Start Up Your Digital Career with Interconnect | 29 January 2014

Women in IT wanted to attend an Interconnect event on 29th January to network with students. Can you help?

‘Start Up Your Digital Career’ is being held on Wednesday 29th January at the Informatics Forum, University of Edinburgh. This event is being held in conjunction with Harvey Nash Scotland staff who will deliver an interactive workshop for students from 11am-12:45pm covering topics such as CVs, interviews and networking.

We are looking for women working in IT to participate in a networking lunch with students from 12:45 until 2pm. This will give students an opportunity to practice their networking skills and to hear about your experience working in technology.

If you would like to support women studying computing and are available from 12:45pm until 2pm on 29th January we would love to hear from you.

Please contact Cheryl Cairns at c.cairns@napier.ac.uk for further information and to register.

Just for the Record, suspended @girlgeeks Twitter account

Hey there, this is Morna Simpson aka @girlgeeks on Twitter.

There seems to be a lot of confusion, especially on Hacker News, about the suspension of my Twitter account. I am a bit cut off at the moment so only catching up with this myself.

So, for the record…

I first knew that my account had been suspended around 2am GMT this morning as a friend sent me a text to let me know.

As far as I am aware I did not receive any advance warning from Twitter, but on signing into my account and clicking on the Suspended Account link, I was sent an email with the following information:

“We understand that you’re contesting an account suspension. Please be sure to read this entire email; you will need to take further action in order to reopen your ticket for your account to be reviewed.

 

If your account was suspended for aggressive following behavior, you should have received an email notification to the address associated with your Twitter account. Please reply to this message and confirm ALL of the following:

 

 

 

• You’ve removed all prohibited following automation from your account, and will stop any manual aggressive following behavior.

 

 

 

• You’ve reviewed our Best Practices page: http://support.twitter.com/articles/68916

 

 

 

• You understand our policies and will not engage in any prohibited following behaviour.”

You will also see from my account that I seem to have lost both my 7000 Followers & 7000 peeps I was following.

Having read through the support pages etc etc I am baffled as to why my account has been suspended. I have responded to Twitter and I am awaiting the outcome…

But it is lovely to know that there is so much support from people online who know me or know of me.

It is true that I have on rare occasions been “harassed” verbally (online & off) because of my area of (voluntary, unfunded) work with Girl Geek Scotland. Our aim is to help with gender balance issues across the tech & digital sector.

I try not to take these verbal accusations personally – when you are online you must remember that you may be speaking to someone who is young or vulnerable. If there is a malicious verbal attack online I can choose to ignore by clicking on the block button. However, I’ve found that on most occasions any misunderstandings and preconceptions can be ironed out with a little discussion.

So although I am happy to join in a healthy debate, I make an effort to disassociate myself from others who call themselves “Feminist” but may or may not actually hold any helpful feminist beliefs or take what I consider appropriate and helpful action in this area. This may be why I rarely – if ever get targeted personally.

Girl Geek Scotland is voluntary unpaid work. We had a fallow period for around two years, while I was getting surgery, and we are only just getting up and running again. That is why our blog was recently thrown up with the new domain. Our previous blog was out of date and had been subject to attacks. However, these looked more like brute force attacks than any deliberate targeting.

So the lack of content on this site belies our history of events and workshops, of which I am quite proud. We mainly run events that aim to inspire and encourage networking in the cross-section between digital, business and creativity. We have attracted very high profile people in the past… again I am very proud of this. You may know of Anne Winblad, Heidi Roizen, Karen White and Wendy Lea… If not they are worth looking up as they are fantastic speakers and our panel chair Dr. Suzanne Doyle Morris made them shine

I suspect the suspension was an error on Twitters part. However, there is the possibility of someone making false and malicious accusations against me. I only think this is a possibility because of my previous experience with Twitter which you can read about here > Who Owns Your Twitter User Name

I hope to be able to add back news to this blog when I get the time.

Looking for a Job in the USA? You’re Hired!

I’ve just discovered an interesting new site called Hired. It is very simple. It connects talent in the technology sector with employers in the USA.

At the moment it seems very small, but already has UX and UI Designers, Product Managers, Project Managers, Software Engineers, and Data Scientists. It also claims you will get between 5 and 15 offers in one week from some of the 700+ employers who have already signed up.

