This is your Women in Business podcast.
Welcome back to Women in Business, the podcast where we dive deep into the stories and strategies of women changing the face of industry. Today, we’re tackling one of the fastest-evolving sectors out there—the tech industry—and how women are navigating the current economic landscape.
Let’s get straight to the heart of it: women are making deliberate, powerful moves in tech, despite persistent obstacles. In the United States, women now make up around 27% of the tech workforce, up from much lower numbers even a decade ago. But according to data from CompTIA and the Women in Digital Report 2025, that number hides a lot of nuance, especially when we dig into where women are in the pipeline and who is making it to the top. There is some encouraging progress: reports highlight that women have seen a steady increase in technical and leadership roles since 2015. Still, the lived experiences tell us the journey is far from finished.
Take the gender pay gap. In Silicon Valley, tech jobs pay exceptionally well, but women—especially women of color—are still being offered less, and the gap widens as seniority grows. Software developers who are women earn close to 94% of what their male counterparts do, which is an improvement over other sectors, yet the wage gap persists, especially at the executive level. For instance, women tech CEOs at startups are making about $20,000 less than male CEOs.
Leadership also remains a key battleground. Women make up only about 14% of global tech leaders. Only 17% of tech companies have a woman as CEO, and there’s a real bottleneck when it comes to promotions. Over half of women in tech roles believe that climbing the ladder is harder for them, not due to skill, but structural and cultural barriers.
Location and flexibility are unexpected factors shaping this story. Regions like Columbia, South Carolina, and cities in the South are emerging as new hot spots, offering more female tech hires higher earnings and career advancement than even Silicon Valley. Cities like Little Rock are reshaping what it means for women to thrive in tech—proving that opportunity doesn’t just live on the coasts. Remote work has also been a game-changer, offering freedom but, at times, leading to burnout, especially highlighted during the pandemic.
Another challenge and opportunity is AI. According to Skillsoft’s Women in Tech Report 2024, three-fifths of women aren’t yet using AI at work, and companies everywhere are rushing to upskill. For those who are engaging with AI, a majority feel not just more productive but also more confident about their place in the future workforce. Closing the AI skills gap is now fundamental for equity and advancement.
So, here are five discussion points for today: persistent pay gaps and what’s working to shrink them, strategies that open leadership paths for women in tech, how geography and remote work influence advancement, ways to battle burnout and attrition, especially post-pandemic, and finally, what mastering emerging technologies like AI can do for women’s careers right now.
Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. If you’re inspired by these stories and want to keep the conversation going, don’t forget to subscribe and share this episode. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Published on 2 months, 2 weeks ago
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