This column is Secret Confessions: Tubong Lugaw Episode 47part of a series called "Voices of Women in Tech," created in collaboration with AnitaB.org, a global enterprise that supports women in technical fields, as well as the organizations that employ them and the academic institutions training the next generation.
So much time, effort, and expense go into fixing tech’s diversity problem — why have we seen so little progress?
SEE ALSO: Hey, tech CEOs: Fighting racism isn't just right, it's also good businessThe proof of our failure is in the data. The 2017 Top Companies for Women Technologists report, which measured more than 547,000 technologists across 63 organizations, showed a mere 1.2 percent year-over-year increase in the number of women in technical roles. Women’s representation in midlevel, senior, and executive roles saw considerably smaller increases of .2 percent, .6 percent, and 1 percent respectively.
These numbers are likely far higher than the industry at large, since Top Companies participants are already committed to measuring their progress. For women of color, the numbers are even more disheartening. The meager increases in women’s representation have gone almost entirely to white women and women of Asian descent.
All of us have to be brave and admit that what we’ve been doing is simply not working.
For years, tech companies have followed a similar formula to diversify their workforces. They host affinity groups, they hold sensitivity training, they tweak hiring processes. But all of these efforts have yielded scant benefits. If the tech industry continues to “improve” at the current rate, it will take decades before we reach gender parity, and even longer before our workforce accurately reflects the population at large. Clearly, something’s gotta give.
All of us have to be brave and admit that what we’ve been doing is simply not working. We need to face the real data, scrap fruitless initiatives, and take an entirely new approach. This is no time to give in to diversity fatigue!
Why do so many organizations continue to fail? For some, there’s a gap between the desire to look good and the actual effort that progress requires. But even executives with perfect motivations are finding themselves looking at stagnant diversity stats. And I know this is true, because I’m one of them.
I’m the leader of AnitaB.org, the leading organization devoted to the advancement of women in technology. We host the annual Grace Hopper Celebration, the world’s biggest gathering of women technologists. We administer Top Companies for Women Technologists, the only program that provides a consistent benchmark of the technical workforce across a wide range of industries.
We are, by all rights, true experts in fostering diversity. And yet, looking at our own internal diversity numbers, I could see no other answer: We had not only failed to move the needle, by most measures we had actually regressed. How could we continue to pressure the industry around us for greater diversity when we ourselves were not able to improve as we intended?
Clearly, we need a new approach. Here’s what we’re advocating: First, the change has to start at the very top. When our board of trustees sought a new CEO for our organization — someone to continue the incredible work that Anita Borg herself began in 1997 — they took a very rare step. Not only did they interview me, a black woman technologist, they hired me. By doing so, they were making a clear statement: It was time for this organization to take the necessary steps toward fully recognizing the intersectionality of the women we serve, and of our own team doing that work.
As part of a series of changes under my leadership, we have hired our first HR director. She’s implementing significantly stronger HR policies and procedures to foster more inclusivity and equity, and helping us adjust our hiring practices — where we advertise, how we assemble interview panels, and other tactical steps — to help us attract a more diverse candidate pool. We’re also requiring that every hiring manager assemble a truly inclusive group of prospective employees.
When we add to our team, leaders must consider candidates with a variety of intersections, including age, gender, race, and ability. We’re also focused on capturing our racial and ethnic data more accurately, especially for those team members who identify with more than one group, to better measure our progress.
When we add to our team, leaders must consider candidates with a variety of intersections, including age, gender, race, and ability.
Right now, I’m also personally vetting every hire we make to ensure we’ve drawn from a broad pool, and that we are bringing on talent that truly reflects the richness of the communities we serve. This commitment takes time away from my other projects, but we accept this trade-off because it’s important to set the tone from the top, and because we cannot continue to operate as we always have.
We’re also focusing on promoting and retaining a diverse set of talented employees — because, frankly, we’ve lost some good people who we wanted to keep. As we always tell the companies who work with us, fixing the “leaky pipeline” is not enough. We cannot hire our way out of this problem. We must fix our retention and promotion process, not simply in addition to hiring better, but first and foremost.
