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Women in Business: Tech's New Power Grid - Breaking Through Silicon Ceilings in a Downturn Economy
Published 2 months, 1 week ago
Description
This is your Women in Business podcast.
Welcome back to Women in Business, where we celebrate the unstoppable force of women shaping tomorrow's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving into how women are navigating the tech industry's turbulent economic waters with grit, innovation, and sheer determination. Let's jump right in.
First off, representation is climbing, but we've got work to do. StrongDM reports that women now make up 27.6% of the global tech workforce, a modest rebound from 26.7% in 2021 after pandemic dips. In the US, big players like Amazon lead at 45% female employees, while Microsoft trails at 29%, according to their diversity reports. In Europe, ComputerWeekly notes 22% of IT specialists are women, up from 19% six years ago, reaching 441,000 strong. Listeners, this progress screams potential—imagine doubling that to close the gap, as tech inclusion strategist Karen Blake urges.
Shifting to leadership, only 17% of tech companies have women CEOs, per StrongDM stats, yet we're promoted faster—15.9% rate versus 13.6% for men in 2022. WomenTech Network highlights growth in roles like QA and product management, projecting women to hold 35% of tech jobs by 2025 and over 30% of core engineering by 2030. In this tight economy with 70% of firms facing skills shortages, as noted by industry surveys, your leadership is the edge companies crave.
Pay tells a mixed story of resilience. Women in computer science earn 94 cents on the male dollar—slimmer than the broader 83-cent gap—though female startup CEOs earned $20,000 less last year. Amid layoffs, women were 65% more likely to be cut in 2022-2023, yet nine in ten who left would return for better conditions. That's empowerment: turning setbacks into setups for bigger leaps.
Retention challenges hit hard—50% of women exit tech by 35, 45% higher than men, citing culture, growth limits, and family, says Girls Who Code and Accenture. Burnout plagues 57% of us versus 36% of men, fueled by pandemic loads. But remote work and economic pressures are shifting norms, opening doors.
Finally, seize the trends: Women in Tech spotlight AI ethics leads, data governance, and UX roles where your storytelling and empathy shine. With BLS projecting 19% growth in computer science jobs by 2026, upskill in cloud and analytics—fields hungry for your systems thinking.
Sisters, the economic headwinds are fierce, but you're the innovators turning VC squeezes into breakthroughs. Own your seat at Google, Apple, or startups alike—demand equity, build networks, and lead unapologetically.
Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Subscribe now for more empowerment. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Welcome back to Women in Business, where we celebrate the unstoppable force of women shaping tomorrow's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving into how women are navigating the tech industry's turbulent economic waters with grit, innovation, and sheer determination. Let's jump right in.
First off, representation is climbing, but we've got work to do. StrongDM reports that women now make up 27.6% of the global tech workforce, a modest rebound from 26.7% in 2021 after pandemic dips. In the US, big players like Amazon lead at 45% female employees, while Microsoft trails at 29%, according to their diversity reports. In Europe, ComputerWeekly notes 22% of IT specialists are women, up from 19% six years ago, reaching 441,000 strong. Listeners, this progress screams potential—imagine doubling that to close the gap, as tech inclusion strategist Karen Blake urges.
Shifting to leadership, only 17% of tech companies have women CEOs, per StrongDM stats, yet we're promoted faster—15.9% rate versus 13.6% for men in 2022. WomenTech Network highlights growth in roles like QA and product management, projecting women to hold 35% of tech jobs by 2025 and over 30% of core engineering by 2030. In this tight economy with 70% of firms facing skills shortages, as noted by industry surveys, your leadership is the edge companies crave.
Pay tells a mixed story of resilience. Women in computer science earn 94 cents on the male dollar—slimmer than the broader 83-cent gap—though female startup CEOs earned $20,000 less last year. Amid layoffs, women were 65% more likely to be cut in 2022-2023, yet nine in ten who left would return for better conditions. That's empowerment: turning setbacks into setups for bigger leaps.
Retention challenges hit hard—50% of women exit tech by 35, 45% higher than men, citing culture, growth limits, and family, says Girls Who Code and Accenture. Burnout plagues 57% of us versus 36% of men, fueled by pandemic loads. But remote work and economic pressures are shifting norms, opening doors.
Finally, seize the trends: Women in Tech spotlight AI ethics leads, data governance, and UX roles where your storytelling and empathy shine. With BLS projecting 19% growth in computer science jobs by 2026, upskill in cloud and analytics—fields hungry for your systems thinking.
Sisters, the economic headwinds are fierce, but you're the innovators turning VC squeezes into breakthroughs. Own your seat at Google, Apple, or startups alike—demand equity, build networks, and lead unapologetically.
Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Subscribe now for more empowerment. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI