Pulse logo
Pulse Region
ADVERTISEMENT

Women in tech share leadership ideas

Ammanath has been advocating for  more women in positions of technology leadership.
Women in tech share leadership ideas
Women in tech share leadership ideas

If you’re a fan of the Marvel  superhero world, you’ll already have noticed that the next Iron Man is a black woman.

You may also have noticed that this particular fantasy world has  lacked diversity for some time – which helps to explain why so many fans were  excited by the announcement of Riri Williams as Tony Stark’s successor.

ALSO READ: How the oil embargo crisis advanced innovation

Where Stark was a billion-dollar  tech businessman (played by Robert Downey Junior on the big screen), Williams  is an exceptional student who designed her own Iron Man suit and enrolled at  the Massachusetts Institute of Technology at 15 years old. Her importance  shouldn’t be underestimated in a world where girls and young women still feel  intimidated by technology and need even fictional role models to show them  that anything is possible and no field is taboo.

Inspired by Williams, here is  some frank advice about what it means to be female and working in technology.

A GE  Computer Scientist Crushes Gender Assumptions

Women have made significant  inroads into a number of science and technology fields usually dominated by  men. One such example is Beena Ammanath,  executive director of data and analytics at GE.

From the mid-1980s, the number of  women majoring in computer science has decreased from about 40% to less than  17% today. As a result, women hold less than 27% of all computer science jobs  and only 7% of venture capital funding goes to women-owned businesses.

ALSO READ: General Electric creates new digital business

Ammanath has been advocating for  more women in positions of technology leadership. “I work to nudge the gender  diversity stats higher each day. I have the power to set an example for middle  school girls, high school girls and women who are just starting out in their  technical careers,” says Ammanath.

Ammanath believes that now is the  best, most rewarding time to be a woman in technology. “At times, it can be a  bit lonely and intimidating, however, this feeling is where I find my  strength to work extra hard to be heard on behalf of the other ‘female  techies’,” says Ammanath.

Women  Leaders Have To Work Harder Than Men To Prove Themselves

As CEO of GE South Africa  Technologies, a joint venture between GE Transportation and the Mineworkers  Investment Company, Zeenith Ebrahim has to make sure  GESAT delivers on one of the largest-ever transportation deals GE has  concluded outside the United States.

ALSO READ: Interview with Frannie Leautier: Emergence of African innovations

“Being a CEO in a male dominated  sector is not easy. While men continue to build relationships outside the  boardroom,­ over drinks or on the golf course, as a woman you have to  establish and maintain your credibility within the boardroom,” she says.

But Ebrahim says she always felt  a drive to succeed in order to make a meaningful difference. While in high  school, her work with children’s rights group Molo Songololo elevated her  social consciousness and led to her first overseas trip at the age of 16. “It  felt good to be part of a global community with common interests. I felt like  I had a voice and if I hadn’t learnt to proactively express my views and  offer myself up to do and learn certain things, I don’t think I would be  where I am today.”

GE is continually encouraging girls to consider the technology  field  with initiatives such as the Girls in Technology Day, which is held annually  in Nigeria and encourages girls to pursue careers in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields.

Subscribe to receive daily news updates.

Next Article