Women in Business: Breaking Tech's Glass Ceiling One Line of Code at a Time episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 15, 2026 · 3 MIN

Women in Business: Breaking Tech's Glass Ceiling One Line of Code at a Time

from Women in Business · host Inception Point AI

This is your Women in Business podcast. Welcome to Women in Business, where we celebrate the unstoppable force of women shaping tomorrow's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving into how women are navigating the turbulent economic landscape in the tech industry—turning challenges into triumphs amid layoffs, AI booms, and slow-but-steady progress. First, let's face the stark reality of representation. In 2026, women make up just 26% of the U.S. STEM workforce, according to Boundev's analysis—a tiny 1% bump since 2000. At giants like Google, Apple, and Meta, technical roles hover around 25% female, while global AI positions sit at a mere 22%. StrongDM reports the overall tech workforce at 27.6%, with Amazon leading Big Tech at 45% women overall, though core tech roles lag. Yet, this underrepresentation fuels our fire—women are proving they're essential, powering innovation where it counts. Transitioning to the broken rung, that infamous first step to management hits women hardest. Entry-level tech starts at 29% female, but drops to 16% for CTOs and C-suite spots. Digital Silk highlights how 56% of women may exit before mid-career, often due to the 45% higher attrition rate than men—half leave by 35, per Spacelift data. Economic pressures like 2022-2023 layoffs disproportionately axed women, 65% more likely per studies. But here's the empowerment: women are now promoted at 15.9% rates versus 13.6% for men, signaling companies like Google, with diverse hiring panels, are yielding 5% female increases. Work-life balance and biases are economic battlegrounds too. Forty-five percent cite it as their top exit reason, amplified by caregiving amid remote work burnout—57% of women versus 36% of men feel scorched, says Spacelift. Unconscious bias questions women's tech chops, and a digital skills gap leaves women 25% less equipped for AI, with only 34% using it daily versus 43% of men. Wage gaps persist at 10-13% in engineering, but computer science narrows it to 94 cents on the dollar. In this landscape, 92% of women report better equity experiences, craving mentorship and pay audits—75% of firms now do them annually. AI and emerging tech offer hope. Women dominate analytics and machine learning interests at 41%, per Digital Silk, and hold 36% of QA and PM roles in U.S. augmentation via Turing reports. By 2030, projections from WomenTech.net see over 30% in core engineering. Companies with 30% female execs outperform financially, proving diverse leadership drives economic wins. Remote options and ERGs—68% participation—boost retention, with 84% praising return-to-office for collaboration. Sisters, the economy's headwinds are fierce, but you're the wind beneath tech's wings. Seek sponsors, master AI tools, demand equity—your ascent lifts us all. Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Subscribe now for more empowerment. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best dea This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

This is your Women in Business podcast. Welcome to Women in Business, where we celebrate the unstoppable force of women shaping tomorrow's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving into how women are navigating the turbulent economic landscape in the tech industry—turning challenges into triumphs amid layoffs, AI booms, and slow-but-steady progress. First, let's face the stark reality of representation. In 2026, women make up just 26% of the U.S. STEM workforce, according to Boundev's analysis—a tiny 1% bump since 2000. At giants like Google, Apple, and Meta, technical roles hover around 25% female, while global AI positions sit at a mere 22%. StrongDM reports the overall tech workforce at 27.6%, with Amazon leading Big Tech at 45% women overall, though core tech roles lag. Yet, this underrepresentation fuels our fire—women are proving they're essential, powering innovation where it counts. Transitioning to the broken rung, that infamous first step to management hits women hardest. Entry-level tech starts at 29% female, but drops to 16% for CTOs and C-suite spots. Digital Silk highlights how 56% of women may exit before mid-career, often due to the 45% higher attrition rate than men—half leave by 35, per Spacelift data. Economic pressures like 2022-2023 layoffs disproportionately axed women, 65% more likely per studies. But here's the empowerment: women are now promoted at 15.9% rates versus 13.6% for men, signaling companies like Google, with diverse hiring panels, are yielding 5% female increases. Work-life balance and biases are economic battlegrounds too. Forty-five percent cite it as their top exit reason, amplified by caregiving amid remote work burnout—57% of women versus 36% of men feel scorched, says Spacelift. Unconscious bias questions women's tech chops, and a digital skills gap leaves women 25% less equipped for AI, with only 34% using it daily versus 43% of men. Wage gaps persist at 10-13% in engineering, but computer science narrows it to 94 cents on the dollar. In this landscape, 92% of women report better equity experiences, craving mentorship and pay audits—75% of firms now do them annually. AI and emerging tech offer hope. Women dominate analytics and machine learning interests at 41%, per Digital Silk, and hold 36% of QA and PM roles in U.S. augmentation via Turing reports. By 2030, projections from WomenTech.net see over 30% in core engineering. Companies with 30% female execs outperform financially, proving diverse leadership drives economic wins. Remote options and ERGs—68% participation—boost retention, with 84% praising return-to-office for collaboration. Sisters, the economy's headwinds are fierce, but you're the wind beneath tech's wings. Seek sponsors, master AI tools, demand equity—your ascent lifts us all. Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Subscribe now for more empowerment. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best dea This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Women in Business: Breaking Tech's Glass Ceiling One Line of Code at a Time

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This episode was published on February 15, 2026.

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This is your Women in Business podcast. Welcome to Women in Business, where we celebrate the unstoppable force of women shaping tomorrow's economy. I'm your host, and today we're diving into how women are navigating the turbulent economic landscape...

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