Tag Archives: SXSW

Vote for Todd Simpson’s upcoming talk at SXSW

 

Vote for my proposed session at the SXSW (South by Southwest) 2016 Interactive Festival.  If you care about privacy, here are sme important questions that I aim to answer:

  • How are physical tracking mechanisms and traditional online mechanisms converging?
  • What does that mean for your privacy?
  • Why is privacy an important fundamental human right that we should all be protecting?

 

Click here now to vote for Todd

 

If you vote for my session, I’ll also introduce a breakthrough technology that can help tell the world when you’re not willing to be tracked called ‘Do Not Snap’.

Thank you for voting for me, and I to hope to see you at SXSW 2016.

Wear Red for Pay Equity

Today, April 14, is National Equal Pay Day, which is designed to highlight the issue of gender/pay gap.

Why does National Equal Pay Day fall in the month of April? Because that’s how far into the year it is estimated that a woman must work to earn what a man earned in the previous year! Pay-equity.org is urging supporters to wear red today to symbolize how far behind women and minorities are in their pay.

We have a long way to go, inside and out of tech on this issue. As has been reported by the Government’s Department of Labor, overall women who work full-time still make 78 cents for every dollar a male counterpart makes. You can see details here. This despite the fact that the Equal Pay Act was enacted in 1963! (Ironically, at the height of the Mad Men era.)

AAUW (American Association of University Women), one of the champions in the fight to end wage discrimination, notes that for some inexplicable reason, there is a 7% difference in the earnings of males and females just one year after they graduate college. AAUW also reports that in 2013, the disparity is even greater for Hispanics, African Americans, American Indian and Native Hawaiian women.

Furthermore AAUW reports, “working mothers are often penalized for having children, while fatherhood generally tends to boost a man’s career.” In fact, the latter was the basis of my recent talk “Boardroom or Baby” at SXSW Interactive, which was designed to begin to tackle this issue.

The good (and sometimes painful) news is that pay rates and gender discrimination have been in the news a lot lately!

Earlier this year we applauded the Academy Award winning actress Patricia Arquette for her conscious-raising remarks at the Oscar bash. (See my earlier blog.)

And pay equity is a priority for the newly minted U.S. Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton – who weighed in on the topic at the Women in Tech Conference in Silicon Valley and said in her keynote, “She’s right — it is time to have wage equality once and for all.”

President Obama clearly supports fair pay. I’m just guessing, but I think as the smart son of a single working mother he saw first-hand how wage discrimination worked. In his tenure he has signed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act and established the National Equal Pay Task Force. You can read more here about two new executive actions to help combat pay discrimination and strengthen enforcement of equal pay laws.

Then, there are the many recent lawsuits in the tech world that demonstrate how far we have to go in terms of pay and discrimination. (I won’t go into them here.)

Needless to say, it’s enough to make anyone see red. I think any fair-minded person, no matter what their gender or identity would agree.
So what can you do besides wear red today? You can get a free equal payday kit here with a lot of suggestions. And you can educate yourself. There’s an illuminating fact sheet supplied by AAUW.

Finally… as a woman, or a minority, or really as any employee, you should feel free to ask for a wage increase if you think you are due one! It’s amazing when you review the statistics of people who just don’t ask for a wage increase.

So, while I wouldn’t say National Equal Pay Day is really cause for celebration, we can use it to raise awareness. And you can wear red… I am.

Judith Bitterli answers your questions on Women in Tech

  • Why are there fewer women studying technology but more women using it?

  • Do you think more women would be in tech if there wasn’t so much misogyny in the media?

Video

Judith Bitterli Answers Your Questions on Women in Tech

 

  • Do women in tech jobs earn as much as their male counterparts?

  • Women in tech are facing time management issues. What can they do to solve this problem?

Video

Judith Bitterli Answers Your Questions on Women in Tech

 

  • Should young girls be discouraged that tech is a male dominated field?

  • What do companies like AVG do to encourage young women to start a career in tech?

Video

Judith Bitterli Answers Your Questions on Women in Tech

 

  • Do you think suppliers and consumers can work together to encourage more women to have a career in tech?

