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Women in Tech: Breaking the 26% Barrier While the Industry Breaks Down
Published 1 month, 1 week ago
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This is your Women in Business podcast.
Welcome 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 fierce women are navigating the tech industry's turbulent waters amid economic ups and downs. Picture this: layoffs hit hard, AI booms, and venture capital tightens, yet women are rising stronger.
First, let's face the stark reality of representation. Women hold just 26.7% of U.S. tech jobs, per the Bureau of Labor Statistics, even though we make up nearly half the overall workforce. At giants like Amazon with 45% female employees, Google at 33%, and Microsoft at 33%, the numbers look better overall, but drop below 25% in core tech roles like software engineering and machine learning. Globally, it's 26-28%, says the CompTIA State of the Tech Workforce report. In this shaky economy, that underrepresentation hits harder, but it's fueling our push for change.
Transitioning to the leadership squeeze: women snag only 15% of CTO and CIO spots in NASDAQ-100 tech firms, and just 28% of VP roles. McKinsey's 2023 data shows companies with gender-diverse exec teams outperform financially by 39%. Economic pressures like tight VC—where all-female teams get just 1-2%—make diverse leadership not just empowering, but a smart business move. Women, we're building pipelines through coding bootcamps, where we claim 36-40% of U.S. graduates.
Now, the brutal attrition crisis: 56% of women leave tech mid-career, double men's rate, according to McKinsey and Accenture. Half exit by age 35, reports Girls Who Code. Why? Burnout at 57% versus 36% for men, 62% facing discrimination, and 66% lacking clear advancement paths, per the Lovelace Report. In the 2022 downturn, women were 1.6 times more likely to be laid off—69% of cuts despite being under 30% of the workforce. Yet, amid this, 92% of us report better workplace equity experiences, and 95% hold permanent roles.
Pay gaps persist—84 cents on the dollar, says U.S. Census Bureau—but computer science narrows it to 94%, and we're promoted faster at 15.9% versus 13.6% for men. AI is our playground: 41% interest in analytics and machine learning, with senior women leading adoption by 12-16%. Remote work post-pandemic helps balance life, and 85% of us prioritize companies with strong female leaders.
Sisters, the economic landscape tests us, but we're innovators in cybersecurity at 24%, cloud at 15%, and thriving in UX design. Deloitte notes mid-size firms hit 30% female tech staff with smart hiring. Demand equity, seek allies, and lead unapologetically—we're the future.
Thank you, listeners, for tuning in to Women in Business. 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 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 fierce women are navigating the tech industry's turbulent waters amid economic ups and downs. Picture this: layoffs hit hard, AI booms, and venture capital tightens, yet women are rising stronger.
First, let's face the stark reality of representation. Women hold just 26.7% of U.S. tech jobs, per the Bureau of Labor Statistics, even though we make up nearly half the overall workforce. At giants like Amazon with 45% female employees, Google at 33%, and Microsoft at 33%, the numbers look better overall, but drop below 25% in core tech roles like software engineering and machine learning. Globally, it's 26-28%, says the CompTIA State of the Tech Workforce report. In this shaky economy, that underrepresentation hits harder, but it's fueling our push for change.
Transitioning to the leadership squeeze: women snag only 15% of CTO and CIO spots in NASDAQ-100 tech firms, and just 28% of VP roles. McKinsey's 2023 data shows companies with gender-diverse exec teams outperform financially by 39%. Economic pressures like tight VC—where all-female teams get just 1-2%—make diverse leadership not just empowering, but a smart business move. Women, we're building pipelines through coding bootcamps, where we claim 36-40% of U.S. graduates.
Now, the brutal attrition crisis: 56% of women leave tech mid-career, double men's rate, according to McKinsey and Accenture. Half exit by age 35, reports Girls Who Code. Why? Burnout at 57% versus 36% for men, 62% facing discrimination, and 66% lacking clear advancement paths, per the Lovelace Report. In the 2022 downturn, women were 1.6 times more likely to be laid off—69% of cuts despite being under 30% of the workforce. Yet, amid this, 92% of us report better workplace equity experiences, and 95% hold permanent roles.
Pay gaps persist—84 cents on the dollar, says U.S. Census Bureau—but computer science narrows it to 94%, and we're promoted faster at 15.9% versus 13.6% for men. AI is our playground: 41% interest in analytics and machine learning, with senior women leading adoption by 12-16%. Remote work post-pandemic helps balance life, and 85% of us prioritize companies with strong female leaders.
Sisters, the economic landscape tests us, but we're innovators in cybersecurity at 24%, cloud at 15%, and thriving in UX design. Deloitte notes mid-size firms hit 30% female tech staff with smart hiring. Demand equity, seek allies, and lead unapologetically—we're the future.
Thank you, listeners, for tuning in to Women in Business. 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