Employee Retention stories
In an AI-transformed workplace, women who embrace continuous reinvention and relevance over rank will define the next era of leadership.
Women in tech are drowning in mentorship but starved of sponsorship, leaving careers stalled and leadership pipelines chronically underused.
In today's tech world, mentoring is not a perk but a core duty, unlocking talent, widening opportunity and strengthening leadership.
Game rooms won't fix gender gaps; women need trust-based flexibility, robust leave and healthcare that match messy, real working lives.
Backing high-potential women with mentoring and stretch roles builds stronger leaders, boosts retention and strengthens business outcomes.
Culture-first leaders aren't 'soft'; they pair empathy with high standards, commercial discipline and tough decisions to drive performance.
Koddi argues career progress hinges on structured sponsorship, not ad hoc mentorship, turning advocacy into core organisational infrastructure.
On International Women's Day 2026, female tech leaders warn AI risks deepening bias unless women shape, lead and design the future.
International Women's Day should be tech's annual audit of real benefits and transparency, not a branding exercise of panels and posts.
Sales teams enter new years blind as quotas arrive late, targets shift faster and AI fails to fix mounting planning and commission chaos.
In 2026, tech must move beyond hiring drives and embed real cultural change so women can progress, lead and stay for the long term.
As AI erodes entry-level tech roles, female leaders warn only intentional mentorship can keep women from being locked out of the future.
Women leaders in IT are transforming male-dominated industries by prioritising retention, real representation and measurable strategic results.
IT leaders must back recruiters and foster inclusive cultures if they want to fix tech's gender gap and unlock performance gains.
On International Women's Day, tech leaders warn progress for women is no accident and urge deliberate action to fix systemic bias.
Mentorship is reshaping tech careers as seasoned leaders invest in young women, learning fresh skills and perspectives in return.
As AI booms, tech is wasting vital female talent; embracing 'give to gain' could close skills gaps, cut costs and build fairer systems.
In a tight tech talent market, firms win on retention by nailing everyday culture, clarity, fairness and truly flexible work.
UK tech leaders warn women must be central to tackling digital skills gaps or the economy risks losing more than GBP £10 billion in growth.
Employers warned jargon-laden job ads packed with 'rockstar' and 'ninja' clichés may signal burnout and bias, putting off strong candidates.