  • Is there an effort to feature women who are excelling as an example for others?

Video

Judith Bitterli Answers Your Questions on Women in Tech

 

Thank you for all your questions, if there’s something you’d like to ask me, please let me know by getting in touch via Twitter @JudyatAVG.

 

Women in Tech: The Conversation Continues at SXSW  

I was struck by the mea culpa issued last week by former Huffington Post and Washington Post manager-turned entrepreneur Katharine Zaleski. Her commentary, posted on Fortune.com on March 3, was entitled: “I’m sorry to all the mothers I worked with.

Zaleski said: “I didn’t realize how horrible I had been, until I had a child of my own.”

Then, she recounted the eye rolling and “silently slandering” that she participated in with colleagues – aimed at working moms who couldn’t make end of day meetings or meet for drinks after work.

That was before her personal journey and becoming a mother herself. “Empathy is a great teacher,” she said.

Zaleski has since founded PowertoFly, a job matching platform for women in highly skilled positions across tech and digital that they can do from home, or in an office, if they choose.

The time commitment to parenting contradicts office culture, Zaleski noted in her video interview with Fortune that runs alongside her column.  “We need to end the idea that work value is based on physically being there.”  In other words, she advocates, that we need to value output over time in office.

As Zaleski acknowledges, work at home and/or flexible work schedules is one solution to the problem for moms – though not the only one.

On that note, I am super excited to have the conversation “Boardroom or Baby: The Choices Women have in Tech,” at SXSW this Saturday (3:30 p.m. JW Marriott Room 407) which delves into the heart of this topic.

There are many considerations and questions women need to ask themselves if they are considering having a family and a career in tech. I’m fond of using the analogy of wedding planning:  Many of us carefully plan for our wedding day – a one day event in our lives – but don’t plan for the critical decisions we must make about our careers and our families.

As Zaleski noted in her interview: 1 billion women will be coming into the workforce in the next 10 years – 80% of which will be mothers (based on U.S. Census Bureau estimates). Yet, as she also noted, today we also see more women dropping out of the work force, more than at any time since the 70s. As she advocates, “We have to find a way to allow women to careers while they also have lives.”

You don’t need to be a woman, or to have a child to understand this is a problem that we need to address.

This is why I believe ‘women in tech’ has become one of the major discussions at this year’s SXSW- and of our time. As I noted in my previous blog, there are quite a few sessions and conversations taking place on the topic of women in tech, gender equality and diversity. It underscores that the time is finally now for this issue in our industry.

In preparation for my talk, we interviewed nearly 20 Silicon Valley women in tech, along with some men, for their perspective on gender equality in the tech workplace today.

 

Video

Boardroom or Baby?

 

We received some amazing and thought provoking insights, which I will be sharing in my session, here and on Twitter and Facebook.

I also want to thank all of the remarkable people who participated in interviews for my session, among them: Julie Hanna, entrepreneur and board chair at Kiva; Robin Abrams, veteran tech CEO , and her daughter, Libby, a new entrant in the tech workforce. Also, Sheila Brady, former engineering director at Apple, and Barbara Krause, Silicon Valley PR pro, and her daughter Emily, another new tech workplace entrant. Also, Stephanie Boudreau, program manager for Google Hangouts, and Robin Starbuck Farmanfarmaian, a health, IT and bioscience executive and entrepreneur.

Finally, I want to call out that we at AVG are also delighted to be the sponsor of the Mothers’ Room for SXSW this year, for the entire festival. If you are a mom attendee, come check it out.

It’s located in Room 1 in the Convention Center. It’s a quiet comfortable place to feed and change your baby, entertain yourself, and keep siblings busy.

We at AVG know that for moms and all parents, looking after our families is job number one. Not only physically but in cyberspace as well…

I look forward to continuing our conversation at SXSW Interactive and beyond.

Join us in person or at @judyatAVG #techwomen #SXSW.

Let’s ‘Make It Happen’ for Women in Tech

The first International Women’s Day was held in 1911. The day is actually celebrated worldwide, and not just on one day, but from late February through March and beyond.