While Scotland provides a rich startup ecology it has very few multi-facing software products that have developed scale without US investment. There are a few very exciting products in Scotland that could be described as up and coming… and that nets a few jobs for skilled workers in this field.

Some of my friends have managed to net a US job remotely. However, that is rare and they developed innovative and provoking self-publicising schemes which on one occasion made the front page of Hacker News. It’s true that there is no shortage of Technology roles, and because the sector is so fast moving employers are finding these roles hard to fill… but what happens when you have an idea for an innovative software product and you want to develop a start up business? This will be very hard.

Scottish Enterprise has criteria for High Growth that expects around £400K in 3 years. This pushes some early startups, looking for support, to grasp at unrealistic goals for Exit. Most software startups, and particularly multi-facing products simply take longer to go through the early startup and development phase. Multi-facing products also generally take a large investment to develop their early market foothold.

Heidi Roizen recently told an audience of Girl Geeks, that when she invests in this kind of product, she expects to develop a relationship with her young business over a period of 10 years. So the mindset for investment in this type of product is quite different in the USA. The “£3-5 (million) in 3-5 (years)” mentality of the Scottish investment scene is killing young software companies.

Finding the right investor with the right experience and enough financial clout while fitting within the Scottish Enterprise eligibility guidelines is almost impossible. Scotland simply has not got the track record of supporting this kind of product beyond early start up phase.

I don’t doubt that we will see a number of young Scottish companies hopping over the Atlantic for investment in the near future. In the meantime, I’m quite excited to see how this new multi-facing software product develops and if it can offer some Scottish talent, new work opportunities, that are just too hard to get in Scotland.

http://join.hired.com/x/MundPx

Be in the Driving Seat of Your Own Career

Thursday 5th December  

5:30pm for a 6pm start

JP Morgan

200 St Vincent Street

G2 5SG

JP Morgan sponsors “Be in the Driving Seat of Your Own Career” an event aimed at females working in the technology industry across Scotland. 

How fulfilled are you in your life and career? What would you attempt to do, if you knew you could not fail?
It’s time to tackle the internal barriers that might be holding you back from a richer, more satisfying life and career – whether that’s in your current job or a new one.

Hear from our inspirational key note speakers:


Maggie Scullion, Business & Technology Consultant – Oil & Gas Sector


Maggie has held positions at CIO level across large-scale organisations in both the oil & gas and construction sectors for many years. Maggie will deliver an insightful talk on her own career journey and explore how a technology career can mean many things to many people. How now, working as an independent consultant allows her to combine business and technology roles. In addition Maggie will share some of the methods she uses to remain in the driving seat of her own career.

Kirsty Baker, CEO & Founder, The Firefly Group

Kirsty is an empowering leader , a thought-provoking catalyst for change and a unique creator of strategic partnerships. By founding Firefly in 2011, Kirsty has a proven track-record of enabling others to achieve the clarity, insight, and momentum they need to take a clear step toward individual and organisational change. Kirsty will support you in identifying where you get to in your own way and in taking steps to move forward in the direction you choose. Could it be that 2014 is the start of the next phase of your career?

 

Q & A Panel Discussion

Following the above sessions, we will host a Q&A panel discussion which will also include Polly Purvis, Chief Executive of ScotlandIS. The trade body for the information and communications technologies (ICT) industry, Scotland IS represents around 200 software, telecoms, IT and creative technologies businesses throughout Scotland’ to read ‘The trade body for the digital technologies industry, ScotlandIS represents over 270 software, telecoms, IT and digital agencies throughout Scotland.

 

The event will conclude with some time for networking with drinks and canapés. 

Spaces are limited, please be sure to register your attendance as soon as possible by emailing ashley.hutton@jpmorgan.com

Entrepreneurial Spark Launch NEST

Entrepreneurial Spark Nest is the next stage in the start-up renaissance in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Ayrshire.

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The Nest – a one year growth programme for businesses trading between 6 months and 5 years old, continuing our commitment to SMEs as they grow and develop.

The new Nest spaces provide 12 months free business support, office space, IT, networking for ventures in the growth stage of their entrepreneurial journey, taking place in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Ayrshire.

