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Tech's 35 Percent Problem: Why Half of Women Leave by 35 and What We Can Do About It
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 explore the real challenges and opportunities facing women in today's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving deep into what it means to navigate the tech industry as a woman in 2026.
Let's start with the big picture. Women currently make up about 35 percent of the tech workforce globally, which sounds promising until you realize that women represent 42 percent of the overall labor force worldwide. According to Computer Weekly, we've reached 441,000 women working as IT specialists, representing 22 percent of the profession in some regions. That's progress, but Karen Blake, a tech inclusion strategist and former co-CEO of the Tech Talent Charter, reminds us that to achieve equal representation, we'd need to add another 530,000 women to the sector. We're talking about more than doubling current numbers.
Now here's where it gets challenging. Research from Girls Who Code and Accenture reveals that 50 percent of women who enter the technology field abandon it by age 35. Women leave tech at a 45 percent higher rate than men do. Why? According to spacelift.io data, 37 percent of women cite bad company culture, 28 percent point to limited growth opportunities, and 27 percent leave mainly for family reasons. This isn't just about individual choice; it's about systemic barriers that make staying feel impossible.
Leadership representation tells another troubling story. Only 17 percent of tech company CEOs are women, and just 8 percent of chief technology officers are women. At the biggest U.S. tech companies like Amazon, Facebook, Apple, Google, and Microsoft, women occupy no more than a quarter of core technical roles. The promotion pipeline is equally concerning. For every 100 men promoted to manager, only 87 women receive the same advancement. This creates a compounding effect that makes climbing the ladder exponentially harder.
But here's what gives me hope. StrongDM reports that women in tech are actually promoted at a somewhat higher rate than men, at 15.9 percent versus 13.6 percent. Additionally, the earnings gap in computer science is among the narrowest in STEM fields, with women earning about 94 percent of what men do. According to womentech.net, emerging opportunities are appearing in high-growth roles like analytics engineering, applied data science, and data governance. These positions value both technical expertise and something women often excel at: the ability to connect data to broader organizational goals and tell compelling stories with numbers.
The path forward requires action at every level. Nine out of ten women who have left tech claim they would consider returning if conditions improve. That's our signal listeners. Companies need to create inclusive cultures, address burnout which affects 57 percent of women in tech compared to 36 percent of men, and genuinely invest in mentorship and advancement pathways.
The conversation doesn't end here. We have work to do, but we also have momentum. Thank you so much for tuning in to Women in Business today. Please subscribe to stay updated on future episodes as we continue exploring these critical issues. 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, the podcast where we explore the real challenges and opportunities facing women in today's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving deep into what it means to navigate the tech industry as a woman in 2026.
Let's start with the big picture. Women currently make up about 35 percent of the tech workforce globally, which sounds promising until you realize that women represent 42 percent of the overall labor force worldwide. According to Computer Weekly, we've reached 441,000 women working as IT specialists, representing 22 percent of the profession in some regions. That's progress, but Karen Blake, a tech inclusion strategist and former co-CEO of the Tech Talent Charter, reminds us that to achieve equal representation, we'd need to add another 530,000 women to the sector. We're talking about more than doubling current numbers.
Now here's where it gets challenging. Research from Girls Who Code and Accenture reveals that 50 percent of women who enter the technology field abandon it by age 35. Women leave tech at a 45 percent higher rate than men do. Why? According to spacelift.io data, 37 percent of women cite bad company culture, 28 percent point to limited growth opportunities, and 27 percent leave mainly for family reasons. This isn't just about individual choice; it's about systemic barriers that make staying feel impossible.
Leadership representation tells another troubling story. Only 17 percent of tech company CEOs are women, and just 8 percent of chief technology officers are women. At the biggest U.S. tech companies like Amazon, Facebook, Apple, Google, and Microsoft, women occupy no more than a quarter of core technical roles. The promotion pipeline is equally concerning. For every 100 men promoted to manager, only 87 women receive the same advancement. This creates a compounding effect that makes climbing the ladder exponentially harder.
But here's what gives me hope. StrongDM reports that women in tech are actually promoted at a somewhat higher rate than men, at 15.9 percent versus 13.6 percent. Additionally, the earnings gap in computer science is among the narrowest in STEM fields, with women earning about 94 percent of what men do. According to womentech.net, emerging opportunities are appearing in high-growth roles like analytics engineering, applied data science, and data governance. These positions value both technical expertise and something women often excel at: the ability to connect data to broader organizational goals and tell compelling stories with numbers.
The path forward requires action at every level. Nine out of ten women who have left tech claim they would consider returning if conditions improve. That's our signal listeners. Companies need to create inclusive cultures, address burnout which affects 57 percent of women in tech compared to 36 percent of men, and genuinely invest in mentorship and advancement pathways.
The conversation doesn't end here. We have work to do, but we also have momentum. Thank you so much for tuning in to Women in Business today. Please subscribe to stay updated on future episodes as we continue exploring these critical issues. 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