Being the only woman on a team (or at a company) โ especially when belonging to additional marginalized groups โ is harmful to oneโs career, mental wellbeing, and physical safety (McKinsey & Co, 2019).
Lately, Iโve noticed these statistics arenโt โclickingโ for my clients: well-meaning mostly white, mostly male leaders. And, since the swell of interest this Summer, Iโve noticed diversity efforts and gender inclusion initiatives stalling out a bit.
To help reinvigorate the work of inclusion in tech, I surveyed and then hosted two open sessions on โSurviving Techโ for those who are often โthe firstโ or โthe onlyโ or โsomehow differentโ in terms of any under-represented identities.
My collaborator and I asked these 120 multi-racial, multi-gendered techies, โwhatโs hard about being โthe firstโ / โthe onlyโ in tech?โ
Their answers were crushing, unsurprising, and motivating. Their reflections spoke to six main ways tech is failing women and non-binary people, techies of Color, queer/trans folks, and especially those of us who belong to more than one marginalized community:
Hostility and culture issues
- โAll day itโs offensive humor in earshot; and I get called out for eavesdropping or being โover-sensitiveโ when I say anythingโ
- โEven nice people are just not aware about whatโs not cool anymore. Words that just shouldnโt fly today and racist emojis from white people.โ
- โWhen I was hired, the guys played โtricksโ on me, denying me access from systems I needed to use for my job.โ
- โI didnโt have a title for 1.7 years and so they made me do all this grunt workโฆand then they told me I wasnโt ready for the raise or new title.โ
- โYouโd be amazed at the level of straight up sexual harassment in tech even after #metooโ
- โBullying and rudenessโ
- โInterruptions all the timeโ
- โEverythingโs just supposedly a โjokeโ to the engineers but itโs frankly racist and unkind to the gay communityโ
- โWorking in startups without HR depts to curb unfair behaviorโ
Getting overlooked
- โBeing given projects that donโt challenge meโ
- โGetting obviously underpaidโ
- โBeing left out of the important meetingsโ
- โNot being taken seriously on my teamโ
- โIโm so demoralized by seeing Cis white men with inflated titles compared to their skills get promoted above me: a seasoned personโ
- โPromotion / climb up ladder / job searching โ as Black and femaleโ
- โBeing given the โgirlyโ tasks โ like keeping the team organized (Iโm an engineer).
- โGetting told Iโm not ready for promotion, but then getting asked to train someone (a rescind college grad white male) much more junior for the role โ โbecause he had promiseโ.โ
- โI wonder if thereโs something wrong with me: in my last job I was in a much higher role. Here, they said โyouโre not there yetโ but when I asked what it would take: silence.โ
โBeing under-estimated is really taking a toll on me.โ
- โMajor self-doubt and self criticism from seeing no one like me.โ
- โI take three times as long as my colleagues to make sure itโs perfect on the first try (Iโm getting burned out).โ
- โBeing an โonlyโ โ especially in leadership is rough.โ
- โI feel called to allyship for everyone whoโs not a CIS straight white man.โ
- โI do lots of second-guessing myself.โ
- โIโm very impacted by the thoughts and words of people I donโt respect who keep bringing me down.โ
- โI guess Iโm giving up: I donโt market my skills and accomplishments as well as I should.โ
โItโs lonely as hell.โ
- โI get talked over, ignored, repeated, or disrespected in ways Iโm certain my colleagues donโt even understand.โ
- โI crave finding like-minded folks excited about new tech but from a similar class and background.โ
- โIโm the first non-binary tech cofounder in my company and in my social group.โ
- โIโm the first woman on the engineering side โ theyโre always making a thing out of my gender; itโs a lot of pressure.โ
- โI feel like Iโm the crazy one.โ
- โIโm so damn lonely.โ
Itโs hard to โbe myselfโ.
- โItโs hard to figure out โauthenticityโ and โvulnerabilityโ in a super-homogenous tech (bro) culture, so I just shut myself down.โ
- โNot sure how cool it is to be โoutโ as a progressive โ in my leadership role.โ
- โEveryone seems cool, but Iโm not 100% ready to โcome outโ there; itโs weird because Iโm โoutโ everywhere else.โ
- โThereโs shame in being new to techโ
- โIโm tired of working in spaces where I can not be in my wholeness.โ
- โI donโt even feel like myself anymore in this culture.โ
Iโm not sure how to make change (without repercussions)
- โAdvocating for inclusion without being โthat personโ.โ
- โKnowing when to stand up for myself (and when to let it lie).โ
- โI want to learn how to care for, and create space for people who have been marginalized and ensure that as many people as I can, are embraced and exposed to their full potential in a respectful and comfortable way.โ
- โThe battle and balance of hiring more diverse candidates.โ
- โExhaustion.โ
- โWhen to stay quiet and survive and when to push back.โ
- โI want to help breakdown stereotypes and bring more Diversity & Inclusion within tech.โ
Being marginalized in tech โ especially as an โonlyโ โ can cause slowed career growth, loneliness, burnout, role confusion, self-doubt, lack of critical thought partnership, and a feeling of being torn about โspeaking upโ to make it better.
My hope in sharing these quotations is that the words of these individuals will re-awaken all of us to the need for real change in companies.