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Women in Business: Five Power Moves Tech Leaders Use to Turn Economic Chaos Into Their Launchpad

Women in Business: Five Power Moves Tech Leaders Use to Turn Economic Chaos Into Their Launchpad

Published 2 weeks ago
Description
This is your Women in Business podcast.

Imagine stepping into the heart of Silicon Valley, where the buzz of innovation meets the unyielding spirit of women like Reshma Saujani, founder of Girls Who Code, and Melanie Perkins of Canva, who are rewriting the rules of the tech world amid today's economic turbulence. Welcome to Women in Business, where we empower you, our listeners, to conquer the current landscape. Today, let's dive into five key ways trailblazing women are navigating economic headwinds in tech, turning challenges into triumphs.

First, embrace resilience like Whitney Wolfe Herd, Bumble's visionary founder. With tech layoffs surging—over 260,000 jobs cut in 2023 alone, according to Layoffs.fyi—women leaders are pivoting fast. Herd bootstrapped Bumble to a billion-dollar valuation during economic dips by focusing on community-driven growth, proving that vulnerability fuels strength. Listeners, channel that: audit your skills, upskill in AI via platforms like Coursera, and build unbreakable networks.

Transitioning smoothly, second, master funding hurdles with strategic storytelling, as Sara Blakely of Spanx did to inspire tech peers. Women receive just 2% of venture capital, per PitchBook data, yet Blakely's authentic pitch turned a $5,000 investment into billions. In this high-interest-rate era, craft narratives highlighting your unique value—economic forecasts from McKinsey predict women-led startups will close the gap by 2030 through targeted pitches to funds like Female Founders Fund.

Third, prioritize inclusive innovation, echoing Anne Wojcicki of 23andMe. Economic uncertainty demands efficiency, but Wojcicki's DNA tech thrived by diversifying teams—women hold only 26% of tech jobs, says Women in Tech Network. Her approach? Integrate diverse voices to spot market gaps, like AI ethics tools amid regulatory shifts from the EU's AI Act, boosting profitability even as venture funding dropped 38% last year, per Crunchbase.

Fourth, leverage self-care and mentorship, inspired by single entrepreneurs like those profiled in Entreprenista magazine. Tech's burnout crisis worsens with inflation squeezing budgets, but building rituals—think Peloton sessions or masterminds via Chief—sustains drive. Whitney Wolfe Herd swears by therapy; adopt it to balance hustle and health, fostering the mental fortitude for economic rebounds.

Finally, fifth, bet on purpose-driven scale, like Melanie Perkins, who grew Canva to 170 million users without traditional ads. Amid recessions, align with sustainability—Goldman Sachs reports purpose-led firms outperform by 10%. Perkins' freemium model navigated downturns; you can too, by launching MVPs on Product Hunt and scaling via user feedback.

Listeners, these strategies from powerhouses like Saujani, Herd, Blakely, Wojcicki, and Perkins show you're not just surviving—you're leading the charge. Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. Subscribe now for more empowerment, and remember: your breakthrough awaits. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai


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