Tag Archives: Churchill Club

Women in Tech: Changing the Conversation via the Bottom Line

Though industry numbers don’t yet reflect it, I have to say now is a very exciting time for women in tech. Why? Because for the first time in my career, there is an active conversation taking place about achieving gender and overall diversity in our industry.

This was illustrated yet again this past week by the “Women in Tech Executive Roundtable 2015” hosted by Silicon Valley’s venerable Churchill Club.

I was honored to be one of the speakers, joining a panel of five amazing and inspirational women for the breakfast event in Palo Alto, which brought us together with an active audience of the Valley’s women in tech  – and even a few men, who were brave enough to join us. (And I don’t use the word “brave” in a negative way – but in the best possible meaning – as in it was encouraging to see them showing up and participating in a discussion on women’s issues.)

Churchill Club Logo

 

You can find the Churchill Club video on their YouTube Channel here.

The bottom line, as my co-panelist Julie Hanna, the executive chair of Kiva and newly named Presidential Ambassador for Global Entrepreneurism, so eloquently describes it: the discourse on gender equality is not just a women’s issue, it needs to be a question for humanity.

As fellow panelist Amity Millhiser, Managing Partner at PwC, noted: “Think about our daughters and how do we want them to think about diversity?” I will paraphrase her here: but in addition to it being a justice issue, gender equality is a “success” issue.

There is no denying that women still lag in STEM education, tech jobs, equal pay, and the C-suites and boardrooms. But the numbers also tell another story. As I was reminded earlier last week by a new study on IT industry and gender diversity by The National Center for Women and Information Technology (NCWIT):  Companies with women on their executive boards outperformed companies will all-male executive boards. Gender-diverse management teams also showed superior return on equity, debt/equity ratios, price/equity ratios, and average growth.

The NCWIT analysis of 2,360 companies corroborates statistics on women-led company performance findings in a study Babson College Research last year, which I’ve written about previously.

The place where gender bias is most prevalent tends to be at executive and boardroom levels and in the VC funding process — where women have the smallest presence (and somehow seem to be “heard differently” than males – as many of my colleagues on the panel have witnessed).

Another salient point made by our discussion group that I, myself, identify with is how we as women are sometimes part of the problem. For example, the audience asked the panel about “cattiness” in the workplace, and why women can be jealous of other women’s success.

Julie Hanna spoke to the dichotomy and “strangeness” of being an engineering-geek woman, who had predominately worked with men, then going to working with other women and encountering a new kind of fear. “It’s like we have to, on a primal level, learn to recognize one of our own and know we/they mean no harm.”

Dr. Tanja Rueckert, Executive VP & Chief Operating Officer Products & Innovation for SAP further underscored: “Remind yourselves to hire for diversity” and for female VCs to invest in female startups.

I believe, much as one panelist reminded us – as Madeleine Albright famously said:  “There’s a special place in hell for women who don’t help other women.”

Madeleine Albright

It is also my strong belief, that as women, 1) we all have an inherent responsibility to educate ourselves what diversity means and why diversity is important and 2) vote with our pocket books – only work with and support companies that support diversity.

 

Here are some other key pieces of advice from the panel:

  • Always be yourself
  • Don’t apologize for your success; take credit when credit is due
  • Accept feedback, and don’t take criticism personally
  • Be supportive, not jealous of other women
  • Women need both women and men to sponsor, mentor and support them

 

And by the way, if you are in Silicon Valley and want to stay on top of insights and trends to empower women, and to help create a new conversation in the year ahead, please check out the Churchill Club. It is an extraordinary non-profit organization with a rich history of bringing together the best and brightest in Silicon Valley in conversations that ignite change – and it’s also a mecca for industry networking!

Stepping Up Efforts to Support Emerging Women Entrepreneurs

The White House brought together emerging entrepreneurs from across the United States and the globe – joined by several of the celebrity investors from the hit TV show Shark Tank.  The stated goal was to raise awareness of “the importance of investing in women and young entrepreneurs to create innovative solutions to some of the world’s toughest challenges, including poverty, climate change, extremism, as well as access to education and healthcare.”

Brava!

The White House event comes as President Obama prepares for the Global Entrepreneurship Summit in Kenya later this summer. You can read more about this week’s event here and get the transcript of the President’s remarks here.

A highlight of the White House event was the President’s announcement of the creation of the Spark Global Entrepreneurship initiative and its goal to generate over a billion dollars in private investment for emerging entrepreneurs around the world by the end of 2017.  Half of this goal will be specifically for women and young entrepreneurs.

The White House event also featured the introduction of the newest Presidential Ambassadors for Global Entrepreneurship (PAGE).  Nine new ambassadors were named to join 17 who were appointed when he launched PAGE last year.

I’m thrilled to say one of the new ambassadors is my friend Julie Hanna, the executive chair of the board of the non-profit Kiva, the first and largest crowdfunding marketplace for underserved entrepreneurs.

Julie joins Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky; Elizabeth Holmes ,the founder of Theranos; and Alison Rosenthal, the vice president of Strategic Partnerships Wealthfront, among other new appointments to PAGE.

As part of her commitment, Julie introduced Kiva’s new $100 million initiative,  “Global Capital Access,” which is committed to delivering crowdfunded Kiva loans to 200,000 women and young entrepreneurs across 86 countries, including the U.S.  Entrepreneurs will have an opportunity to receive crowdfunded loans through Kiva and its global network of 1.3 million lenders in 198 countries. (Since 2005, Kiva and its global community have crowdfunded $700 million loans to 1.6 million entrepreneurs in 86 countries. For as little as a $25 loan, anyone can back an entrepreneur.)

Julie is truly an amazing entrepreneur, leader and mentor.  She also generously participated in a video for my SXSW “Boardroom or Baby” presentation earlier this year, to give advice to young women seeking VC investment.

Video

Boardroom or Baby 2015

 

I am particularly delighted to say that I will be joining her for a “Women in Tech Executive Roundtable 2015” sponsored by the Churchill Club this Friday in Palo Alto, CA. For more info and to sign up to attend go to www.churchillclub.org.

The roundtable is designed to be a frank and lively conversation about what matters most for advancing women in business and technology. We hope to share actionable insights and takeaways to empower women and to help create a new conversation in the year ahead.

I’m looking forward to our discussion, as well as the opportunity to personally congratulate Julie and hear about the White House event and her plans as ambassador.

As Julie noted at the White House event, one of the most encouraging things happening toward empowerment of female entrepreneurs is the public conversation occurring about public and hidden bias. As she said: “We need to elevate the discourse to make it an issue for humanity, not just for women – much like Martin Luther King did on Civil Rights.”

Title image courtesy of Levo.com