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Beyond the glass ceiling: Behavioural intelligence is the power skill for women in tech
As the technology sector celebrates International Women's Day, we rightly applaud the progress made in representation and opportunity. Yet, for many women in leadership, navigating the industry's high-pressure environments reveals a persistent and exhausting challenge: the behavioural tightrope.
Women in tech are often caught in a classic double bind. They are encouraged to be assertive, but penalised for being perceived as aggressive. They are expected to be collaborative and empathetic, but then find their authority questioned. This creates a constant, draining tension between intention and impact. A female project lead may intend to drive her team to meet a critical deadline, but her directness is misread as being abrasive. A female CTO may intend to foster a culture of open debate but finds she must carefully moderate her tone in a way her male counterparts do not.
Give to Gain: building inclusive leadership in tech
International Women's Day is often a time for recognition. We celebrate achievements, acknowledge progress, and highlight the women shaping industries, organisations and communities. In technology, that visibility matters. It helps challenge outdated assumptions about who belongs in the sector and who gets to lead its future.
But this year's theme, "Give to Gain," calls for something more practical than celebration alone.
It asks us to consider what progress actually requires – and what organisations, leaders and individuals must give if they want to gain stronger teams, better outcomes and a more sustainable future for the technology workforce.
In the technology sector, the answer is clear: if we want to gain innovation, resilience and high performance, we must be willing to give opportunity, trust, sponsorship, time and structural support.
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Beyond the pipeline problem: Why transformation starts with culture, not quotas
The conversation around women in technology has matured over the past decade. We've moved slowly but meaningfully from debating whether the problem exists to debating how best to solve it. Yet, many organisations are still reaching for the wrong tools.
The instinct is understandable. When faced with a systemic challenge, the natural response is to build a system in return: a formal mentorship programme or a diversity target. These efforts are rarely without value, but they tend to treat gender equity as a project with a completion date rather than a culture that requires constant, deliberate tending.
Real transformation does not announce itself in a press release. It happens in the quiet moments that never make it into an annual report.
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