Stanford GSB researchers designed an experimental program that helps women quickly boost their skills so they can land technology jobs
Why aren’t there more women working in tech? For all the hiring pledges, networking initiatives and one-on-one mentoring programs, women hold 30% of tech jobs worldwide — even though they make up half the global population.
The implications of having a more representative workforce are straightforward: It can reduce unintended disparities and increase the prospect that the benefits of technology will be widely shared.
There’s another concern. Tech is expected to add workers at a faster rate than many other major job categories over the next eight years, suggesting that today’s mass layoffs are a temporary blip. If business leaders and policymakers don’t find ways to accelerate efforts to diversify the sector, then women — and other underrepresented groups — will continue to lose out on tech’s high-paying jobs.
Susan Athey, the Economics of Technology Professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Business and a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Researchopen in new window (SIEPR), and Emil Palikotopen in new window, a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford GSB’s Golub Capital Social Impact Lab, think they have just the catalyst the sector needs to close the diversity gap.
Athey — the founding director of the social impact lab — and Palikot recently teamed with a Poland-based organization that supports women looking to transition into careers in tech who had already acquired the necessary basic skills but had been unable to find a job. The organization, Dare ITopen in new window, couldn’t come close to meeting the demand for its free one-on-one mentoring program: 2,000 women would apply for 200 openings in each cohort.
This piece originally appeared in Stanford Business Insights from Stanford Graduate School of Business. To receive business ideas and insights from Stanford GSB click here: (To sign up : https://www.gsb.stanford.edu/insights/about/emails ) ]