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Women in Tech Festival 2015- Eventbrite. Invalid quantity.

Women in Tech Festival 2015- Eventbrite

Please enter a quantity of 1 or more. The quantity you chose exceeds the quantity available. Please enter your name. Please enter an email address. Please enter a valid email address. Please enter your message or comments. Please enter the code as shown on the image. Please select the date you would like to attend. Why Aren’t There More Female Entrepreneurs?

I’m often asked the question about why there aren’t more women who are entrepreneurs.

Why Aren’t There More Female Entrepreneurs?

On my blog I’ve been hesitant to take the topic head on. Somehow it seems kind of strange for a man to answer this question that obviously comes from a man’s point of view. But last week I noticed a blog post by a woman, Tara Tiger Brown, that asked the question, “Why Aren’t More Women Commenting on VC Blog Posts?” [it's short, you should read it] .

TRUTH: Women-Led Startups Have Fewer Failures. Women own about 40 percent of the private businesses in the United States, according to the Center for Women's Business Research.

TRUTH: Women-Led Startups Have Fewer Failures

But according to Astia, a group that supports women-led small companies, women make up less than 10 percent of venture-backed start-ups. As of last year, only 14 women had been funded by Y Combinator out of a total of 208. That's a disparity that some, including Cindy Padnos, have found troubling. It's not because of any bias it might imply. Padnos finds the numbers so disturbing because she believes start-ups are missing out on a very valuable resource that are actually quite important for their health. Padnos started her career as a tech entrepreneur and later served as president and CEO of a software company. "I thought I saw a growing disparity between the growth in the number of venture-backable women, and the actual dollars that were going into companies that had women on the founding team," Padnos says. What About the Critics? Most, however, disagree. Which female-founded tech companies have received funding.

Are Women Bad for Start-ups? You've Got To Be Kidding... Posted by Tom Foremski - August 7, 2011 By Vanessa Camones, PR veteran and founder of theMIX agency.

Are Women Bad for Start-ups? You've Got To Be Kidding...

Women have made astounding advances in the workforce in the past fifty years. Even in the tech sector, traditionally an enclave of geeky guys, women have progressed from support roles to becoming respected builders, leaders and innovators. We're still a minority, but no longer an anomaly. Report: Women-owned or Led Firms are Becoming a Leading Entrepreneurial force in Technology : The Next Women. The Big Shift: Challenge and Opportunity for Women. 2010: The Year of Whining About Women In Tech. Whining about the inequality of women in tech has been big for page views this year.

2010: The Year of Whining About Women In Tech

I'm calling BS on all of it. Every few months in 2010, someone posted about whose fault it is that there are not enough of us in the tech sectors, and then everyone got upset. Everyone pointed fingers. It's gender. It's biology. She done it. Everyone always takes a position. Seriously: Who Cares? I know, like we ladies should care what some creepy old dude thinks.

Deep Thoughts by Siobhan Quinn: The Women (I know) in Tech. Over the last few months there's been a lot of public discussion / accusation / explanation around why there are few women working at technology startups.

Deep Thoughts by Siobhan Quinn: The Women (I know) in Tech

Silicon Alley Insider pointed out the lack of women applying to "maker" (engineers, product managers, and designers) positions at small tech companies. TechCrunch asked everyone to stop blamming men (I agree with their argument), but then also published a fairly upsetting post by a guest blogger explaining that women would rather have children than run startups. Prominent Web 2.0 Companies Do Not Have Any Women on Their Board of Directors. In one memorable episode of the famous old short films “The Little Rascals,” after not getting invited to a party, the Our Gang little dudes decided to form their own group, comically called “The He-Man Woman-Haters Club.”

Prominent Web 2.0 Companies Do Not Have Any Women on Their Board of Directors

In other words: No girls allowed! While it was wink-wink cute when Spanky, Alfalfa and Buckwheat huffed and puffed about keeping out Darla–which they never ever could do–back in the last century, it’s not quite as adorkable when it comes to the boards of all the major Web 2.0 hotshots these days. That would be Twitter, Facebook, Zynga, Groupon and Foursquare, none of which have any women as directors. As in zero. Sol Tzvi. WomenInTech. Thoughtleaders: Where are the women in technology? Anita Borg In.

