Women in Tech 2026: Breaking Through the Broken Rung in Your Backyard
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Women in Tech 2026: Breaking Through the Broken Rung in Your Backyard

4:08 Mar 4, 2026
About this episode
This is your Women in Business podcast.Welcome back to Women in Business, listeners, where we celebrate the unstoppable force of women shaping tomorrow's economy. I'm your host, diving straight into how we're navigating the 2026 tech landscape amid economic headwinds like layoffs and tight venture capital. Despite it all, we're rising—holding 26% of the U.S. STEM workforce according to Boundev's 2026 analysis, with a slight rebound to 27.6% overall in tech per StrongDM stats. Let's unpack five key discussion points empowering us to thrive.First, representation gaps are our starting line, but we're gaining ground. Women make up 24% of core tech roles in computing and engineering, 25% at giants like Google, Apple, and Meta, yet only 16% of CTOs and 22% of global AI positions, as Boundev reports. In this economic squeeze, our entry-level presence at 29% drops to just 28% at senior VP levels due to the broken rung—that critical first managerial step where promotions lag. But here's the empowerment: companies like Google boosted female hires by 5% with diverse interview panels and blind resume reviews. Listeners, demand those structured processes; they're your ladder.Transitioning to the paycheck reality, the gender pay gap persists at 10-13% in engineering and science, with women earning 94 cents on the dollar in computer science per StrongDM, widening to 84 cents overall and even less for Black and Latina women at 63 and 54 cents per Hired and National Partnership data. Economic uncertainty amplifies this, but 75% of firms now conduct pay equity audits, up from past years. We're flipping the script—women are promoted at higher rates, 15.9% versus 13.6% for men in 2022 data from StrongDM. Negotiate boldly, sisters; your value is non-negotiable.Next, retention challenges hit hard in this volatile economy. Half of us leave tech by age 35, 45% more likely than men, citing poor work-life balance by 45%, bad culture by 37%, and limited growth by 28%, per Accenture and ISACA studies. Layoffs in 2022-2023 hit women 65% harder, as Spacelift notes, and burnout affects 57% of us versus 36% of men. Yet, 91% of women who've left would return with better conditions. Economic flexibility is our ally—68% prefer remote or hybrid work, boosting satisfaction by 30% according to Gallup and FlexJobs, and increasing our job applications by 28%.Shining a light on AI, our underrepresentation at 22% globally and 18% of researchers stems from a 25% digital skills gap and lower daily AI use—34% for women versus 43% for men, Boundev reveals. But 73% of us using generative AI report productivity gains, and North America hits 25% female AI roles. In 2026's AI boom, upskill relentlessly; Stanford's AI Index shows 26% women in AI/ML, a foothold we're expanding.Finally, support systems are our superpower. Mentorship speeds promotions by 25% and retention by 38%, while ERGs cut attrition 22%, per Catalyst and Gr
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