Gender-based Reverse Mentoring
We are trying to change the game for Women in Tech by building a reverse-mentoring program to pair early in career women with mid-career male managers.
Working with Seattle startup UpNotch, the Seattle Women in Tech Consortium community can help pair our community to change the game for Women in Tech.
Our solution is two-fold. First, given that the current tech landscape is male dominated, this program will help raise awareness with mid/senior career men to pair them with early in career women - to help them learn more and hopefully drive empathy. More importantly, this will expose early in career women to the thinking of senior leaders to better prepare them for future careers. It is truly a win-win.
We have a great partnership with Upnotch.com to do the matching. We, the Seattle Women in Tech Consortium Home | Seattle Women in Tech Consortium - are a non-profit made up of volunteers. We can do most of this on our own - but we don't have the capacity to do background checks and the heavy lifting for matching. Seattle startup Upnotch.com | Executive Mentorship Platform is partnering with us to fill that gap.
- Create a more inclusive STEM workplace culture including through improving pay transparency, decreasing bias in hiring and promotion, introducing and upholding healthy behaviors and organizational role models, and/or bolstering wraparound supports for wor
- Growth: An organization with an established product, service, or business model that is rolled out in one or more communities
Estimate is about 50 so far.
I would say we could benefit most from support and learning, the peer network and PR as a winner to help evangelize. Obviously, finances could help, but the PR that this effort could benefit from would be really helpful.
Honestly, every organization can do this on their own to promote women in STEM - and so the publicity that this idea of gender-based reverse mentoring would gain from this is definitely more important than our individual effort.
Both of us lead this effort.
I think we have a practical mix of early in career women in STEM in our community - along with a mix of senior folks in big tech companies - combined with a hungry startup investing in mentor matching technology.
All three combine to pair up early in career women in tech with mid/senior male managers to subtlety influence culture change in ways that were not previous addressable (by HR or hiring or management training) - senior managers learn first-hand what it's like to be an early in career woman in tech.
Scale up our program - we have a couple large tech company pilots but we would love to use this program to scale across the industry. This is not difficult, but it's impactful if we can scale it up.
This is challenging, but I think over the long term, we could use subjective data, interviewing mid/senior career male execs about how their reverse mentor influenced their hiring practices.
There has never been a mid/senior career male manager in tech who grew up as an early in career women in tech. Never. When we change the game and switch it up - early in career women can advise on current tech, social media, challenges and aspirations - and over time, the two sides build a relationshp where the mal manager feels safe and comfortable with a trusted advisor for the early in career woman - someone who represents people in their org - and will give them honest feedback on being a better leader to their generation.
No, right now, things are analog. We hope there will be AI in the future to help with matching, but we are in in stage.
- A new business model or process that relies on technology to be successful
- Behavioral Technology
- United Kingdom
- Hybrid of for-profit and nonprofit
5
1 year
This is a very diverse team and a solution focused on diversity and inclusion in tech firms.
non-profit - we are focused on societal change.
- Individual consumers or stakeholders (B2C)
We are volunteer - not worried about finances. We are partnering but our goal is gender equity
100% focused on gender equity. If we were to receive funding, we would use that to scale up our efforts to bring more women into tech.