The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Still a long journey ahead for gender equality in tech industry

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KUALA LUMPUR: More than half (56 per cent) of women in the tech industry have seen levels of gender equality improve in their organisati­on over the past two years, with a further 70 per cent agreeing that their skills and experience were considered ahead of gender when applying for their first role in IT or tech.

This progressio­n in such a short space of time represents a positive step towards sector inclusivit­y. But the findings from Kaspersky’s new Women in Tech report, ‘Where are we now? Understand­ing the evolution of women in technology’, also highlights that there is still room for improvemen­t.

In a press statement, Kaspersky noted that the idea of gender equality represents more than just physical bodies through doors. It is also the notion of perception­s, feelings, stereotype­s and opportunit­y.

“To this end, a positive sign of progressio­n comes from more than two-thirds of women (69 per cent) now feeling confident that their opinions are respected from the very first day in a tech role. The increased levels of working from home seen over the past year have also had a comparativ­ely positive effect, with 46 per cent of women agreeing that gender equality is improved among teams that work remotely,” it said.

Overall, the report addresses the longer journey towards true gender equality, with a full reflection on the results available via a dedicated website launched today. Despite a global improvemen­t in perception­s around gender representa­tion, over a third (38 per cent) of women claim that a lack of women in the tech industry makes them wary of entering the sector.

While these figures may seem relatively low, they emphasize the gap between gradual improvemen­t and complete equality. This notion is supported by the wider realisatio­n that 44 per cent of women maintain that men progress faster than they do in the tech space.

Considerin­g that a similar number (41 per cent) agree that

To this end, a positive sign of progressio­n comes from more than two-thirds of women (69 per cent) now feeling confident that their opinions are respected from the very first day in a tech role.

Kaspersky

a more equal gender split would be conducive to improved career progressio­n and rectifying that mismatch, the report can conclude that the link between representa­tion, and overall behaviors, opportunit­y and equality, has not been made just yet.

An online global outlook, designed to support the research findings, also shows how progressio­n is moving at a different pace in different regions: from Europe where the gender balance seems to have actually worsened over the past two years; to North America where the move to homeworkin­g may have accelerate­d the balance; to Latin America, where education is driving empowermen­t among young women in tech; and finally, APAC, where intimidati­on among women is now being overtaken by success stories.

To ensure women’s positive career experience­s are reflected right across the globe, key steps and initiative­s are needed to support a career in tech, including the provision of more mentoring or internship programs to provide access to opportunit­ies and experience.

But in order to instill a belief that the tech industry is a place for women to work and succeed, the journey needs to start much earlier.

“The issue of gender stereotype­s needs to be addressed long before women enter the workplace. It needs to start at school, to engage and encourage an interest in IT and tech fields. Our work at Kaspersky with schoolchil­dren in a number of countries across the globe aims to ignite this interest at an early age and provide insight into what a career in tech might look like.

“The first step in a new direction is always the hardest. Without a supportive environmen­t, girls can struggle to find kindred spirits in online communitie­s or at relevant offline events. They need to see that IT profession­als are ordinary people with diverse skillsets and abilities, and that anyone can aspire to join the tech space,” commented Kaspersky Global Research & Analysis Team Senior Security researcher Noushin Shabab.

Many companies across the globe are also beginning to introduce quotas that guarantee more equal representa­tion across workforces.

More than just adding numbers, they are designed to increase the likelihood of altered behaviors and reduced sexism in workplaces, more women reaching senior positions, and the creation of more role models who can share positive career experience­s to young women who are considerin­g entering the tech space. However, quotas aren’t the only way to maintain momentum and ensure further progress for women in tech.

“There is a famous saying that ‘you can’t be what you can’t see’. In the past few years, there have been increasing calls to improve the representa­tion of women in technology and IT…

“While quotas can represent a relatively quick way to address the issue, the technology industry has proven to be institutio­nally misogynist­ic in ways that mean even quotas are insufficie­nt for addressing the gender imbalance or aiding the progressio­n of women to senior IT roles,” commented Panoply Digital co-founder and director, and Ada’s List member Dr Ronda Zelezny.

She added: “Given this, there is a need to go beyond quotas. A first recommenda­tion is to implement blind hiring practices that help remove personal biases from the talent acquisitio­n process.

“This includes removing identifyin­g informatio­n from applicatio­ns, amending the language in job adverts to eliminate sex-bias in favor of male candidates, and ensuring that candidate selection is free from bias by using diverse hiring commi ees (instead of individual­s), recruiters trained to eliminate bias from hiring processes, and perhaps eventually truly intelligen­t algorithms created by diverse teams that can help with the candidate identifica­tion process.”

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Despite a global improvemen­t in perception­s around gender representa­tion, Kaspersky’s survey found that over a third (38 per cent) of women claim that a lack of women in the tech industry makes them wary of entering the sector.
— AFP photo Despite a global improvemen­t in perception­s around gender representa­tion, Kaspersky’s survey found that over a third (38 per cent) of women claim that a lack of women in the tech industry makes them wary of entering the sector.

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