International Women's Day 2007
Speech by AIIA CEO Sheryle Moon to FITT luncheon, 8 March 2007
Joining the information and communication technology (ICT) industry in
1981 was not a calculated choice. A single parent with a 3-year-old
to support, I needed a secure job to pay the bills.
When I was offered a position with IBM, my family and some of my
friends could not believe that I would even contemplate accepting it.
Their comments were: ‘you’ll never be successful in computing’, ‘you’re
no good at maths or science’ and ‘you’re better with people than you’ll
be with computers’.
Hang on, I thought. My Higher School Certificate shows that I passed
maths and science at the highest levels. I did economics and
econometrics at university and passed. I can be successful. I took the
job.
Little did I know that the ICT industry would provide me with such a dynamic, challenging and fulfilling career.
During my 26 years in the industry, I have travelled all over
the world with my work. I have managed companies with revenue in the
many hundreds of millions of dollars. I have also learned that the ICT
industry is as much about people and solving their problems as it is
about hardware and software.
My story is not unique. I’m sure I’m in the company of an audience of
women who have enjoyed satisfying and stimulating careers in the ICT
industry. And yet, statistics tell us that the number of women in the
ICT industry is falling rapidly.
During the period from 2001 to 2004, women's participation in the
Australian ICT industry declined by 7.6 per cent, despite the industry
growing as a whole. The Australian Bureau of Statistics tells us that
23.6 per cent of employees in the ICT industry were women in 2001. By
2004, the percentage of female employees had fallen to 16 per cent.
Today, it stands at around 18 per cent. And this 18 per cent of females
employed in the ICT industry represents only 1 per cent of total
employed women in the population.
And here’s more food for thought. AIIA’s counterpart in Britain,
IntellectUK, released a study last year which revealed that many women
professionals are leaving the IT industry because the male-dominated
environment and a lack of work-life balance made the industry
unattractive to women.
For many women surveyed, the male-dominated culture went hand-in-hand
with a ‘glass ceiling’, and they felt they had to work harder than male
colleagues to achieve success. The ‘old boys club’ approach in some
parts of the industry - with its informal male networking – also
contributed to the perceived or real exclusion of women from many job
opportunities in ICT.
So, we have female professionals abandoning the ICT industry because it
is not providing them with the career challenges and work-life balance
they are looking for. Simultaneously, the numbers of young women
studying IT is also shrinking.
In 1996 the percentage of women enrolled in IT courses was 36 per cent,
falling to 30 per cent in 2001 and declining even further to 22.6 per
cent in 2003 – that’s 13.4 per cent in seven years.
And the outlook is grim. A survey of Year 12 students, conducted by
Multimedia Victoria in 2004, revealed that only 3 per cent of the girls
surveyed showed a strong interest in pursuing ICT as a career.
We know that many young women are turned off careers in ICT because
they believe ‘it’s for computer nerds’, or ‘it’s for blokes’ or ‘it’s
boring, you just sit in front of a computer screen all day’.
And yet, when they are asked what they are looking for in a career,
young women say they are looking for fun, variety, security,
interaction with others, helping others, financial reward, expressing
their creativity and the opportunity to travel.
It sounds like they are describing our industry!
So, what can we do to make the ICT industry more attractive to young
women entering the workforce and more flexible for women already in an
ICT career?
Governments, industry associations, companies and professionals must
work together. We each have a vital role to play in improving our
industry’s image and attracting more women into the industry.
Companies small and large must plug the hole in the leaky bucket now,
and retain the women who will act as tomorrow’s role models. They must
foster the careers of talented women when they enter the profession and
support these women at all stages in their careers and lives.
Companies in our industry must maximise the benefits of the technology
they helped to create by offering women flexible working arrangements.
The ABS tells us that just under a quarter of all Australians now do
some work from home – this must increase if we are to capitalise on the
skills of women who want to juggle career and motherhood.
Our sector must also foster a culture that ensures women feel valued
and that recognises some of the ‘softer’ management skills that many
women possess. Talented female professionals need access to business
mentoring and networking opportunities to help their careers progress.
Governments and industry associations like AIIA must help women
understand that a career in ICT is a career full of challenges and
rewards and can be pursued within practically any sector they care to
choose. From fashion to fitness, from art to architecture – ICT skills
translate to virtually every industry across our economy.
Australia’s ICT industry is dynamic and world leading, but it won’t
stay that way if we continue to lose valuable skilled women
professionals from the sector. We must take action to ensure that we
are doing all that we can to recruit, motivate and retain women within
our industry.
Today, the Australian Government has announced a grant of $70 000 which
will support a new training initiative, led by AIIA and supported by
the Australian Computer Society. This training will provide female ICT
professionals and their employers with the knowledge and skills to
address barriers that limit women’s ability to progress in the ICT
sector.
Engaging more women in the ICT industry is not just about helping
bottom line profits. It’s not just about maximising women’s
contribution to the labour force and to Australia’s productivity.
Being a part of the ICT industry enables women to influence
technological innovation – everything from traffic and transport to
communication and construction – across the entire spectrum of our
society. And in return, it ensures that our society has a wider skill
set to draw upon and benefits from the intellects and technological
talents and experiences of all its members, not just 50 per cent of the
population.