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Women in Canadian IT: How the best get ahead

Women in Canadian IT: How the best get ahead

By:  Briony Smith  On: 19 Jun 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Executives from Microsoft, Bell Canada, CATA and others meet at a national forum to talk about how they approach problems compared to their male counterparts. Plus: Can tech jobs be sexy?

The IT field isn't one chock-a-block with women, a problem that starts in school with teachers unaware of the skills required or opportunities available for IT pros, and then manifests itself as a lack of ladies in the more hard-tech jobs, and few networking chances for those who are.

These issues were at the heart of a recent Information and Communications Technology Council-hosted “Women in IT National Forum” in Toronto. Panelist and Microsoft Canada practice manager Elizabeth Carson began by acknowledging that “the lack of women is an industry-wide challenge. Finding those women with strong, technically-deep experience is a challenge. The candidate pool is getting smaller, so having that diversity is not just a rights issue, but a competitive advantage — they can offer a different perspective.”

Carson said that in the professional services portion of the business, the deeply technical positions tend to be dominated by males. Women tend to gravitate toward less technical positions that, according to Carson, play upon their ability to understand communities and what users want. She said, “They tend to be project managers and business analysts instead.”

Vanda Vicars, senior vice-president with Bell Canada’s Enterprise Solutions’ design and delivery services, has found that her own intuitive and collaborative skills have helped her in her career, which included a 20-year stint with IBM Canada in roles like vice-president for technical support in IBM Global Services. “Women approach problems differently,” she said.

One barrier, Vicars said, is the fact that women don’t network as much as men do. One way to counteract this is to implement a structured mentor system that would help women navigate their workplace, and ongoing networking meetings and groups where women in the company’s IT department (or in IT in general) can interact. (IBM Canada has its own networking group for women, for instance.)

The laws of attraction

Managing director Joanne Stanley of the Ottawa-based CATA Women in IT Forum presented on behalf of her group and said that women should be made aware of the IT jobs that might be more interesting to them. Examples included human resource technology, online management and collaboration, IT security, IT architecture (including design, graphics, and software), and business and system integration. Her group also suggested that IT needs a new “look”. Said Stanley: “We need to change the perception of the ICT industry: we need to make it look fun and sexy, and emphasize the flexible work environment.”


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Briony Smith Briony Smith is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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