At our core, we’re technologists: Solving problems is what we do best. We need to focus the same skills that have made technology companies the vanguard of economic growth — disruption and innovation — onto the issues that threaten our industry’s progress.
To win the innovation wars, to fill empty seats, to create products that delight customers, change must start with leadership. Visionary leaders need to make bold moves and acknowledge the depth of the issue. We need to throw out initiatives that haven’t made an impact, look at real data, and build a better way forward. Companies that undertake a new approach are the companies that are going to see change.
SEE ALSO: The long, strange history of the backlash against women in techAnd it has to start with those of us who do the work of diversity, equity, and inclusion on a daily basis.
Already, we’ve seen some progress. Our diversity numbers so far this year look very different than they did at the end of 2017. And, as we set a new baseline and measure ourselves against it, we will be better able to identify places where we’ve improved and those where we’ve regressed, codifying our tactics for future gains. We don’t expect everything to work perfectly — there is no silver bullet — but we do expect to take honest and unflinching measurements of what does move the needle.
Fixing tech’s diversity issues is truly personal for me, and for everyone who works at AnitaB.org. As we offer ourselves as an example, we want the companies we work with to know we’re willing to do the same critical work and, as leaders, hold ourselves personally accountable in the same ways that we’re demanding of them.
Brenda Darden Wilkerson serves as the President and CEO of AnitaB.org, an organization working to shape public opinion about issues of critical importance to women technologists in academia, industry, and government.
Topics Social Good
Waterman Redux by Anthony MadridChildren with Mothers Don’t Eat Houses by Sabrina Orah MarkWriters’ Fridges: Kristen Arnett by Kristen ArnettAs Certain as Death and Taxes by Souvankham ThammavongsaWhat the Scientists Who Photographed the Black Hole Like to Read by Rebekah FrumkinHow Not to Be Forgotten by Lauren KaneThe Art of Doodling by The Paris ReviewWinter by Marin SardyReframing Agnes by RL GoldbergSomehow I Became Respectable by John WatersRedux: April in Paris by The Paris ReviewWelcoming Our New Digital Director, Craig Morgan Teicher by The Paris ReviewGone in Sixty Sentences by Rachel KushnerWriters’ Fridges: Kristen Arnett by Kristen ArnettThe Hidden Harper Lee by Casey N. CepGangster Bedtime Stories by Rich CohenThere Are No Small Fascisms: An Interview with Dasa DrndicPoetry Rx: Sometimes Sadness Is Just What Comes between the Dancing by Claire SchwartzRedux: Blue in the Evenings by The Paris ReviewSomething Always Remains by Trevor Paglen Tinder tests two Police sketch of a burglary suspect goes horribly wrong Viral TikTok for air fryer cleaning trick works, but it's not magic 'If you can't handle me at my worst' has evolved into a bigger, better meme Instagram, YouTube, Facebook fail women, sexism report card finds WhatsApp wants to warn you about text messaging scams Home Depot is selling a giant 8 Robinhood data breach exposes 7 million users' personal information Breaking down Mike Huckabee's tweet which may be the worst of all time 9 websites to download Lightroom presets to up your photography game 'Tyrannophone' iPhone case comes with an actual dinosaur tooth Officials think they've cracked the LA 'jetpack man' mystery Social media fills with footage from Astroworld tragedy. Some of it helps. Newspaper tries to be patriotic, accidentally satirises Brexit Ryan Reynolds can't help himself when it comes to rumors about his marriage Twitch streamer gives a young gamer the most heartwarming pep talk after losing No one can tell if this Lindsay Lohan video is an April Fools' Day prank or not YouTube shooting became a Twitter monster because of trolling, not fake news Let's talk about the Guardians of the Galaxy Colin Kaepernick shares his truth on Netflix in a way you haven't heard before
2.2334s , 8248.1328125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Secret Confessions: Tubong Lugaw Episode 47】,Evergreen Information Network