Women in Business
This is your Women in Business: Generate 5 discussion points for a podcast episode about women navigating the current economic landscape, focusing on the tech industry. podcast. Welcome back to Women in Business. I’m your host, and today we’re diving straight into how women are navigating this wild economic landscape in the tech industry. Let’s start with the reality check. According to McKinsey and LeanIn.org, women still hold less than a third of tech roles in major companies, and representation drops further for women of color. At the same time, the World Bank notes that digital jobs are growing faster than many traditional sectors. That means opportunity is exploding, but access is still unequal. So if you’re a woman in tech right now, you are operating in a space of both pressure and possibility. First discussion point: surviving and thriving through economic volatility. Big names like Meta, Google, and Amazon have all made headlines with layoffs, and women have often been hit hardest in non-technical and early-career roles. Yet research from the Boston Consulting Group shows that companies with more diverse leadership outperform on innovation revenue. So when you, as a woman, stay visible, keep your skills sharp in areas like artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and cloud computing, you are not just protecting your career, you’re strengthening the companies you work for. Second discussion point: the funding gap for women in tech entrepreneurship. PitchBook and Crunchbase both report that women-founded startups still receive only a tiny slice of global venture capital, often under 3 percent. But here’s the twist: studies from First Round Capital and others have found that diverse founding teams frequently outperform homogenous ones on returns. That means the data is on your side. Women founders are increasingly turning to angel networks like Golden Seeds and accelerator programs like Y Combinator’s female-focused cohorts to bypass old gatekeepers and build their own tables. Third discussion point: remote work and hybrid work as a double-edged sword. Surveys from Deloitte and PwC show that many women in tech value flexibility because it lets them better manage caregiving, health, and personal priorities. But there’s also evidence that when women are remote more often than men, they risk being “out of sight, out of mind” for promotions and stretch assignments. That’s pushing women to be more intentional about visibility: booking regular one-on-ones with managers, speaking up in Zoom rooms, and taking lead roles in high-impact projects, even from home. Fourth discussion point: the skills that matter most now. LinkedIn and Coursera both highlight that the fastest-growing skills in tech include machine learning, data analysis, product management, and cybersecurity. But they also emphasize power skills: communication, negotiation, and leadership. Women who pair technical skills with strategic storytelling and confident negotiation are increasingly stepping into engineering leadership, product director, and founder roles, even in uncertain markets. Fifth discussion point: community as economic power. From Girls Who Code, to Women Who Code, to Black Girls Code, and communities like Elpha and Chief, women are leveraging networks to swap job leads, share salary data, and invest in each other’s companies. In a shaky economy, your network becomes an economic safety net and a launchpad. Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. If this conversation resonated with you, make sure you subscribe so you never miss an episode. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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