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Women in Tech: Breaking Through the Broken Rung in Today's Economy
Published 3 weeks, 6 days ago
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This is your Women in Business podcast.
Welcome back to Women in Business, listeners, where we celebrate the trailblazers shaping tomorrow's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving into how women are navigating the tough tech landscape amid economic turbulence, turning challenges into triumphs.
First, let's face the stark reality of underrepresentation. According to Boundev's 2026 report, women make up just 26% of the U.S. STEM workforce—a tiny 1% bump since 2000—and only 24% of core tech roles at giants like Google, Apple, and Meta. In AI, it's even bleaker at 22% globally. Yet, this disparity fuels our fire. Women like those at Women in Tech Global are pushing back, proving that when we claim space in boardrooms and codebases, innovation soars.
Second, the broken rung to leadership is crumbling under scrutiny. Boundev data shows entry-level tech jobs start at 29% women, but plummet to 16% for CTOs and 11% of executive spots per McKinsey's 2024 insights. The economic squeeze amplifies this—recent layoffs hit women 1.6 times harder, with 69% of 2022 cuts affecting them despite our smaller workforce share, as WomenHack reports. But here's the empowerment: women are promoted at higher rates now, 15.9% versus 13.6% for men, according to StrongDM's stats. We're not just surviving; we're climbing smarter, demanding transparent hiring at mid-size firms where diversity hits 30%.
Third, pay gaps persist, with women earning 84 cents on the dollar per U.S. Census Bureau figures, tighter at 94% in computer science. Venture capital? A measly 1% goes to all-female startups, says PitchBook. In this volatile economy, we're countering with fierce negotiation and networks like WomenHack, turning equity into reality.
Fourth, retention is our battleground—56% of women exit mid-career, per McKinsey and Accenture, citing burnout, bias, and work-life strains. Forty-five percent leave over balance issues, and 62% face discrimination. Layoffs erased diversity gains, yet 73% of women using generative AI report productivity boosts, closing the daily AI usage gap from 34% to men's 43%. Remote work post-COVID offers flexibility; we're leveraging it to stay, mentor, and rise.
Finally, the path forward shines bright. Bootcamps see 36-40% women graduates in the U.S., and companies like Amazon with 45% female staff lead by example. Globally, places like the Netherlands boast 39% women in tech. Listeners, embrace AI tools, build allyships, and advocate—your voice closes gaps. By 2070 parity looms, but we accelerate it now through resilience and unity.
Thank you for tuning in, empowered women of business. Subscribe for more inspiration, and remember: your brilliance drives change. 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, listeners, where we celebrate the trailblazers shaping tomorrow's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving into how women are navigating the tough tech landscape amid economic turbulence, turning challenges into triumphs.
First, let's face the stark reality of underrepresentation. According to Boundev's 2026 report, women make up just 26% of the U.S. STEM workforce—a tiny 1% bump since 2000—and only 24% of core tech roles at giants like Google, Apple, and Meta. In AI, it's even bleaker at 22% globally. Yet, this disparity fuels our fire. Women like those at Women in Tech Global are pushing back, proving that when we claim space in boardrooms and codebases, innovation soars.
Second, the broken rung to leadership is crumbling under scrutiny. Boundev data shows entry-level tech jobs start at 29% women, but plummet to 16% for CTOs and 11% of executive spots per McKinsey's 2024 insights. The economic squeeze amplifies this—recent layoffs hit women 1.6 times harder, with 69% of 2022 cuts affecting them despite our smaller workforce share, as WomenHack reports. But here's the empowerment: women are promoted at higher rates now, 15.9% versus 13.6% for men, according to StrongDM's stats. We're not just surviving; we're climbing smarter, demanding transparent hiring at mid-size firms where diversity hits 30%.
Third, pay gaps persist, with women earning 84 cents on the dollar per U.S. Census Bureau figures, tighter at 94% in computer science. Venture capital? A measly 1% goes to all-female startups, says PitchBook. In this volatile economy, we're countering with fierce negotiation and networks like WomenHack, turning equity into reality.
Fourth, retention is our battleground—56% of women exit mid-career, per McKinsey and Accenture, citing burnout, bias, and work-life strains. Forty-five percent leave over balance issues, and 62% face discrimination. Layoffs erased diversity gains, yet 73% of women using generative AI report productivity boosts, closing the daily AI usage gap from 34% to men's 43%. Remote work post-COVID offers flexibility; we're leveraging it to stay, mentor, and rise.
Finally, the path forward shines bright. Bootcamps see 36-40% women graduates in the U.S., and companies like Amazon with 45% female staff lead by example. Globally, places like the Netherlands boast 39% women in tech. Listeners, embrace AI tools, build allyships, and advocate—your voice closes gaps. By 2070 parity looms, but we accelerate it now through resilience and unity.
Thank you for tuning in, empowered women of business. Subscribe for more inspiration, and remember: your brilliance drives change. 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