This year, thousands of events are occurring to mark and encourage the economic, political and social achievements of women. Organizations, governments, charities, educational institutions, women’s groups, corporations and the media celebrate the day. The activities span the realm of possibilities for women, including women in tech.

Make it happen

There were more than 340 events scheduled to take place in the United Kingdom alone to celebrate International Women’s Day. For example, an event on March 6, focused on women’s work in creative and technology industries was scheduled in London’s tech hub.  And in a variation of Girls Who Code, in Luxembourg they were holding “Mums and Girls Code”– a fun introductory workshop in coding for mothers and their daughters.

Here in the USA, 186+ events were scheduled for International Women’s Day.  You can see a complete list here. The list of events is inspiring, promoting awareness, culture, and learning for women and girls across the nation. Many of the IWD events are also online, including webinars, for people who don’t have time to visit a particular event.

Later this March, I’m personally very excited to be speaking at SXSW Interactive on the subject of furthering women’s roles in technology.   My session at 3:30 p.m. March 14 (JW Marriott Room 407), “Boardroom or Baby: The Choices Women Have in Tech” will address closing the gaps in opportunities for women in technology and achieving work/life balance. If you can’t join in person, you can join the conversation at @judyatavg  #techwomen #SXSW.

Video

Boardroom or Baby?

 

It’s actually very encouraging to see that there are many conversations on the topic of women in technology scheduled for SXSW Interactive 2015: Among them:  “End To Brogramming” with Re/code and Elle.com, which takes place from 5-6 p.m. on March 13;  “Geek Girls Are Chic!” on March 15 by Girls Who Code and IBM, and “#OurTimeToLead: Why Tech Needs More Women” by the Anita Borg Institute on March 17. You can see the SXSW schedule here.

We’ve all done the math. But women in tech (or the lack of such) is not just a pipeline issue, it’s a retention issue and a culture issue as well. It’s encouraging to see major tech companies are recognizing this. It is for everyone’s own good: we need a smart tech workforce and can’t dismiss half the population, and on the consumer side, women represent significant adopters when it comes to technology.

So progress is happening. Good moves are being made. Though more must happen. I think International Women’s Day is a great day to see how far we have come, and serve a fantastic spark to light and then pass the torch to following generations to empower all women, our sisters and daughters.
Speak_IA

The choices women face in tech

Whether it is for equal career opportunities or equal compensation, the technology industry is in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons (as highlighted by this Newsweek cover a few weeks back)

With several years’ experience at the senior level in the technology industry, I’ll be sharing my thoughts and advice on how women can forge a successful career in tech.

I’ll aslo discuss the boardroom vs baby debate and underline the crucial importance of a career roadmap for women. Many of us carefully plan for our wedding day – a one day event in our lives – but don’t plan for the critical decisions we must make about our careers and our families

Video

Boardroom or Baby At SXSW Interactive 2015

 

If you are going to be in Austin, please do come by and join in the debate.

Boardroom or Baby?

SXSW Interactive 2015

Room 407, JW Marriott

3:30pm, March 14th

AVG Technologies CMO Judith Bitterli Tackles Issues for Women in Tech at SXSW

AMSTERDAM and SAN FRANCISCO – February 26, 2015 – AVG® Technologies N.V. (NYSE: AVG), the online security company™ for 197 million active users, announced

CMO Judith Bitterli will present a Core Conversation session at SXSW Interactive in Austin, TX Feb. 13-16. Her session, “Boardroom or Baby? The Choices Women Have in Tech” takes place 3:30 p.m.-4:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 14 at the JW Marriott Hotel Room 407. It’s designed to explore gender issues confronting women in tech jobs and to encourage women to make plans to actively manage their careers and life goals.

“We are at an inflection point. The recent Newsweek cover on ‘What Silicon Valley Thinks of Women,’ along with recent research from Harvard to Stanford to Babson College and diversity reporting, brings gender issues out of hibernation and into the forefront once again,” said Bitterli. “These studies underscore the indisputable gap between the career opportunities afforded to women in technology compared to men.

“Advancing careers for women in tech is a topic I’m passionate about. But it’s not enough to just talk about it, we must take action,” Bitterli added. Among key advice she will share: “Don’t work for companies that do not support women – in their policies, practices and programs.”

