“many leaders assume they are better at valuing diversity than they actually are” Havard Business Review – Leaders Aren’t Great at Judging How Inclusive They Are https://hbr.org/2017/10/leaders-arent-great-at-judging-how-inclusive-they-are
Slide 4
The great enemy of inclusivity, is the illusion of it
Slide 5
It’s about building a climate of trust, appreciation, and openness to differences in thoughts, styles and backgrounds
Slide 6
The early days of tech
Slide 7
The early days of tech
Slide 8
The early days of tech
Slide 9
The early days of tech
Slide 10
The rise of men
Slide 11
The rise of men Of those 1378, only 186 were women
Slide 12
The rise of men “[Programmers] dislike activities involving close personal interaction.” A vocational interest scale for computer programmers - William M. Cannon & Dallis K. Perry
Slide 13
The rise of men
• Antisocial personality disorder favours men by 3:1 ratio;
• Autism and Asperger’s is seen as high as 7:1; • Antisocial women are seen as “not liking people”, while men are seen as a “lone wolf”
Slide 14
The rise of men
“[ e] industry selected for antisocial, mathematically inclined males, and therefore antisocial and mathematically inclined males were overrepresented in the programmer population”
Th
The Computer Boys Take Over - Nathan Ensmenger
Slide 15
The rise of men
“ is in turn reinforced the popular perception that programmers ought to be antisocial and mathematically inclined (and therefore male).“
Th
The Computer Boys Take Over - Nathan Ensmenger
Slide 16
The rise of men
Slide 17
The bro culture
Slide 18
The bro culture
“We’re elite talent; and it’s potential and talent, not experience, that has merit.” “only the best”
Slide 19
The bro culture
• How many piano tuners are there in the world?;
• How many golf balls decker bus?;
t in standard double
• How much would you charge to wash all the
fi
windows in San Francisco?
Slide 20
The bro culture Insane work hours, drinking, gambling and Vegas. Plus valuing potential over experience, made the culture male dominated.
Slide 21
The bro culture
Slide 22
The bro culture
• Women; • People of colour; • Gender, sexual, and romantic minorities;
• People with a disability; • People in economic or social hardships.
Slide 23
Make everyone feel welcome and included
Slide 24
Make everyone feel welcome and included
Reach out to new colleagues
Slide 25
Make everyone feel welcome and included
On-boarding buddy
Slide 26
Make everyone feel welcome and included
Your whole team changes
Slide 27
Make everyone feel welcome and included
Don’t assume that they will eventually learn
Slide 28
Make everyone feel welcome and included
Use inclusive language
Slide 29
Make everyone feel welcome and included
Use inclusive language • Avoid jargons and abbreviations;
Slide 30
Make everyone feel welcome and included
Use inclusive language • Avoid jargons and abbreviations; • “Guys” is not gender neutral; Instead of “guys”, use “people”, “folk”, “everyone” or “y’all”. Instead of “he” or “she”, use “they”.
Slide 31
Make everyone feel welcome and included
Use inclusive language • Avoid jargons and abbreviations; • “Guys” is not gender neutral; • Don’t underplay the impact of mental disabilities;
Slide 32
Make everyone feel welcome and included
Use inclusive language • Avoid jargons and abbreviations; • “Guys” is not gender neutral; • Don’t underplay the impact of mental disabilities;
• Coding is also communication;
Slide 33
Be humble
Slide 34
Be humble
Accept your limitations
Slide 35
Be humble
Listen
Slide 36
Be humble
Let people be heard
Slide 37
I think you’re
amazing!
Slide 38
A little bit of kindness goes a long way
Slide 39
Jayne Mast (@jayne_mast) Software engineer @
noti.st/jayne
Read this book!