Posted by Tom Foremski - September 22, 2006 In about two weeks, more than 1200 women plus a handful of men will meet in San Diego for the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing.

Thoughtleaders: Where are the women in technology? Anita Borg In

It is organized by the Anita Borg Institute, the leading advocate for women in technology leadership roles, and the Association of Computing Machinery. Anita Borg, founder of the institute. I recently I met with Telle Whitney, the energetic and passionate head of the Anita Borg Institute, housed within HP Labs in the heart of Silicon Valley. Also at the meeting was Alan Eustace VP of engineering at Google. Anita Borg Institute for Women. Anita Borg on why there should be more women technologists. Anita Borg essay. Anita Borg. Anita Borg (January 17, 1949 – April 6, 2003) was an American computer scientist.

Anita Borg

She founded the Institute for Women and Technology (now the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology) and the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing. She was born Anita Borg Naffz in Chicago, Illinois.[1] She grew up in Palatine, Illinois; Kaneohe, Hawaii; and Mukilteo, Washington.[2] Career[edit] Borg got her first programming job in 1969. Although she loved math while growing up, she did not originally intend to go into computer science and taught herself to program while working at a small insurance company.[3] She earned a doctorate in computer science from New York University in 1981.

After receiving her Ph.D., Borg spent four years building a fault tolerant Unix-based operating system, first for Auragen Systems Corp. of New Jersey and then with Nixdorf Computer in Germany.[4]

Women of Vision Awards

Why So Few Women in Silicon Valley? CANDACE FLEMING’S résumé boasts a double major in industrial engineering and English from Stanford, an M.B.A. from , a management position at and experience as president of a small software company.

Why So Few Women in Silicon Valley?

But when she was raising money for Crimson Hexagon, a start-up company she co-founded in 2007, she recalls one venture capitalist telling her that it didn’t matter that she didn’t have business cards, because all they would say was “Mom.” Another potential backer invited her for a weekend yachting excursion by showing her a picture of himself on the boat — without clothes. When a third financier discovered that her husband was also a biking enthusiast, she says, he spent more time asking if riding affected her husband’s reproductive capabilities than he did focusing on her business plan.

Ultimately, none of the 30 venture firms she pitched financed her company. “I didn’t know things like this still happened,” says Ms. For women, though, that narrative often unfolds differently. No Men Allowed: Girls In Tech Expands To New York, LA, And Beyon. Posted by Tom Foremski - December 4, 2008 "Women in the work place are very competitive with each other and that makes the glass ceiling twice as thick," says Adriana Gascoigne. She is the founder of Girls in Tech, a 1300 strong organization that seeks to empower women in the technology industry.

Tech companies continue to be heavily male dominated and that's something that Girls in Tech hopes to change through networking, roundtables, and entrepreneurial workshops. And only women are invited. "When women get together we can connect on a deeper level than if men are around," says Ms Gascoigne. : Girls In Tech : GirlGeeks.org - Online community for women and girls interested. Kay Koplovitz: We Need More Women Entrepreneurs.

Silicon Valley Has One Hand Tied Behind Its Back... Posted by Tom Foremski - August 28, 2009 Silicon Valley is an immensely creative and inventive place. I love working here and being involved in the conversations, the people, the companies that are making the future. Every day I meet people, I meet startups, that are relocating to here, from every and any place around the world. And they come here for those same reasons why I am here. Yet Silicon Valley is also mired in old school thinking and culture that it needs to shed. If Silicon Valley can figure out how to effectively use this barely tapped resource, it could be so much more successful, and it could show true leadership to the rest of the world. Women And How They Drive Silicon Valley Innovation. Posted by Tom Foremski - February 19, 2010 Here's a couple of tongue-in cheek posts about how few women there are in Silicon Valley.

(Hat tip Jeremiah Owyang)