Come Together... Maybe not right now, and that's ok.

Oops, I did it again. I unintentionally started another fight on Facebook.  

It started out pretty innocently. I woke up and did what I normally do which is sit on the couch with my coffee and pulled up then the news on my phone. I was struck by an article announcing that for the first time the Boy Scouts of America planned to integrate girls into the program. Initially I was pretty positive and excited about it. I was hopeful in thinking that the Boy Scouts are doing the right thing to integrate genders. The article talked about the organization’s desire to expose more girls to STEM programs by giving them the same opportunities as boys. It seemed like a pretty good thing considering the very real talent gap that exists in our industry so I forwarded it on with no comment. Point one for feminism and equal rights! Awesome right?

What was interesting was that a lot of the counter arguments against this change initially came from women that I really respect. Here I was, a self-proclaimed modern feminist having my viewpoint challenged by other feminist open minded thinkers. Throwing boys and girls into the same activities should be a good thing, right? Giving girls the same opportunities as other boys early on in their development is progress, isn’t it? They cited study after study which showed that integrating girls into an all-boys environment had a positive impact on the boys’ development while it showed that it had a detrimental impact on the development and self-confidence of girls. This wasn’t an argument against gender equality. It was an argument for creating environments where girls could thrive.

When my excitement turned to curiosity and I asked, “isn’t equality a good thing?” men reacted too. A lot of these men had strong opinions that I generally agree with like, “treat boys and girls the same way,” and “give everyone equal opportunities.” One of the guys backed up my question with a passionate argument implying that not wanting integration in the Boy Scouts was the same thing as the segregation laws in the 1950’s. As if choosing to keep boys and girls separate in the scouts is synonymous with forcing someone of a different race to drink from a separate water fountain. Or that if the Girl Scouts didn’t offer the same activities as the Boy Scouts we should shift our focus and force the Girl Scouts to change their programs. The guys weren’t arguing against a case for women and girls, they were just looking at the change in a completely different way.

And then it dawned on me…

Here I was singing the praises of integration yet I am also the same person who co-founded a women’s only networking group for my own industry. It’s not because I/we believe in segregation of genders in any way whatsoever. WTF exists in response to a very real issue that exists in our society. Girls today still are faced with a lot of issues that stem from their childhood and it continues on into their professional lives. I love that people are starting to recognize and talk about solutions to these issues. I appreciate that books like Lean In exist and that it has helped create a movement to help women in business and technology (thanks Sheryl). But as someone who has “leaned in” my entire career and never shied away from expressing my opinions or asking for a promotion, my determination and assertiveness is to this day still labeled as “bossy”, “bitchy” or “overly aggressive” while my male counterparts are labeled as “driven”, “strong leaders”, and “high potential”. We can talk about the issues and address the problems but given where we are as a society today it needs to go beyond that. They say it takes a village to raise a child but it takes I believe it takes a community to empower and inspire women and that community needs to be ours.

This has never been an us versus them thing but I realize now that the reason we’re doing this is for the same reasons why the women on Facebook were in support of keeping the two scout groups separate. WTF is not a private women’s club where we sip champagne in our amazingly well-lit room and plot against our male coworkers.  Although I’ll take the great lighting and a glass of champagne any old day of the week. WTF is about a global community of women in our industry coming together because we recognized that we all needed something like this.

Some of us are driven by a desire for mentorship from other strong female leaders. Some of us lack a safe space in our own companies to ask questions or talk about the very real self-confidence issues that exist across a lot of women in the workforce today. Some of us want to move to the next level in our careers but don’t know how to take that step. Some of us love our bitchin’ acronym and get the humor in it because it’s 2018, come on people! Some of us simply want to enjoy a nice glass of wine, get to know some other ladies, and get away from the insanity and chaos of the conferences we all attend. Even if it’s for just for a few magical hours.

For me it’s all of the above.

- Brynn

What a woman sees.

So the other day I started a lively discussion on Facebook.

I was working on the WTF website and was on the hunt for some good stock photos to help elevate and inspire women in our industry. As a grassroots organization the photos needed to be high quality but also not break the bank. I searched Getty Images, iStockphoto, 123RF, and Unsplash and started to notice a pattern.

Here is what I searched for:

Woman in tech
Woman in datacenter
Woman engineer
Woman coder
Woman leader
Woman network engineer
Woman business

What came back were thousands upon thousands of photos. On the business woman/leader search the photos ranged from nicely dressed friendly women smiling with a blurred office background, to strong looking women giving feedback in meetings, to women leading presentations. While there weren't as many images that necessarily resonated with who I am or how I dress at work I felt like these could be representative of something I could get behind. If you go to womenstechforum.com/who-we-are/ you will see an example of one of those photos in our banner image.

