THE ENTERPRISING RIBIKA GIRLS
Richa, Bindiya and Kanika – the RIBIKA girls are well educated and belong to well-established business families, entrepreneurship kind of runs in their blood. Yet when they decided to focus …
Richa, Bindiya and Kanika – the RIBIKA girls are well educated and belong to well-established business families, entrepreneurship kind of runs in their blood. Yet when they decided to focus …
Study analyses the gender pay gap in the OECD and EU technology industry, revealing the best opportunities for women.
A survey of more than 1,000 university students conducted by KPMG and independent market research company High Fliers has identified a crisis in confidence among young women with regards to their digital skills.
VEX Robotics release the findings from their Girls into STEM Initiative (GIS) carried out across UK schools.
Culture, not pay, is the critical factor behind the lack of gender diversity in the technology, according to Venquis.
Pitch competition for women in tech invites entrepreneurs across the UK and Europe to compete for €50,000 in cash prizes.
Female engineers are leaving an already male-dominated engineering field due to a culture that does not take them seriously, according to Professor Brian Rubineau of Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University.
New research from Robert Half UK highlights that misconceptions and stereotypes rather than concerns about technical competencies may be holding women back in the IT field.
The latest GCSE results reveal that too few females are still choosing technology subjects, despite systematically getting better results than boys, according to global tech recruitment firm, Empiric.
WOW Talks, the social impact organisation that delivers engaging live events and digital content to inspire people to discover and pursue career paths in areas they are passionate about, is launching its first flagship event to inspire girls about the world of technology, with the support of Accenture and in partnership with Next Tech Girls.
InterTech is the organisation for LGBT techies. Supported by Microsoft and Google and other tech companies, Women@InterTech looks after the group’s members who identify as female.
Every year, the world celebrates Ada Lovelace Day to recognise and raise the profile of women working in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM).