To help women thrive in tech, leaders must move beyond mentorship to active sponsorship, visibility and everyday acts of encouragement.
As AI reshapes work, women are using it to ditch outdated trade-offs and prove ambitious careers and rich family lives can coexist.
On International Women's Day, organisations are urged to expand access, invest in mentorship and redefine leadership for true equity.
Women rising fastest in AI are those embracing uncertainty and adaptability, not those waiting until they feel fully prepared or perfectly ready.
This International Women's Day, 'Give to Gain' urges leaders to invest in women, champion them in absentia, and unlock collective progress.
Women power the NHS but are sidelined in healthtech, leaving the tools meant to transform care shaped in rooms they rarely occupy.
On International Women's Day, women in STEM show how quiet, visible consistency can reshape workplaces and expand what others believe is possible.
Farah urges women in tech to own their expertise, stay true to themselves and deliver value to earn respect in male-dominated rooms.
Marketing's future belongs to teams that master open, unified data infrastructure instead of guessing through disconnected systems.
After a decade without female colleagues, coder Midori Fukami now sees rising representation in tech and urges women to claim their space.
UK tech's gender gap is no pipeline glitch but structural bias, demanding rigorous use of data and AI oversight to drive real change.
As AI races ahead, women's underrepresented voices could reshape how we navigate uncertainty, bias and authority in this transformative era.
Bridging schools and tech careers with inclusive training and language could speed women's path into engineering and shape fairer AI.
AI is exposing the invisible emotional labour taxing women leaders, turning unmeasured mental load into hard data companies can't ignore.
As women reshape the tech landscape, careers in engineering and AI are offering purpose, impact and fulfilment far beyond the job title.
With women-led start-ups securing just 2.3% of 2024 VC funds, Cristina Fonseca says closing tech's gender gap is vital for growth.
As AI reshapes work and life, women must be empowered to build and question it, or risk being defined by systems they did not design.
Tech's gender gap won't close with quotas alone; real change depends on everyday culture, practical allyship and genuine sponsorship.
Women's health tech is failing because data, research and investment still treat female bodies as exceptions, not the default.
In a world where software outages can ground planes, women tech leaders are redefining resilience, responsibility and influence.