Women in Business

Inception Point AI

This is your Women in Business podcast. "Women in Business" is a compelling podcast dedicated to exploring the unique challenges and triumphs of women entrepreneurs and professionals. Tune in for inspiring stories, expert insights, and actionable advice designed to empower women in the business world, with a special focus on the tech industry. 1. Addressing Gender Disparities: How women in tech are overcoming barriers and achieving success in a traditionally male-dominated industry. 2. The Role of Mentorship: Examining the impact of mentorship and networking opportunities on advancing women’s careers in tech. 3. Balancing Innovation and Inclusion: Strategies for fostering inclusive work environments that encourage female innovation and leadership. 4. Navigating Economic Challenges: Insights into how women tech leaders are adapting to economic shifts and emerging stronger. 5. Future Trends: Exploring the future of women in tech and how current economic trends may shape opportunities and challenges. For more info go to https://www.quietplease.ai Check out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjs This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Episodes

  1. Jun 22

    Women in Tech: From Surviving Layoffs to Architecting the Future Economy

    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 the current economic landscape in the tech industry. Let’s start with the big picture. The World Economic Forum reports that women still make up less than a third of the tech workforce globally, yet roles in AI, cybersecurity, and data science are among the fastest growing and highest paid. That means this tough economic moment, with layoffs and budget cuts, is also a window where women can step into the roles shaping the future, not just reacting to it. First discussion point: resilience in the era of tech layoffs. We’ve seen headlines about companies like Meta, Amazon, and Google cutting jobs, and women—especially women of color—are often hit hardest because they are overrepresented in roles viewed as “non-core,” like operations or support functions. At the same time, McKinsey research shows that women leaders are more likely to champion employee well‑being and DEI, which are critical to long-term performance. So the question for us is: how do we pivot into roles that are seen as central to revenue and innovation, like product, engineering, and data, and make our value impossible to ignore? Second discussion point: skills, not job titles, as the new currency. LinkedIn and Burning Glass Institute data both highlight that skills in cloud computing, AI and machine learning, cybersecurity, and product management continue to command strong demand and pay, even in a shaky economy. For women in tech, that means reskilling and upskilling are economic power moves. Think of a marketing manager who learns SQL and product analytics, or a project manager who trains in agile delivery and cloud platforms like Amazon Web Services or Microsoft Azure. In a skills-based hiring world, those shifts change your earning potential dramatically. Third discussion point: funding and entrepreneurship in a tight money cycle. PitchBook data shows that women-founded startups still receive only a single-digit percentage of venture capital dollars, and in downturns that share often shrinks even more. Yet we’re also seeing women founders building profitable, lean tech companies in fintech, health tech, and climate tech by focusing on revenue earlier and using alternative funding sources like revenue-based financing, angel syndicates, or crowdfunding platforms. The economic landscape might be tougher, but it’s also pressuring the industry to value sustainable, customer-focused businesses—an area where many women excel. Fourth discussion point: remote and hybrid work as a lever of power, not just flexibility. Companies like Salesforce, Microsoft, and Atlassian have embraced hybrid models, which can be a lifeline for caregivers, who are disproportionately women. But hybrid work can also make women less visible for promotions if they’re not intentional. The challenge is to use flexibility strategically: overcommunicating impact, leading cross-functional projects, and building networks across time zones so that your contributions are seen, not hidden behind a screen. Fifth discussion point: networks, mentorship, and sponsors as economic armor. Organizations like Girls Who Code, Women Who Code, AnitaB.org with the Grace Hopper Celebration, and Black Girls Code are more than communities; they’re economic infrastructure. They help women access job leads, speaking opportunities, board roles, and insider information on which teams are growing or shrinking. In an uncertain economy, the women who are most connected are often the ones who land on their feet fastest and climb the highest. As you listen, I want you to see yourself not as someone trying to survive this economic moment, but as someone shaping what comes next in tech. Your skills, your perspective, your leadership style—they’re not just welcome in this industry, they’re needed. Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. Make sure you subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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

