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Women in Tech: Breaking Through Silicon Valley's Storm
Published 5 days, 8 hours ago
Description
This is your Women in Business podcast.
Imagine stepping into the high-stakes world of tech amid economic turbulence, where layoffs ripple through Silicon Valley and AI reshapes everything. As a woman leading product at a startup in San Francisco, I've navigated it all, and listeners, let me tell you, it's fueling a fire of empowerment like never before. Today on Women in Business, we're diving into five key ways we're not just surviving this landscape but thriving.
First, representation is climbing, slowly but surely. Boundev reports women now hold 26% of the U.S. STEM workforce and 24% of core tech roles at giants like Google, Apple, and Meta. Deloitte notes 26.7% globally, with StrongDM pegging it at 27.6%—a rebound post-pandemic. In AI, it's tougher at 22% worldwide, yet North America hits 25%, per Boundev. We're proving our place, turning underrepresentation into a call to action.
Second, the broken rung and retention battles rage on. McKinsey highlights how women drop from 29% at entry-level to just 16% of CTOs, with 45% leaving tech citing work-life balance, per Accenture. Half exit by age 35, says Womenhack, often due to bro culture or burnout—57% of us feel it versus 36% of men. But amid layoffs, women were 65% more likely hit in 2022-2023, per Spacelift. Economic squeezes amplify this, yet we're building resilience.
Third, pay gaps and biases persist in this downturn. Women earn 84 cents to a man's dollar, Womenhack states, with a 13% science gap. Unconscious bias questions our skills more, Boundev notes, and digital skills lags make us 25% less AI-ready. Venture capital? Just 2.3% to female founders. Economic uncertainty freezes funding, but we're flipping it by demanding equity audits—75% of firms now do them.
Fourth, corporate shifts are our allies. Google boosted female hires 5% with diverse panels and blind resumes, Boundev shares. Promotions favor us slightly—15.9% versus 13.6% for men, StrongDM says—and 91% of companies promoted women in 2024, up from 76% in 2019. ERGs engage 68% of us, speeding advancement 25%. Remote work and RTO policies? 84% say they spark collaboration, Digital Silk reports. In tight budgets, these DEI ties to bonuses drive real change.
Fifth, seize AI and emerging tech now. Only 34% of women use AI daily versus 43% men, but 73% report productivity boosts, Boundev finds. With cloud at 15% female and data science 12%, per Spacelift, economic innovation demands us. Mentorship lifts satisfaction 33%, and 85% crave executive roles. Listeners, network in ERGs, upskill relentlessly—this landscape favors the bold.
We're shattering ceilings in this economy, proving women don't just adapt; we innovate. Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. Subscribe for more empowerment, and remember: 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
Imagine stepping into the high-stakes world of tech amid economic turbulence, where layoffs ripple through Silicon Valley and AI reshapes everything. As a woman leading product at a startup in San Francisco, I've navigated it all, and listeners, let me tell you, it's fueling a fire of empowerment like never before. Today on Women in Business, we're diving into five key ways we're not just surviving this landscape but thriving.
First, representation is climbing, slowly but surely. Boundev reports women now hold 26% of the U.S. STEM workforce and 24% of core tech roles at giants like Google, Apple, and Meta. Deloitte notes 26.7% globally, with StrongDM pegging it at 27.6%—a rebound post-pandemic. In AI, it's tougher at 22% worldwide, yet North America hits 25%, per Boundev. We're proving our place, turning underrepresentation into a call to action.
Second, the broken rung and retention battles rage on. McKinsey highlights how women drop from 29% at entry-level to just 16% of CTOs, with 45% leaving tech citing work-life balance, per Accenture. Half exit by age 35, says Womenhack, often due to bro culture or burnout—57% of us feel it versus 36% of men. But amid layoffs, women were 65% more likely hit in 2022-2023, per Spacelift. Economic squeezes amplify this, yet we're building resilience.
Third, pay gaps and biases persist in this downturn. Women earn 84 cents to a man's dollar, Womenhack states, with a 13% science gap. Unconscious bias questions our skills more, Boundev notes, and digital skills lags make us 25% less AI-ready. Venture capital? Just 2.3% to female founders. Economic uncertainty freezes funding, but we're flipping it by demanding equity audits—75% of firms now do them.
Fourth, corporate shifts are our allies. Google boosted female hires 5% with diverse panels and blind resumes, Boundev shares. Promotions favor us slightly—15.9% versus 13.6% for men, StrongDM says—and 91% of companies promoted women in 2024, up from 76% in 2019. ERGs engage 68% of us, speeding advancement 25%. Remote work and RTO policies? 84% say they spark collaboration, Digital Silk reports. In tight budgets, these DEI ties to bonuses drive real change.
Fifth, seize AI and emerging tech now. Only 34% of women use AI daily versus 43% men, but 73% report productivity boosts, Boundev finds. With cloud at 15% female and data science 12%, per Spacelift, economic innovation demands us. Mentorship lifts satisfaction 33%, and 85% crave executive roles. Listeners, network in ERGs, upskill relentlessly—this landscape favors the bold.
We're shattering ceilings in this economy, proving women don't just adapt; we innovate. Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. Subscribe for more empowerment, and remember: 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