The New Zealand Herald

New bid to plug gender gap

- Qiuyi Tan

Women are under-represente­d in the top jobs of science and tech. A new programme is trying to fix that.

Maria Jose Alvarez was pitching her agritech start-up to a group of investors when they cut her off with questions. Not for her, but for her male co-founder standing to the side.

“I was presenting, but their eyes would go to the men for answers,” said Alvarez, now 32 and an investment manager in Auckland.

She was shaken and frustrated then, but it’s human nature, she says.

“People tend to associate with what they can relate to, and in a room full of men, that’s other men. People do it unconsciou­sly,” said Alvarez.

That was a pitch in Chile in 2012, but unconsciou­s biases haven’t gone away. It’s one of many reasons why women continue to be overlooked, even excluded from top jobs in every field, especially in the maledomina­ted worlds of science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s, or Stem.

In New Zealand, women make up 48 per cent of the Stem (science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s) workforce, but account for about 30 per cent of CEOs across these fields, says Emma Timewell, citing data from the 2018 Census.

“Attracting women into Stem fields is not the problem . . . our biggest issue is moving women through the system at the same rate as men, particular­ly into leadership positions,” said Timewell, the national convenor at the Associatio­n of Women and Sciences.

A new initiative is trying to fix this leadership gap. The six-month Women in Leadership Developmen­t or Wild programme will provide mentoring, networking, governance and leadership training for 10 women working across science and innovation, and Alvarez is one of them.

A biotech engineer who founded and ran her own start-up in Chile, she moved to Auckland in 2016 for a masters degree in bioscience enterprise.

She is now on the other end of the pitch table working as an investment manager at NZ Growth Capital Partners, a Government-owned investment outfit looking for the next big Kiwi idea.

Alvarez’s ecosystem straddles business, science and technology, where the minority status of women is most obvious at networking events.

“Every room I’ve been to has been a room full of men,” she said.

The healthy 48 per cent proportion of women in New Zealand’s Stem workforce belies the male-dominated reality in engineerin­g and informatio­n and communicat­ions technology (ICT).

Timewell’s analysis shows women make up about 27 per cent in these two sectors.

The Wild programme, first launched in Australia, is due to kick off in New Zealand at the end of the month. It is backed by life science venture capital firm Brandon Capital and KiwiNet, an alliance of public research institutio­ns.

Alvarez hopes to make it easier for the women who come after her. She believes many will.

“When you have women in senior positions, they’re going to be looking for someone they can relate to, and if you’re a woman, that’s you.”

Every room I’ve been to has been a room full of men.

Maria Jose Alvarez, investment manager

 ??  ?? Maria Jose Alvarez hopes to make it easier for the women who come after her.
Maria Jose Alvarez hopes to make it easier for the women who come after her.

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