International Women's Day (IWD) stories
As AI reshapes workplaces, women's overlooked gift for translating ideas into action is emerging as tech's most critical skill.
Women say the future of work must prioritise flexibility, parental support, pay equity, health policies and real power in decisions.
In a fatigued legal tech market, one marketing chief found that quiet empathy and mission, not louder features, turned clients into loyal advocates.
On International Women's Day, tech leaders urge deeper change, celebrating gains while demanding true inclusion, support and shared power.
From anonymised hiring to visible female leaders, tech must turn equality intent into daily action to sustain momentum for women.
A Filipino-American director in tech shows how rejecting the model minority myth can turn cultural identity into a leadership advantage.
On International Women's Day, CSA spotlights women steering its AI Safety Initiative, proving inclusion is core infrastructure for secure AI.
Women founders are closing the start-up gap, but with VC still lagging, visibility and public storytelling are now vital growth capital.
On International Women's Day, data centres confront a stark leadership gender gap that threatens the resilience of future AI infrastructure.
In a fractured world, leaders must “give to gain” by investing in cultural intelligence, turning diversity into real inclusion and resilience.
A gay woman tech leader shares how change, safety and visibility shaped her inclusive style and why allyship is vital for diverse teams.
To help women thrive in tech, leaders must move beyond mentorship to active sponsorship, visibility and everyday acts of encouragement.
As AI drives a data centre boom, Compu Dynamics is proving women can build careers in mission‑critical tech without a computer science degree.
As AI reshapes work, women are using it to ditch outdated trade-offs and prove ambitious careers and rich family lives can coexist.
On International Women's Day, organisations are urged to expand access, invest in mentorship and redefine leadership for true equity.
In a world of inbox overload, winning customer strategies turn feedback into visible action, proving listening must lead to trust.
Women now outnumber men in Canadian post-secondary study, yet remain sidelined in STEM and AI roles, threatening innovation and competitiveness.
Women's expertise is powering technology's future, but without greater digital visibility, their leadership risks remaining unseen.
When women mentor and network with one another, they transform individual careers into collective momentum for gender equality.
Women are demanding, well-informed investors; designing products around their needs boosts returns, loyalty and overall customer experience.