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Women in Tech: The 35 Percent Illusion - Why the Numbers Hide the Real Story
Published 2 months ago
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This is your Women in Business podcast.
Welcome back to Women in Business, the podcast where we talk about the real challenges and opportunities facing women in today's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving deep into the tech industry, a sector that's reshaping how we work and innovate globally.
Let's start with what the numbers actually tell us. Women currently make up about 35 percent of the tech workforce overall, which sounds promising until you look at where these women actually work. According to data from major tech companies including Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, and Microsoft, women represent between 29 and 45 percent of the overall workforce, but here's the catch: none of these companies report women occupying more than 25 percent of core technical roles. This means women are concentrated in operations, human resources, and product management rather than engineering and development positions. That's our first discussion point: recognizing where the real gaps exist in tech employment.
Our second point addresses the leadership pipeline crisis. Only 17 percent of tech company CEOs are women, and just 8 percent of CTOs are female. Karen Blake, a tech inclusion strategist and former co-CEO of the Tech Talent Charter, points out that we've reached 441,000 women working as IT specialists representing 22 percent of the profession. Yet to achieve equal representation, we'd need to add another 530,000 women to the sector. That's more than doubling current numbers. The climb to leadership is steep, and for every 100 men promoted to manager, only 87 women receive the same promotion.
This brings us to our third discussion point: the attrition crisis that's quietly devastating the industry. Half of all women who enter tech leave by age 35. Women abandon the field at a 45 percent higher rate than men. A Boston Consulting Group study found that 57 percent of women in technology, media, and telecom plan to leave their jobs within two years, citing poor work-life balance. During the 2022 layoffs, women were 65 percent more likely to lose their jobs. When asked why they leave, 37 percent blame bad company culture, 28 percent cite limited growth opportunities, and 27 percent leave for family reasons. The burnout is real: 57 percent of women in tech report feeling burned out compared to 36 percent of men.
Our fourth discussion point focuses on emerging opportunities that are changing the landscape. Women are increasingly stepping into AI product manager roles, cloud engineering positions, and data governance leadership. These fields emphasize communication, systems thinking, and understanding user impact, skills where many women excel. Cloud computing especially offers clear certification pathways, skills that transfer across industries, and abundant remote work opportunities.
Finally, our fifth point is about perspective and persistence. Nine out of ten women who've left tech say they'd consider returning if conditions improve. According to Computer Weekly's analysis, this moment represents both massive improvement and devastatingly slow progress. The industry is growing, and we have more women than ever in these roles, but the work ahead demands intentional action from companies, educational institutions, and society itself.
The tech industry's future depends on creating inclusive cultures and equitable advancement opportunities for women. Thank you so much 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 quietplease dot 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, the podcast where we talk about the real challenges and opportunities facing women in today's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving deep into the tech industry, a sector that's reshaping how we work and innovate globally.
Let's start with what the numbers actually tell us. Women currently make up about 35 percent of the tech workforce overall, which sounds promising until you look at where these women actually work. According to data from major tech companies including Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, and Microsoft, women represent between 29 and 45 percent of the overall workforce, but here's the catch: none of these companies report women occupying more than 25 percent of core technical roles. This means women are concentrated in operations, human resources, and product management rather than engineering and development positions. That's our first discussion point: recognizing where the real gaps exist in tech employment.
Our second point addresses the leadership pipeline crisis. Only 17 percent of tech company CEOs are women, and just 8 percent of CTOs are female. Karen Blake, a tech inclusion strategist and former co-CEO of the Tech Talent Charter, points out that we've reached 441,000 women working as IT specialists representing 22 percent of the profession. Yet to achieve equal representation, we'd need to add another 530,000 women to the sector. That's more than doubling current numbers. The climb to leadership is steep, and for every 100 men promoted to manager, only 87 women receive the same promotion.
This brings us to our third discussion point: the attrition crisis that's quietly devastating the industry. Half of all women who enter tech leave by age 35. Women abandon the field at a 45 percent higher rate than men. A Boston Consulting Group study found that 57 percent of women in technology, media, and telecom plan to leave their jobs within two years, citing poor work-life balance. During the 2022 layoffs, women were 65 percent more likely to lose their jobs. When asked why they leave, 37 percent blame bad company culture, 28 percent cite limited growth opportunities, and 27 percent leave for family reasons. The burnout is real: 57 percent of women in tech report feeling burned out compared to 36 percent of men.
Our fourth discussion point focuses on emerging opportunities that are changing the landscape. Women are increasingly stepping into AI product manager roles, cloud engineering positions, and data governance leadership. These fields emphasize communication, systems thinking, and understanding user impact, skills where many women excel. Cloud computing especially offers clear certification pathways, skills that transfer across industries, and abundant remote work opportunities.
Finally, our fifth point is about perspective and persistence. Nine out of ten women who've left tech say they'd consider returning if conditions improve. According to Computer Weekly's analysis, this moment represents both massive improvement and devastatingly slow progress. The industry is growing, and we have more women than ever in these roles, but the work ahead demands intentional action from companies, educational institutions, and society itself.
The tech industry's future depends on creating inclusive cultures and equitable advancement opportunities for women. Thank you so much 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 quietplease dot 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