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Thriving, Not Just Surviving: Women Redefining Techs Future in 2025

Thriving, Not Just Surviving: Women Redefining Techs Future in 2025



This is your Women in Business podcast.

Welcome back listeners to Women in Business. Today, we’re diving headfirst into what it truly means for women to navigate the tech industry in 2025—a landscape that’s both thrilling and challenging as the digital economy moves faster than ever. Everywhere you look, headlines boast about breakthroughs in AI, cloud computing, and startups turning into unicorns overnight, but the real story that matters to us is: where do women fit into this accelerating picture, and how can we thrive, not just survive?

Let’s start with the numbers, because facts set the stage. Despite women making up nearly half of the global workforce, only about one in four roles in core technology fields—like engineering and computing—are held by women. According to WomenTech Network, women today account for just 26% of STEM jobs and fewer still when you look at artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and top executive positions. Even more striking, none of the so-called “Big Five” tech giants—Google, Apple, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft—has ever had a female CEO. And while Amazon leads these in workforce representation, women still hold fewer than half of positions there, with even lower percentages in technical teams.

That leads directly into the first big discussion point: representation in leadership. The absence of women from C-suite and boardroom tables in tech is not just a missed opportunity for fairness—it’s a missed opportunity for business. Research by McKinsey consistently shows that companies with women in leadership outperform less diverse peers. Still, only 8% of chief technology officers are women right now. Why? Persistent gender bias, lack of access to mentorship, and less visibility to decision-makers remain constant barriers.

Second, let’s talk about pay and advancement. Across the industry, the gender pay gap is alive and well. Data shows that on average, men in tech earn $15,000 more than their female peers in similar roles. When promotion time rolls around, only 87 women move up to manager for every 100 men. The message is loud and clear—economic equality is still far from a reality.

Next, the “bro culture”—and this is where it gets personal for a lot of women. Around 72% report the presence of this culture, characterized by exclusionary behavior, inside jokes, and networks that are tough for outsiders—or women—to break into. This environment is one of the biggest reasons half of all women in tech leave the industry by age 35. Which brings us to workplace culture as our third focus, and why fostering inclusive environments is not a “nice to have”—it’s a business imperative if companies want to retain top talent.

Fourth, mentorship and networking—or rather, the lack of it. More than half of women in tech today report not having equal access to the same networks and opportunities as their male counterparts. And that’s despite the fact that programs like Women Impact Tech and grassroots initiatives are showing real progress in communities like Lake County, Illinois. So how can more organizations go beyond token gestures to build truly supportive ecosystems?

Finally, let's highlight the skills and future prospects. There’s positive momentum: More women are mastering Gen AI, cloud computing, and data science than ever before. Deloitte found that 40% of women in tech are now using generative AI at work, leading to real productivity gains. The future isn’t just being built by men—it’s being co-created by women who refuse to play small, break old molds, and redefine what’s possible.

Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. Don’t forget to subscribe for more empowering stories and game-changing conversations. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai


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