisations move from token gestures to real structural support, they don’t just retain women — they build stronger, more balanced leadership teams.