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Women in Tech: Surviving Layoffs, Closing Pay Gaps, and Leading the AI Revolution

Women in Tech: Surviving Layoffs, Closing Pay Gaps, and Leading the AI Revolution

Published 1 month, 1 week ago
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This is your Women in Business podcast.

Welcome back to Women in Business, listeners, 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 turbulent tech landscape amid economic headwinds like layoffs, AI disruptions, and venture capital squeezes. Let's empower you with five key discussion points, straight from the latest stats.

First, representation is climbing, but slowly—women now make up 27.6% of the tech workforce, a modest rebound from the pandemic dip, according to StrongDM's 2026 report. At giants like Amazon, it's 45%, while Microsoft lags at 29%. Yet, software development remains male-dominated at 91.88% men. The empowerment here? Women dominate roles like operations research analysts at 51% and web designers at 48.6%, per Digital Silk data. Lean into these strengths, sisters—your presence in UX/UI and product management is surging, positioning you at the heart of innovation.

Second, the economic crunch hits women harder in layoffs. During 2022-2023 cuts, women comprised 45% of those laid off despite being just 26-28% of the workforce, reports WomenTech.net. You're 1.6 times more likely to face the axe, often due to underrepresentation in senior roles. But here's the fire: 9 out of 10 women who've left tech would return with better conditions, says Spacelift. Use this resilience—network boldly, upskill in high-demand areas, and demand transparency from employers.

Third, promotions offer a bright spot—women advanced at 15.9% versus 13.6% for men in 2022, per StrongDM. Companies with 30% female execs outperform financially, notes Digital Silk. Still, for every 100 men promoted to manager, only 87 women rise. Listeners, channel this momentum: 85% of women crave exec roles, and 92% report better equity experiences now. Seek mentors, amplify your wins, and push for DEI commitments that stick.

Fourth, the pay gap persists but narrows in tech—women earn 94 cents on the dollar in computer science, far better than the 83-cent average elsewhere, StrongDM confirms. Female startup CEOs earn $20,000 less, yet 72% of women feel confident in their skills. Economic tightfistedness makes VC scarcer—only 2.3% funds women-led startups. Empower yourselves: 83% prioritize companies reporting fair pay gaps. Negotiate fiercely and build alliances.

Finally, AI and remote work reshape everything. Women lag slightly in daily AI use at 34% versus 43% for men, but senior women lead adoption by 12-16%, per WomenTech.net. Euronews warns AI job losses could hit tech women harder, with 60,000 UK women quitting yearly over advancement gaps. Yet, 84% love return-to-office for collaboration, and remote flexibility curbs burnout. Rise up: Dive into AI, analytics—41% of women's top interest—and turn trends into triumphs.

Listeners, you're not just surviving this landscape—you're redefining it. Thank you 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


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