Canadian Business

HEATHER PAYNE

- FOUNDER, LADIES LEARNING CODE & CEO, HACKERYOU –AS TOLD TO DEBORAH AARTS

SOLVING TECH’S BRO PROBLEM, ONE CLASS AT A TIME

Ladies Learning Code was designed to create a really special and fun learning experience. Everything in the day-long workshops is hands-on and project-based; by the time you leave, you have a website you can show someone. That helps people feel accomplish­ed, like they are capable of doing something with their coding skills. We keep a low ratio of instructor­s to participan­ts—four to one—which limits the intimidati­on factor.

From the start, there was so much energy and buzz in the room that I knew we were really onto something, and after three or four workshops, I quit my job to get Ladies Learning Code off the ground. Not long after, participan­ts started asking for more—they loved the style of learning and wanted to dive into coding. I had seen programmin­g boot camps starting to pop up in the U.S. and, given what we’d learned about teaching people, it made obvious sense we should bring that model to Canada.

So we created HackerYou as a business. HackerYou is co-ed, but our founding team is all women, and our enrolment is about 70% female. It has become a significan­t creator of female developers without being an explicitly “female” solution to the women-in-tech problem. In 2011, Heather Payne started Ladies Learning Code, a not-for-profit organizati­on that now operates coding workshops for women and girls in 24 cities across Canada. In 2012, she branched out to start HackerYou, a Toronto-based business that operates co-ed programmin­g courses.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada