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Wall Street Journal: Part 2, Changing Silicon Valleys Frat Boy Culture

Career
Author : Vivek Wadhwa
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When I started writing about the gender disparity I saw in Silicon Valley, I took intense fire from the boys club. I received a barrage of hate mail, immature online chatter and personal attacks on me over Twitter. A handful of prominent investors called my writings garbage; one called me a loser and a fraud. They could get away with this because such frat-boy behavior was considered acceptable in Silicon Valley.

But things are changing for the better. There is outrage at the sexism that is coming to light in Silicon Valley; solutions are being discussed and implemented; women are beginning to help each other; and the venture-capital system is looking at itself critically and mending its ways.

This was a view upon which most of the hundreds of women who helped crowd-create my upcoming book, Innovating Women, agreed. Each had followed a different path to success, because there was no single problem or solution. There were some common themes, however.

1. Support system:Many women said that they had a great network of family and friends who believed in them andprovided a support system that proved essential in dealing with problems such as funding and hectic work-hours. Phaedra Pardue, cloud and content consultant for Sohonet Media Network, said: My close network includes my colleagues and my mother-in-law Madalene Simons, who was one of the first female stockbrokers. While she always looks picture perfect in her lovely suits and petite frame, she packed a powerful presence that was undeniably a game-changer in her industry. In fact, I knew her long before I ever met my husband, as we both belonged to Portlandia, a womens networking group for female business executives in Portland, Oregon. If I could give any advice to those starting their career, find a group of like-minded people to connect with.It has made all the difference for me.

3. Educational tracking:Xerox Chief Technology Officer Sophie Vandebroek shared her shock at finding out that only one girl at her daughters school was put in the advanced math program, and that her daughter and her daughters friends were put in the regular level despite their achievements. I called the other moms and we complained and then they put the girls back in advanced math. So even schools unconsciously put the girls into less scientific fields, and once you do that in the middle school, you lose them. So you have to really be on top of them. It was the same girls that got into advance math in the middle school that then ended up all getting into science, three of them engineers and the fourth one is now in medical school.2. Mentors:Most women found male and female mentors to be invaluable. Megan Groves, a digital-marketing consultant, said: Ive had a long list of mentors over the years myself, in academia, business, and for general life guidance, and most havebeen men. Several live in different cities, but weve kept in touch with regular Skype calls and in-person meetings when wefind ourselves in the same area. Ive seen that many men have a genuine interest in helping bring out the best in the womenaround them, even when other women may or may not share that desire. I think its important to seek out women to trust andlearn from, but I also believe in accepting support where we can find it.

4. Giving back to the community:Kay Koplovitz founded USA Network and turned it into a leading cable network. After exiting from it, she went on to found Springboard Enterprises, which has helped more than 550 women-led companies get off the ground. These companies have raised more than $5.5 billion and created more than 10,000 jobs since their inception.

Lynn Tilton, who now owns a holding company that manages 75 companies with a total of more than $8 billion in annual revenue, faced grueling obstacles on her road to success. Yet she now obsesses over helping others behind her. She wrote: My dream is to end the plague of joblessness. But my new hope is to inspire women to unearth their collective strength, deeply rooted in female creativity and compassion, so that we might find a way to unite on our journeys. We can be smart, sexy, and sophisticated and still rule the world. Perhaps this evolution must start with young girls before they grow jaded.

I have reintroduced an old cosmetic brandJane Cosmeticsfor younger women, where for every one cosmetic item that is purchased, the company gives one to a shelter for battered women in your communitybuy one, give one to a neighbor in need. It is my confidence that through this company we can help teach a younger generation of women that compassion is contagious and that kindness can be the new cool. I have dedicated my efforts and my companies sponsorship to support Dean Kamen in his FIRST robotics competition in order to attract a larger populace of girls by making certain they never feel the need to choose between brains and beauty. I am in the process of posting the X Prize that I have designed and funded, that which will offer an extra $5 million to any winning X Prize team that boasts a female CEO and women in half its leadership roles in women. Perhaps the size of the prize will inspire the drafting of brilliant women to the technology teams advancing solutions to the worlds largest problems.

5. Conviction and defiance: The discussions made clear that women entrepreneurs all understood that sacrifice and risks were involved but remained determined to achieve their goals. They knew they would have to think smarter and work harder and deal with sexism.

Heidi Roizen described how, when she was an entrepreneur, a PC manufacturers senior vice president, who had been instrumental in crafting a large deal she was about to close, asked her to accept a giftin his unzipped pants. She let the deal fall apart.

Another time, while she was pitching a Boston-based VC, one of his partners engaged in a pantomime in the corridor, making a circle with the fingers of one hand while poking his other fingers through the circle, then thrusting his hips in a sexual fashion, wrote Roizen. She says she found it rather hard to concentrate on her pitch and did not get a term sheet from that firm.

And once, while pregnant, she was asked by a male Silicon Valley investor how shed be able to perform after her baby was born. According to Roizen, he said: My partners are concerned that when you have this baby, you are going to lose interest in the company and not be a good CEO. How can you assure us that wont happen?

Yet Roizen persevered. She obtained financing from Draper Fisher Jurvetson and became a partner herself at that firm.

Because of the success of women such as these, there are strong role models.

Because women are now outnumbering men in higher education, advancing technologies are making it possible to start world-changing companies without the need for venture capital, so the playing field is becoming level.

And because of the maternal instincts and resulting empathy that many women have, they are best positioned to solve the biggest problems of humanity.

This is why I believe it is so important to support and encourage women to join the innovation economy.

ReadVivek Wadhwa: Inside Silicon Valleys Boys Club

Link to article on Wall Street Journal's website


About Author
Vivek Wadhwa is Vice President of Innovation and Research at Singularity University; Fellow, Arthur & Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance, Stanford University; Director of Research at the Center for Entrepreneurship and Research Commercialization at the Pratt School of Engineering, Duke University; and distinguished visiting scholar, Halle Institute of Global Learning, Emory University. He is author of ”The Immigrant Exodus: Why America Is Losing the Global Race to Capture Entrepreneurial Talent”–which was named by The Economist as a Book of the Year of 2012.

Wadhwa oversees the academic programs at Singularity University, which educates a select group of leaders about the exponentially growing technologies that are soon going to change our world. These advances—in fields such as robotics, A.I., computing, synthetic biology, 3D printing, medicine, and nanomaterials—are making it possible for small teams to do what was once possible only for governments and large corporations to do: solve the grand challenges in education, water, food, shelter, health, and security.

Website: http://wadhwa.com/2014/08/04/wall-street-journal-part-2-changing-silicon-valleys-frat-boy-culture/

 

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