Employee Retention stories
In cyber security, leaders with self-awareness and emotional intelligence now outperform purely technical experts under relentless pressure.
Cyber and tech leaders say diversity will stall unless firms tackle toxic culture, caregiving bias and back women with real sponsorship.
Backing women in ICT is more than a diversity goal; it builds confident leaders, stronger teams and delivers real business growth.
Women in tech say AI will entrench bias without diverse leadership, urging IWD to drive measurable change and equitable innovation.
In modern tech, the strongest leaders aren't answer-givers but question-askers, building trust, safety and innovation through curiosity.
Orange Business is tackling tech's gender gap with school outreach, inclusive hiring, upskilling and support for women-led startups.
As cyber threats grow, more women are entering security roles, yet leadership remains male-dominated, risking lost talent and weaker defences.
In an AI-transformed workplace, women who embrace continuous reinvention and relevance over rank will define the next era of leadership.
Women in tech are drowning in mentorship but starved of sponsorship, leaving careers stalled and leadership pipelines chronically underused.
In today's tech world, mentoring is not a perk but a core duty, unlocking talent, widening opportunity and strengthening leadership.
Game rooms won't fix gender gaps; women need trust-based flexibility, robust leave and healthcare that match messy, real working lives.
Backing high-potential women with mentoring and stretch roles builds stronger leaders, boosts retention and strengthens business outcomes.
On International Women's Day, leaders urge tech to move from visibility for women to real executive power, policy support and pay parity.
As International Women's Day nears, tech's future hinges on courageous women redefining leadership norms, not just filling seats.
Half of Canadian VC funds now have a female partner, but weak promotion pathways mean women are still exiting the industry in droves.
Unconditional, expectation-free allyship is vital to keep women in tech and create psychologically safe, genuinely supportive workplaces.
In 2026, tech must move beyond hiring drives and embed real cultural change so women can progress, lead and stay for the long term.
As AI erodes entry-level tech roles, female leaders warn only intentional mentorship can keep women from being locked out of the future.
Women leaders in IT are transforming male-dominated industries by prioritising retention, real representation and measurable strategic results.
IT leaders must back recruiters and foster inclusive cultures if they want to fix tech's gender gap and unlock performance gains.