Applications are open now for an intake at the beginning of February 

Entrepreneurial Spark (ESpark) would like to announce the opening of the Nest’s in Glasgow,

Edinburgh and Ayrshire, which will allow ESpark to provide the collaborative, environment Scotland’s entrepreneurs need to flourish. The Nests are aimed at startup businesses, which have already been trading for a minimum of six months, have achieved tangible results either in terms of turnover or investment, and employ at least one member of staff.

 

This opportunity is open to all businesses whether they have been through the ESpark Hatchery or not.

 

Criteria:

  • Have had investment or about to secure investment
  • About to generate revenue or generating revenue
  • Scottish EDGE winner (if appropriate)
  • Glasgow/Edinburgh/Ayrshire Business Gateway high growth potential
  • Existing Glasgow/Edinburgh/Ayrshire Business Gateway pipeline clients
  • Given up job, working on business full time
  • Up to 6 members in the team [on entry]
  • 6 months to 5 years trading
  • Up to £2million turnover

 

Opportunities Include

  • Daily Enablement from in house team
  • Monthly business health check with enabler strategy etc.
  • Milestones – monthly economic impact, income, forecast, team
  • Executive Education – provided by in organisation capability, team, investment, sales, etc.
  • Pool of mentors to support
  • One day bootcamp 5th February
  • Workshops and clinics from ambassadors
  • Option to attend ESpark
  • Monthly celebrate success
  • Hatchery Hits the Street

Apply now to join Scotland’s entrepreneurial hubs in Ayrshire, Glasgow or Edinburgh.

For more information call 0141 418 9120.  Interviews will be during December/January with a beginning of February start.

www.entrepreneurial-spark.com

 

Female Tech Entrepreneurs, Scotland

Do you remember that photoshoot on the roof of TechCube that everyone made such a fuss about? It was intended to represent Technology Entrepreneurs in Scotland… but something missing… all the women.

Girl Geek Scotland, Hot Tin Roof and ScotlandIS got together to organise an alternative shoot, this time only featuring the women. As our lovely photograph image shows there are quite a few female leaders in this sector. Who knows where they were that day. I suspect that they were all at high profile meetings in  London, New York and San Francisco.

Many people dispute that women are treated at all differently at work. While overt sexism is extremely rare in this sector in Scotland, there is evidence to suggest that *everyone* (both men and women) are guilty of unconscious bias.

There have been several studies that examine this phenomenon, and one of the most compelling, though 10 years old (and a study carried out in the USA), still rings true. It is called the Howard/Heidi study.

 

The Heidi Howard Study

Two professors wrote up a case study about a real-life entrepreneur named Heidi Roizen, describing how she became a successful venture capitalist by relying on her outgoing personality and huge personal and professional network. The professors had a group of students read Roizen’s story with her real name attached and another group read the story with the name changed to “Howard.” Then the students rated Howard and Heidi on their accomplishments and on how appealing they seemed as colleagues.

While the students rated them equally in terms of success, they thought Howard was likeable while Heidi seemed selfish and not “the type of person you would want to hire or work for.” Sandberg’s conclusion: when a man is successful, he is well liked. When a woman does well, people like her less.

 

Female Tech Entrepreneurs, Scotland

For those of you who would like to know more about the technology scene in Scotland, and how women fit in, here are some facts brought courtesy of our friends  at Hot Tin Roof.

  • In Scotland around one fifth of the tech work force are women[SL1] .  Many find themselves the only women at meetings or in a team.  This can be culturally isolating and women can feel overwhelmed by a predominantly male culture.
  • There is a skills shortage in Scotland at the moment and the industry will only thrive on talent male or female.
  • It is statistically proven that companies do better with women in them.  If tech in Scotland is to flourish it must attract and retain women.
  • Women who leave the industry don’t come back.  One of the reasons for this is that tech moves so quickly that their knowledge become out of date very quickly.
  • It is not the ability of women to do the work but a pipeline problem.  Women self identify as being creative – not ‘mathematical’.  They don’t naturally gravitate towards the IT sector.
  • Actually software design is not an intrinsically mathematical process but more of a creative process.  It is all about recognizing patterns.
  •  We must make the environment supportive and encourage women to first of all come into the sector and then to stay.  Computing must be taught in a more engaging way at schools to both boys and girls.
  • The tech sector requires a range of skills and disciplines and must attract women from all backgrounds – creative, psychology, language and marketing.
  • The tech sector is not intrinsically sexist any more than journalism, the law or business.  In Scotland the industry is inclusive and supportive of women.
  • The industry is taking steps to address the issue with initiatives like Scottish Women in Technology established by IBM, Dell, HP and Cisco which supports women coming through the ranks, encouraging them to apply for senior roles and supporting return to work after maternity leave.
  • Groups like Girl Geeks – which has male and female members – have grown up to share experience and provide a support network – creating the networks that men naturally have.
  • Facebook’s COO, Sheryl Sanberg’s, book Lean In was published earlier this year looked at businesses and how businesses with women at senior levels perform better.  Heidi Roizen who is taking part in the picture on Thursday is mentioned in Lean In – she took part in a Stanford University [SL2] experiment 10 years ago looking at unconscious gender bias when her achievements were reviewed as Howard and as Heidi.

