Women in Technology stories
As faith in tech bros wanes, founders say a quieter, human-centred playbook is proving better for business, investors and users alike.
As AI reshapes tech careers, New Zealand faces a pivotal chance to draw more women into the sector before they are shut out of its future.
Adaptability is reshaping tech consulting, as diverse, risk-driven teams ditch rigid methods to steer complex digital transformations.
Empathy, not just agile tools, is emerging as the missing link between business strategy and tech delivery in digital transformation.
A human-centred UX/UI designer says the most powerful tech solutions begin not with code or visuals, but with deep, disciplined listening.
Australia's tech sector is missing out on a USD $6.5 billion boost by failing to close the gender gap and fully harness female talent.
Ethical AI and redesigned work models could help dismantle bias in law, paving the way for more women to thrive as leaders in the profession.
In tech and marketing, women are excluded not just by bias in code or funding, but by domestic load and male-coded networking rituals.
Edge AI will only reach its potential if diverse teams shape its design, deployment and impact, ensuring fair, resilient systems for all.
Backing high-potential women with mentoring and stretch roles builds stronger leaders, boosts retention and strengthens business outcomes.
IT leaders who actively mentor women in cybersecurity unlock stronger teams, greater resilience and a more diverse, future-ready workforce.
Succession planning from day one and intentional mentoring are vital to grow future female leaders and safeguard continuity in business.
Women are lagging men in AI adoption, risking a generational career setback unless leaders tackle structural barriers and targeted training now.
AI is helping women in HR and beyond gain strategic influence, speeding policy work and reshaping leadership paths outside IT.
Asia's tech sector is failing women: only bold sponsorship, not well-meaning mentoring schemes, will finally close the leadership gap.
Women leaders in IT are transforming male-dominated industries by prioritising retention, real representation and measurable strategic results.
IT leaders must back recruiters and foster inclusive cultures if they want to fix tech's gender gap and unlock performance gains.
On International Women's Day, tech leaders warn progress for women is no accident and urge deliberate action to fix systemic bias.
Women are driving explosive growth in digital fitness and sports tech, turning female-first design from side initiative into core strategy.
Mentorship is reshaping tech careers as seasoned leaders invest in young women, learning fresh skills and perspectives in return.