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Tech's Missing Million: Empowering Women to Thrive and Disrupt

Tech's Missing Million: Empowering Women to Thrive and Disrupt



This is your Women in Business podcast.

Welcome back to Women in Business, the podcast where we explore how women are thriving and challenging the status quo in today's economy. Today we're diving deep into the tech industry, where women are navigating significant challenges but also creating remarkable opportunities. Let's get started.

First, let's talk about representation. Right now, women make up about 27.6 percent of the technology workforce globally, according to the latest data. That might sound like progress, but consider this: women represent 42 percent of the overall global labor force. So we're still drastically underrepresented in tech. In the United States specifically, roughly 3.7 million women work in tech positions, representing just 23 percent of the tech labor force. Even at major companies like Google, Apple, and Microsoft, women make up only 33 to 34 percent of their entire workforce.

Here's where it gets interesting. Women are leaving tech at alarming rates. Half of all women in the industry leave by age 35. Why? According to research, 37 percent cite bad company culture, 28 percent point to limited growth opportunities, and 27 percent leave for family reasons. Women in tech experience burnout at significantly higher rates than men, with 57 percent of women reporting burnout compared to just 36 percent of men. This creates a domino effect that keeps women from advancing into leadership roles.

Let's address the leadership gap directly. Women hold only 25 percent of C-suite positions in tech, and just 5 percent of those positions go to women of color. When we look at promotions, for every 100 men promoted to manager, only 87 women and 82 women of color receive that same opportunity. This shortage of female candidates in the pipeline perpetuates the cycle of underrepresentation at every level.

The financial reality is sobering too. Women in tech earn approximately 16 percent less than their male counterparts according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data. The median weekly earnings for women in tech sit at around 1,005 dollars, creating a significant pay disparity that compounds over careers.

But here's the empowering part. Seventy percent of women in tech say that if conditions improved, they would consider returning to the industry. Nine out of ten women who have left tech claim they would come back if the workplace environment changed. This tells us something crucial: the talent is there, the desire is there. What's needed are systemic changes in how tech companies cultivate culture, support advancement, and value their female employees.

Companies that address the pain points women face in tech could potentially increase female representation by nearly one million workers in Europe alone. When we create support networks where women feel equally valued, reduce isolation, and build clear career pathways, everyone benefits. The tech industry needs these voices now more than ever.

Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. Please subscribe so you don't miss our next episode. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Published on 1 week, 5 days ago






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