 


 [SL1] Stats are – around 14% of CS and software engineering students are female

about 16% of our e-placement Scotland students are female

18% of the IT professionals workforce is female – ie are software engineers, IT specialists etc

 

Girl Geek Enterprise Workshops

Girl Geek Scotland hosted a series of workshops to complement our Speaker Series 2010 on ‘Creativity, Computing and Entrepreneurialism’. The workshops, which were aimed at women who are thinking about starting, or have recently started, a Scottish business, will work around themes that will target what we believe are existing weaknesses in female business culture, namely: Negotiation, Funding Strategies, and Creativity in Business.

The workshops took place in the beautiful city of Stirling in Autumn. They were aimed at women with an interest in technology – background was less important than enthusiasm – and a desire to follow a tech/creative project through. A diverse range of people attended, from crafts practitioners to programmers to hardware developers to geneticists. A common theme united them: the desire to build a business that could help or provide a service to, and to become financially independent. Each of our participants brought an idea or exisiting project with them. Through the use of skills and techniques introduced throughout each workshop these ideas had the potential to grow and develop into viable businesses.

These events were fully funded by Informatics Ventures based at the University of Edinburgh, and all costs for those meeting the funding criteria were met.

* Free if they met the criteria as detailed in the call for participation

With additional support from the Instititute for Capitalising on Creativity

 

A Conversation with Silicon Valley

Our most recent event (a special summer double event) “Conversations with Silicon Valley” and the “Summer Start-Up Party” held on 30 August 2013 was a rip-roaring and terrific success. We had a great night, and we hope everyone else did too.

We’d like to give special thanks to:

  • our terrific and thoroughly inspiring panel guests from Silicon Valley: Heidi Roizen, Ann Winblad, Wendy Lea, and Karen White
  • our extremely capable panel chair: Suzanne Doyle-Morris
  • our wonderful event sponsor and friend of GGS: Scotland IS
  • our sound engineer for the evening: Dorothy Le Grove (NLP Coach)
  • our fabulous venue sponsor: Summerhall, Edinburgh
  • and very importantly, all the wonderful girl and boy geeks who came along to really make the event an incredible evening

We always welcome feedback and will be shortly sending out a short and sweet survey to those who attended.

SPECIAL NOTE: We acknowledge there were some avoidable and unavoidable issues with the time and quality of the catered dinner. We apologise for any disappointment there. There was an oven breakdown in the kitchen as dinner was being prepared. But we also have feedback for the caterer on the design and quality of the courses on the menu.

Geek Guide to Glasgow

Nina Baker has been commissioned by the Glasgow City Marketing Bureau to develop the content for a “Geek Guide to Glasgow”. This will be a predominantly online resource with some hard copy downloads too and will offer some offbeat ideas for the technically-minded tourist in the City of Glasgow. The concept is similar to The Geek Atlas www.geekatlas.com, but very locally focused.

Nina would be glad of any ideas relating to any area of pure or applied sciences/technology, which might include such things as:

  • A building that was the first (or very early adopter) to use a new technology/materials
  • A building that is the last known standing of its type/use
  • Location of a discovery or where a well known person (or unsung hero) lived/worked (even if the original building is now gone)
  • Memorials of any kind
  • Stories, myths even, relating to people or locations, in relation to technology

 

The first draft has to be ready for end of March, so any ideas that come to mind – please get in touch asap, so that she can get the research and photography done quickly

Email: nina.baker1@btinternet.com

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