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 so glad you’re here, because today we’re diving straight into how women are navigating this wild economic moment in the tech industry, and what it really takes not just to survive it, but to own it. Let’s start with where we actually stand. According to McKinsey and Lean In, women now make up roughly a third of tech employees in North America, but only a small fraction of C‑suite roles, and women of color hold just a slice of those leadership seats. At the same time, layoffs in Silicon Valley have hit women disproportionately hard, especially in roles like recruiting and marketing. That means the economic landscape is not neutral. When budgets tighten, women are often first out and last promoted back in. Knowing that truth isn’t discouraging; it’s clarifying. It tells us exactly where we need to push. So first, we talk about power in skills. In this economy, skills are currency. The World Economic Forum points to AI, data literacy, and cybersecurity as high-growth areas, yet women remain underrepresented in all three. If you’re in tech today, one of the most powerful economic moves you can make is to become “recession-resistant” through upskilling. That might look like a data analytics certificate from Coursera, a machine learning course from Stanford Online, or a product management program from General Assembly. The question becomes: how do I make my skill set so future-focused that economic cycles can slow me down, but not stop me? Next, we need to talk money, because compensation is strategy. PayScale and Glassdoor consistently report that women in tech still earn less than male peers in similar roles. In a tighter economy, companies count on people not negotiating. That’s exactly when women must negotiate the hardest. Using market data from sites like Levels.fyi and Blind, going in with a clear salary range, and being ready to walk away are not luxuries anymore; they’re survival strategies. This isn’t just about your paycheck today; it’s about compounding wealth over decades, from stock options and bonuses to retirement contributions. Another critical point is the rise of remote and hybrid work. After the pandemic, many tech companies from Meta to Google have experimented with pulling people back into offices. Research highlighted by Stanford economist Nicholas Bloom shows remote work can boost productivity and widen talent pools, but it can also create “proximity bias,” where the people in the room get the promotions. For women, especially caregivers, remote work can be a lifeline and a trap at the same time. So the economic question is: how do we negotiate flexibility without losing visibility? That might mean setting clear performance metrics, scheduling regular one-on-ones, and making your impact highly measurable and impossible to ignore. We also have to look at entrepreneurship as an economic path. PitchBook reports that women-founded startups still receive under 3 percent of total venture capital funding, yet we’re seeing powerful countercurrents: funds like All Raise, Female Founders Fund, and Backstage Capital are channeling money specifically to women and underrepresented founders. In an uncertain job market, some women are choosing to build instead of beg for a seat. That can mean a venture-backed startup, a consultancy, or a profitable solo business in product, UX, or engineering. The key is understanding access to capital: grants, angel investors, revenue-based financing, and not just traditional VC. Finally, community is economic infrastructure. According to Catalyst and the AnitaB.org institute, women in tech who have strong networks and mentorship are more likely to stay, to be promoted, and to move into leadership. Organizations like Girls Who Code, Women Who Code, and Latinas in Tech are not just feel-good communities; they are economic engines, connecting women to jobs, deals, and board seats. In a volatile economy, no one wins alone. Your network can be the difference between a layoff being a dead end and a temporary detour. As you’re listening, I want you to ask yourself: where is my leverage in this moment? Is it in the skills I’m building, the salary I’m negotiating, the business I’m launching, the flexibility I’m claiming, or the community I’m investing in? Because even in a tough economic climate, women in tech are not just passengers. We are drivers. Thank you for tuning in to Women in Business. If this episode resonated with you, please hit subscribe, share it with another woman in tech who needs to hear it, and stay with us for more conversations like this. 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