women in hr tech
TRANSCRIPT
Women & Technology:HR Technology Professionals at the
Crossroads
Heidi Spirgi, SVP Product & TechnologyThe Marcus Buckingham Company, [email protected]@tmbc.com
UK By the Numbers
• Currently only 17% of people working in tech in the UK are women
• Roughly 90% of coders in the UK are men• UK is already experiencing a digital skills gap that is
forecasted to reach 745,000 workers by 2017 and one million by 2020
• 60% of college graduates are women in Europe
A Global Case Study - Google
• Just 30% of Googlers are women• 48% of the company's non-tech jobs are held by women• Only 17% of Google's engineers are female• Women make up just 21% of the company's leadership• 3/10 Google directors are female, but only one of the
company's top 12 executives -- YouTube chief Susan Wojcicki -- is a woman.
The BIG Miss
• Digital disruption of every industry • Women are more active Internet users than men• Women are far more engaged in social media• Women are involved in 80% of consumer decisions
Most internet companies’ customers are women, but the engineers, designers, coders and executives making the products
are predominantly men
“If 90% of coders are men, developing and owning the language of the future,
women won’t be part of the conversation". – Caitlin Moran
Monoculture is Bad for Business
HR Technology Professional
Non-traditional
Backgrounds
Access
Gender CompositionExperience
Technology Solutions
Our Unique Position
Recruit
Retain
Advance
TechTalent Charter
• An initiative set-up up by the recruitment platform Monster with the aim to take positive action to increase the ratio of women working in tech to reflect the makeup of the UK population.
• Signatories commit to seven protocols that will, in theory, lead to an increased ratio of women in tech. They cover:• How to build a pipeline of female tech talent• How to recruit the right talent• How to retain female tech talent
• Two stages to the Charter:1. Launched in November 2015 to founding signatories committing to the seven principles in
the Charter2. June 2016 signatories asked to sign up to fully embrace and implement the Charter's
protocols. Best practices and tools are provided by the Charter’s founding Steering Group to ensure signatories are equipped with the knowledge and abilities to fully implement the seven protocols
TechTalent Charter – 7 Protocols
1. Commit to best practice in recruitment by implementing the ‘Rooney Rule’ – interviewing at least one female candidate (where available) as part of the recruitment process
2. Encourage and support adoption of diversity best practice by adhering to the ‘tech inclusion’ accreditation scheme
3. Explore and collectively support initiatives to address longer term programmes to build a strong tech talent pipeline among the younger UK generation
4. Appoint a senior level, named representative with responsibility for the Charter commitments from each signatory organisation
5. Work collectively with other signatories to develop and implement future protocols that support the practical implementation of the aims of the Charter
6. Establish a set benchmark for measurement – signatories agree to share and publish the diversity profile of UK employees and any other work on equality, diversity and inclusion
7. To measure and monitor progress of the Charter and its protocols, publishing an annual joint report based on contributing data shared from all signatories
• http://monsteremploy.co.uk/techtalent/