Bitterli’s session is designed to leave the audience inspired for careers in tech, as well as arm them with tools that will help them navigate career paths and choices – including critical questions they need to ask themselves, and tools to create a career roadmap and work/life plan.

“Many of us carefully plan for our wedding day – a one day event in our lives – but don’t plan for the critical decisions we must make about our careers and our families,” added Bitterli.

Bitterli, who leads marketing and customer services for AVG Technologies, the online security company with more than 197 million active users, has more than 25 years of executive level experience at tech companies, including RealNetworks, Micron, SoftBank and CompuAdd. She is also an entrepreneur and the former owner of three businesses.  Before her career in technology, Judith was in the U.S. Army for 7 years as a parachute rigger and then testing parachutes and large-scale weapons and missiles. She became the first certified female jumpmaster in the military. Read her blog at now.avg.com, where she regularly blogs on the topic of women in tech, technology for Boomers and small business strategies.

For a preview of her session and talk, go to: the SXSW schedule, now.avg.com and the AVG YouTube channel. Join her in conversation at judy@avg #techwomen #SXSW.

 

About AVG Technologies

AVG is the online security company providing leading software and services to secure devices, data and people. Over 197 million active users, as of December 31, 2014, use AVG´s products and services. AVG’s Consumer portfolio includes internet security, performance optimization, and personal privacy and identity protection for mobile devices and desktops. The AVG Business portfolio – delivered by managed service providers, VARs and resellers – offers IT administration, control and reporting, integrated security, and mobile device management that simplify and protect businesses.

All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

www.avg.com

Contacts:

US

Katie Han

Waggener Edstrom for AVG

[email protected]

+ 1 (212) 551 4807

UK

Samantha Woodman

Waggener Edstrom for AVG

[email protected]

+ 44 (0)20 7632 384

Is momentum gathering for women in tech?

Many of you who didn’t see the Oscars will have no doubt heard about Best Actress winner Patricia Arquette’s acceptance speech. In a rousing call to arms she demanded equal pay for women.

She said, in part, “To every woman who gave birth, to every taxpayer and citizen of this nation, we have fought for everybody else’s equal rights, it’s our time to have wage equality once and for all, and equal rights for women in the United States of America.” (For those who missed it, you can see a clip here.)

Her brief acceptance speech galvanized the Hollywood audience. Although I believe she had the right intentions, her after-Oscar remarks also earned criticism in some camps, specifically African Americans and members of the LBGT communities, who faulted her choice of words for being insensitive, and for not calling out “all” women specifically.

But the essence of the remarks resonated this week at the first-ever, sold-out “Lead On Conference for Women,” held in Silicon Valley.  It certainly resonated with keynote speaker Hillary Clinton, former Secretary of State and presumptive candidate for the U.S. presidency.

Said Clinton in her keynote, “She’s right — it is time to have wage equality once and for all.”

The one-day Lead On Conference had more than 100 speakers, including tech industry luminaries such as Kara Swisher of Re/Code, who interviewed Hillary, and others who have made their mark elsewhere, such as Jill Abramson, best known as the first female executive editor of the New York Times. The agenda was full of many more extraordinary women – and a few men sprinkled in as well :).

Hillary Clinton Lead On

Image courtesy of recode

 

But the killer keynote came from Clinton, giving her first public speech this year.

Clinton is no stranger when it comes to Silicon Valley and is a strong supporter of Girls Who Code, a national nonprofit dedicated to closing the gender gap in tech.

In her keynote, among other points, she voiced concern about the dearth of women in tech and the lack of a pipeline. She focused on the numbers, which do not lie: including the fact that currently, women receive only 18 percent of computer science degrees — which is, amazingly, less than half of those awarded in the 1980s, when women earned 38 percent of those degrees. “We’re going backwards in a field that is supposed to be all about moving forward,” Clinton said.

As for pay parity, both inside and outside of tech, it’s a big issue.  According to the most recent surveys by the BLS, women made 82 percent of the median weekly earnings of male full-time wage and salary workers.

