About this episode
This is your Women in Business podcast.Welcome to Women in Business, where we celebrate the unstoppable force of women shaping tomorrow's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving into how women are navigating the turbulent economic landscape in the tech industry—rising above layoffs, AI disruptions, and stubborn gaps with fierce determination and smart strategies.First, let's face the stark reality of representation. According to Boundev's 2026 report, women make up just 26% of the U.S. STEM workforce, a tiny 1% bump since 2000, with only 24% in core tech roles at giants like Google, Apple, and Meta. WomenHack echoes this, pegging it at 26.7% globally, dropping to a mere 16% for CTOs. Yet, here's the empowerment spark: 91% of companies promoted women in tech last year, up from 76% in 2019, proving corporate commitments like pay equity audits at 75% of firms are creating real ladders up.That leads us to the broken rung—the infamous drop-off from entry-level, where women hold 29% of tech jobs, to leadership, where it's just 28% at senior VP and C-suite levels. Digital Silk's stats show 56% of women may exit before mid-career, often citing culture or growth barriers. But listen, sisters: 92% report better workplace experiences with equity focus, and 85% say strong female leaders make them join—companies with 30% women execs outperform financially. You're not just surviving; you're the key to innovation.Now, AI, the economic wildcard. Boundev reveals women hold only 22% of global AI positions and 18% of researcher roles, with just 34% using AI daily versus 43% of men—a skills gap leaving us vulnerable in automation waves. Layoffs hit hard too; WomenTech notes women, at 26-28% of the workforce, comprised 45% of cuts in 2022-2023, 1.6 times more likely to be affected. In this downturn, Ravio's European data shows women at 40% of tech roles but only 21% in exec spots, fueling pay gaps like 84 cents on the dollar.Retention is our battleground. Half of women leave tech by 35, per multiple reports—45% higher rates than men—blaming culture (56%), advancement (48%), or family. Yet, 95% hold permanent roles, and 72% feel confident in their skills. Mentorship boosts satisfaction 33% and promotions 25% faster.Economic resilience? Women in analytics and AI top interest areas at 41%, per Digital Silk. With 37% of startups boasting female founders, up from 28%, and Gen AI yielding 73% productivity gains for users, we're leveraging tools to thrive amid uncertainty.Listeners, you're the vanguard—demand sponsorship, upskill in AI, build networks. The landscape is tough, but your power is reshaping it.Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. Subscribe now for more empowering stories. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For more http://www.quietplease.ai