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Smashing the Silicon Ceiling: Women Reboot the Tech World

Smashing the Silicon Ceiling: Women Reboot the Tech World



This is your Women in Business podcast.

Welcome back to Women in Business, where we put a spotlight on the movers, the innovators, and the builders transforming what it means to be a woman in the world of commerce. Today, our focus is cutting through the ever-evolving economic landscape as women navigate the tech industry—a space renowned for both rapid growth and persistent hurdles.

The facts make it clear: despite gains, the gender gap in tech is stubborn. According to the latest data from organizations like McKinsey & Company and CompTIA, less than 30 percent of roles in U.S. tech companies are held by women, and in global tech leadership, only about 14 percent are women. Compare that to the broader workforce, where women make up almost half of all jobs. As we look around at giants like Amazon, Facebook, Apple, Google, and Microsoft, women remain in the minority. Amazon leads with 45 percent women, but the others range from just 33 to 37 percent.

But it’s not just about numbers at the entry level. One major challenge is the sharp drop in female representation as you go up the ladder. While women account for over 40 percent of entry-level software tech roles, only about a quarter, or less, reach manager or senior executive posts. The disparity is even more glaring in high-profile leadership—only around 8 to 9 percent of C-suite tech roles are filled by women. And, strikingly, none of these big tech titans—Apple, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft—have ever had a female CEO.

That brings us to the pay gap, which, while closing, still lingers. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that women in tech earned about 16 percent less than their male counterparts in 2023. It’s worth noting that even as hybrid and remote work options expand, women in tech were still content to settle for around 95 cents for every dollar paid to men, according to analysis published in WomenTech Network reports.

Culture and retention are the next big hurdles we have to tackle. We’re losing talent too soon. Nearly half of all women in tech have left the industry by age 35, and women are more likely to experience layoffs, partly because they haven’t broken into seniority ranks. Top reasons cited for departure? Negative company culture, lack of advancement opportunity, and the persistent need to work harder to prove themselves—70 percent of women in tech report feeling this pressure.

Yet, the horizon isn’t all gloom. Data science roles, e-commerce, and payments show comparatively stronger female representation, with close to half of data scientist positions in the US filled by women. There’s a real appetite for change among companies, with findings that improving support, flexibility, and work-life balance could tempt the majority of women who left tech to return. Industry-wide, the drumbeat for more role models, mentorship, and policy shifts grows louder.

So, as we keep our sights set on progress, let’s wrap our discussion around these key points: persistent gender gaps, barriers to advancement, pay and promotion disparities, culture and retention challenges, and finally, the critical role of support systems and policy changes for women in tech.

Thank you for tuning in to today’s conversation on Women in Business. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode spotlighting the voices that redefine our industries. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Published on 4 weeks, 1 day ago






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