For the tech industry, we see pay gaps and opportunity all around us. In fact, in a recent study last November, Glassdoor found that of 25 tech companies surveyed, “At most of these companies, men report earning a higher base salary than women for the same role.” (You can see a chart breaking compensation down by company and job title.)

It’s encouraging to be seeing momentum building for pay parity and a major political player who gets the importance of tech, and, moreover, the importance of women in tech. Bravo to both Clinton, and to Arquette.

Although we have a long way to go…there are baby steps happening!

As for myself, I am looking forward to continuing this conversation as a speaker at the 2015 SXSW Interactive program with a Core Conversation on “Boardroom or Baby” on March 14th.

For a preview take a look at the accompanying blog post. And, if you are going to be in Austin – join me there!

Title image courtesy of Chicago Tribune

SXSW 2015: The Challenges Facing Women in Tech

Recent events have shown that the technology industry is starting to address the gender gap, but what can women do to get ahead in one of the most competitive business environments?

This year at SXSW 2015, Judith Bitterli will be giving expert advice to women looking to forge a career in technology.

Whether a building career roadmap, mentoring advice or hard lessons learned, Judith will share her experiences and answer questions.

Video

The Challenges Facing Women in Tech?

 

If you are planning to attend SXSW this year, we’d love for you to come by and share your views.

See Judith Bitterli at SXSW 2015

A Time to Celebrate Diversity  

Today we celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. day in the U.S., a day to remember the great Civil Rights champion. I think it’s also a day for us in the tech industry to celebrate diversity and reflect on it.

There was a significant development in tech diversity earlier this month.  Intel CEO Brian Krzanich pledged in his CES keynote address to invest $300 million over the next five years to improve the diversity of the company’s workforce. The investment will be used to attract more women and minorities for engineering and computer science positions, actively support and retain those new employees, and fund programs to support more positive diversity within the larger technology and gaming industries.

And, at least in my mind, equally importantly, as part of its effort, Intel is attempting to achieve “full representation” of women and under-represented minorities within the company by 2020, including in senior leadership positions.

“It’s not good enough to say we value diversity and then under-represent women and minorities,” Krzanich stated in his address. “Intel wants to lead by example.”

This was really refreshing and good news to hear from one of technology’s leading companies, and I applaud it.

The move follows a breakthrough last year when top tech companies released their workforce make-ups for the first time.  Facebook, Google, Twitter, Apple, Instagram were among the companies to report.

The numbers show that women represent no more than 30 percent of the workforce in many of the top companies. (Full disclosure: This is true for AVG as well.) Another snapshot provided in the latest (ISC)2 workforce study, published in spring 2013, shows that as a whole, the information security sector trails significantly with only 10% of its professionals female.

That is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the overall representation of minorities. This chart from the Guardian newspaper created by Information is Beautiful provides a view of gender and racial diversity make-up of the tech and social media industry.

Guardian Technology Diversity

 

Since last year’s report, a number of companies have begun to step up and invest in diversity, as we’ve previously written. In June, Google announced a program to get more women into tech with a $50 million fund to encourage girls to take up computer science in college and other grants and programs.  Its “Made with Code” campaign is in partnership with Girls Who Code, a nonprofit organization that runs summer coding schools for girls, and The Clinton Foundation, whose No Ceilings project aims to promote full participation by girls and women in all aspects of society.  You can read about it here.

More recently, the Hour of Code, while not aimed specifically at women and minorities, was another excellent step in promoting overall interest in computer science during Computer Science Education Week. They reported more than 10 million girls tried computer since in that one week – more than the total of the last 70 years! You can learn more at code.org.

While there is more work to be done to move diversity forward, these are good starts for our industry.

I am looking forward to contributing to the effort to help close the diversity gap in the tech industry and encourage women in technology careers as a speaker at the 2015 SXSW Interactive program with a Core Conversation on “Boardroom or Baby? The Choices Women have in Tech” on March 14th.  If you’re planning to attend the conference in Austin, Texas, please put 3:30-4:30 p.m. on your calendar to join the conversation. I’m sure it will be lively!

See Judith Bitterli at SXSW 2015

 

Title image courtesy of the bbc