Then I started to look for good photos that represented women in tech. I scrolled through page after page on Getty Images and found one or two photos that I deemed acceptable. Both of the good photos could be obtained for the small purchase price of $550. Nope. 

A Google search for women in datacenters introduced me to 123RF. Between that site and iStock I found a handful of photos but it took me nearly an hour of searching through multiple pages on each of these sites. Unspash (a free photo site) offered little to no examples of women in technology so I moved on. As an aside, if you want some great general photos of women Unsplash is a great resource.

Long and short, photos of women in our industry do exist but you have to search through pages and pages...and more pages...<le sigh> to find them. This brings me back to my lively Facebook discussion the other day. It started with a comment on the photo below...

"If the tech/cloud/data center industry wants to change the perception of women then maybe start by getting some better stock photos than some dude mansplaining to a woman taking notes on a laptop."

"If the tech/cloud/data center industry wants to change the perception of women then maybe start by getting some better stock photos than some dude mansplaining to a woman taking notes on a laptop."

Needless to say the resulting comments were lively. A few folks posted photos as a counter to this statement. Unfortunately many of the photos that were posted helped support the point I was originally making. Yes, there are photos of women in datacenters and women working in IT. A lot of them. But there is an appallingly low number of them that actually represent who we really are.

Let's break this down with some good and bad examples of what is out there:

In a recent article published on AFCOM Theresa Simpkin, head of the department of Lord Ashcroft International Business School for Anglia Ruskin University, was quoted as saying, "Organizational culture is often not conducive to supporting career progression for women in tech - not necessarily because of the individuals within the organization per se, but the accepted norms that have developed over time," Simpkin said. "Networks, advocate programs and other mechanisms designed to provide a desirable career trajectory are often not aligned to alternative labor characteristics (this is not just about gender, but also covers socio-economic factors, race, orientation etc).  This is a highly complex, socially constructed matter that has its roots in organizational structure, culture, social learning and unconscious bias." To learn more about the content published in the recent AFCOM article go here. This was also republished recently on DataCenter Knowledge.

If the goal is to get more women in our industry then there are countless ways we can tackle this issue. I am grateful that there are men out there who recognize there is a problem with the content that exists. Thank you for your contribution to the Facebook discussion. But the discussion itself is an example of a broader social issue. As I looked back through 2 days of comments on that post that I realized something. It goes something like this...

  1. Woman addresses problem in a public forum.

  2. Man jumps in and start offering solutions to the problem.

  3. More men jump in with more solutions to said problem.

  4. Even more men offer solutions.....

I'm just going to stop here.

I love that men want to help solve these problems. Seriously. It's really cool that guys recognize that there is an issue and want to provide support. I personally have had so many wonderful men help me in my career and build me up over the years. But that's not the point. 

The point is that women should be offering solutions to problems like this. We have a voice and an opportunity to contribute to the discussion and enact real change. If men want to help us then tell the amazing women in their company that we exist and help us build more connections. Help us build our community. Ask us how we think they can help before offering solutions to solve the problem.

I want more women leaders in my life. I want women around me that I can aspire to be like so that I can evolve in my career. I want a community where it's ok to talk about my desire for a strong female mentor, or talk about my fear of public speaking but that I do it anyway because I feel like it will help me get over it, or my own challenges as a woman leader tech. The reason I jumped behind the concept of WTF was to not just change the conversation, but to create a community where other women had a common framework and an environment where we could support one another professionally and grow our personal networks and maybe even make a few friends along the way.

We've defined the problem but how many of us are taking action to help solve it? Women are leaders. Women are technicians. Women are coders. Women are network engineers. Women are individual contributors, president's club award winners, Managers, Directors, Sr. Directors, VPs, CEOs. Women get things done. So what's preventing us from talking about solving it more than we are right now? What's preventing us from striking up a conversation with our marketing teams about how the images on our websites shape the perspective of prospective candidates? Or informing the recruiting teams at our own companies about how the language used in job descriptions actually impacts the candidate pool. Each of us has the ability to make an impact as individuals and as female leaders at our companies. The beauty of our industry is that it is small and by design we are in the business of connecting the world.

So why not shift inward and focus on what holds us back and what we need to move forward and evolve beyond the status quo. If we as women want to change the way the world sees our contribution then let's start with how we see ourselves.

- Brynn

Leading the conversation.

Have something you want to say or contribute to our community? Then we want to hear from you. Shoot us a note on our Get Involved page. We're currently compiling a list of topics we want to cover in 2018. We are actively looking for bloggers and women who want to contribute to this effort and have your voice heard.

Some of you may have read an amazing book that you want to share with our community, while others have an idea or topic you want to speak about to get others thinking. Any and all topics relevant to our industry and to our community will be welcome. So don't be shy ladies. :) 

- Brynn

lauren-mancke-60627-unsplash.jpg