    4 min
  2. Jun 21

    Women in Tech: Turning Underfunded Into Overperforming in 2024's Economy

    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. You’re listening to Women in Business, and today we’re diving straight into how women are navigating the current economic landscape in the tech industry. Let’s start with the reality: according to McKinsey and Company, women now hold around a quarter of technical roles in major tech companies, and that share is slowly growing, even as the industry faces layoffs, tighter funding, and rapid AI disruption. At the same time, PitchBook reports that women‑founded startups still receive less than 3 percent of global venture capital, even though data from Boston Consulting Group shows that women‑led startups, on average, generate more revenue per dollar invested. That tension between underfunding and overperformance is shaping how women move through tech right now. The first big discussion point for us is power in uncertainty. As the global economy cools and tech companies from Meta to Google tighten budgets, women often bear the brunt of “last in, first out” restructuring. Yet Deloitte’s research shows that companies with more women in leadership are more resilient and innovative during downturns. So the question for listeners is: how do you turn economic instability into leverage? Think about building visible expertise, owning your impact with numbers, and being very intentional about negotiating role scope and not just salary. Our second point is the rise of women in AI and deep tech. Stanford’s Human‑Centered AI Institute reports that women are still underrepresented in AI research, but their numbers are climbing, especially in applied machine learning and ethics. Women like Fei‑Fei Li at Stanford University and Timnit Gebru at the Distributed AI Research Institute are shaping global conversations about responsible AI. For listeners in tech, this moment is not just about getting a seat at the table; it’s about helping design the table: policy, safety, data rights, and how AI impacts care work and service jobs where women are overrepresented. Third, we have the funding gap and new funding models. Crunchbase has tracked a decline in overall venture funding since the boom years, but it also highlights a rise in women‑focused funds like Female Founders Fund and All Raise. Angel networks such as Golden Seeds are channeling capital directly to women‑led tech startups. In this climate, women are diversifying their options: revenue‑based financing, crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter, and strategic partnerships with corporates that offer both cash and distribution. Our fourth discussion point is the remote work reset. A report from LinkedIn shows that remote tech roles have declined since their peak, while hybrid work is stabilizing. For many women, especially caregivers, remote work opened doors that are now narrowing. The opportunity is in negotiating flexibility as a performance issue, not a personal favor. Companies like Salesforce, Microsoft, and Atlassian are publishing data that links flexibility to productivity and retention, giving women powerful evidence when they ask for hybrid structures that actually work. The fifth point is leadership and ownership in this new landscape. Ernst and Young reports that companies with more women on boards perform better on return on equity. In tech, we’re seeing more women move from employee to founder, or from founder to investor, like Aileen Lee at Cowboy Ventures or Arlan Hamilton at Backstage Capital. Economic uncertainty is pushing some women to say, “If I’m taking the risk anyway, I might as well own the upside.” To every listener navigating this moment: the landscape is tough, but you are not asking for a favor from this industry. You are bringing documented value into a space that needs you to innovate, to question, and to lead. Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. 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

    4 min

About

This is your Women in Business podcast. "Women in Business" is a compelling podcast dedicated to exploring the unique challenges and triumphs of women entrepreneurs and professionals. Tune in for inspiring stories, expert insights, and actionable advice designed to empower women in the business world, with a special focus on the tech industry. 1. Addressing Gender Disparities: How women in tech are overcoming barriers and achieving success in a traditionally male-dominated industry. 2. The Role of Mentorship: Examining the impact of mentorship and networking opportunities on advancing women’s careers in tech. 3. Balancing Innovation and Inclusion: Strategies for fostering inclusive work environments that encourage female innovation and leadership. 4. Navigating Economic Challenges: Insights into how women tech leaders are adapting to economic shifts and emerging stronger. 5. Future Trends: Exploring the future of women in tech and how current economic trends may shape opportunities and challenges. For more info go to https://www.quietplease.ai Check out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjs This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.