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Women tech experience lags behind men by three years

While gender inequality in tech has dominated discussions in recent times, findings from the new data by Anderson Frank, a Tenth Revolution Group company, show that tangible progress remains elusive. The research findings reveal that women in tech have an average of almost 3 years less experience than their male counterparts, a disparity that may not only impacts their chances of progression but also restricts their access to senior and leadership roles. As it stands, just 26% of those in the UK tech workforce are women. Research by Revolent shows that 87% of the top 500 companies led by female decision-makers last year reported above-average profits, compared to just 78% of companies without a female CEO.

New data offers insight into progress towards equal access, highlights experience gap. Gender inequality in tech has remained a key site of discussion throughout 2023 thus far. The increase in mainstream coverage of the conversation in recent years has undoubtedly increased awareness, but tangible progress is still hard to mark. 

In the context of recent research into the gender balance at both leadership and middle management levels in tech, new data* explores the question of how long women have been in the sector on average compared to men. 

Average Years Of Experience 
Men 14.2
Women  11.3 

Commenting on this new data, Anderson Frank Chairman and CEO James Lloyd-Townshend said: “We know that women are under-represented at every level in tech, but what this new data really shows us is that there’s an experience gap at work for those women already in the sector. With that gap at almost three years, it’s not difficult to see how this impacts progression and access to those more senior and leadership roles. Not only are there fewer of those positions available, but male tech professionals effectively have a head start in terms of their experience in the sector.” 

“This data is also a reminder that the conversation around inclusion has to be more than just a discussion of the numerical gender balance at each level. The numbers are important and we have to keep pushing towards equal access, but we also have to be exploring the question of progression and how training and development opportunities, and experience factor into that. It’s vital that women are able to enter the sector and that they’re able to progress within it. Experience is a massive part of that.” 

*Anderson Frank, a Tenth Revolution Group company, has mined Statistics were derived from the latest (2022-2023)

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