Why We Must Help Bridge the Gap For Women In Tech

Some days it gets wearying to face the additional challenges it takes for a woman to make it in the world of tech, but on days when it feels like that to me, I pull out the photo of all of the women that attended our first bootcamp.
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I remember you; you're the one who started the business that we used to bet on when you'd fail.

The comment came from a former writer who, like me, had been a contributor for one of New Mexico's most prestigious publications, The Albuquerque Tribune, a Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper which closed its doors in 2008 - only a year before I made the shift from well-known local writer to founder of a tech corporation. And not founder of just any tech company - I launched APPCityLife as a company tasked with forging a path in the brand new industry of mobile.

While I may understand why he, like many other former colleagues, believed a quick demise was eminent for a woman taking the leap from writer to tech startup founder, the discovery that they actually took bets on how long it would take me to fail was a bit of a shock. For me, the decision wasn't any bigger leap than the one I'd already taken from stay at home mom to writer. I haven't ever waited to be qualified to do something that I wanted or needed to do - not ever. I applied for my first real job the same day the state of Ohio deemed me legally old enough to earn a paycheck - and I got hired from the first store I walked into despite having no previous experience in retail. At sixteen years old, I'd already been babysitting for six years and selling and delivering newspapers (sometimes two routes) for eight years. Yes, eight years. I started selling Grit Magazine door to door to earn extra money when most kids my age were busy playing kick ball or riding bikes. I wasn't afraid of stretching skills or work, and that was the only qualification necessary to learn the rest that was needed.

Over the past five years as we've grown APPCityLife into the civic tech platform it is today, I've wondered how many other women would embrace tech if they believed it possible to do so. Tech is so much more than being a full-fledged developer, scientist or engineer, and one of our goals has been to empower individuals on the fringe of tech to not just join the community but change the conversation by being part of it.

We recently hosted our first Mobile App Bootcamp, opening up our platform to the public for the first time. I was overcome with emotion as I looked out across the room of participants and realized that almost half of the room were women. Many, like me, possessed passion, vision, and innovative ideas but hadn't taken the path of formal education in a STEM degree. And in that moment I realized the true, equalizing power of what we'd spent five years building at APPCityLife - our blend of civic tech and user-friendly access is a gateway for women as well as other under-represented groups to not only embrace but become active, contributing participants in tech.

Our bootcamp is the beginning of a new initiative we are spearheading at APPCityLife - a push to bring access to our platform to individuals and groups all around the world who already have the creativity, ideas and passion to envision valuable solutions to civic challenges within their own community. In fact, our second event is already lined up, and we'll be opening our platform to participants at a hackathon in Silicon Valley aimed at solving transportation challenges for the region. If all that is needed to change the ratio is access to a user-friendly platform which bridges the current gap between the non-tech and highly skilled developers, we can make that happen, and that is so exciting to me.

News broke yesterday of Laura Arrillaga-Andreessen and Marc Andreessen donating $500,000 to Girls Who Code, Code2040 and Hack the Hood, all nonprofits focused on bringing new opportunities in tech to women and black and Latino people. And while I admit to being sensitive to the subject after being on the front lines for the past five years, I found it ironic that the top search results for articles about the Andreessen's donation all focused on Marc, many failing to even mention his wife's involvement. In fact, the first result to include her name was penned by a woman journalist.

Our team was one of ten companies invited to pitch on October 7, 2014, at the Deal Stream Summit which brought together investors from New Mexico and the region. When I pitched with the group last year, I was the only woman. This year, there were three women presenters - a significant increase. In fact, one woman pitched on stage after having less than 24 hours to polish her presentation after her business partner landed in the hospital with a heart attack. She represented well, especially given the limited time to prepare. But since the event, not one news story published to date has covered or even named a single woman who participated in the event, although one online piece did at least post a photo. And of the women investors present at the event, not a single one is mentioned either. Please know that this is not about women wanting special treatment or not celebrating the successes of male colleagues. This is about voicing concern over the insidious gender bias that is still happening today, where the men are taken more seriously, given more credence by the press.

Some days it gets wearying to face the additional challenges it takes for a woman to make it in the world of tech, but on days when it feels like that to me, I pull out the photo of all of the women that attended our first bootcamp. I remind myself how lucky I am to have not only a supportive, proactive spouse and cofounder but two other male cofounders who have all put their faith in a woman CEO and are giving everything they have to help change the possibilities for other women and under-represented groups by building a platform which will deliver access to tech and help bridge the gap. It's impossible to stay discouraged for long with that much support and when that kind of promise lies ahead. All it takes is stretching skills, hard work, and courage to not play by the rules of the boys' club - whether we're men or women - and we can all do that.

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