ALLYSHIP IN TECH
Owning Your Impact
Liz Collins León
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In trying to avoid a work culture that romanticizes
work-life imbalance and glorifies ‘the struggle’,
I freelanced my way into enterprise tech.
G’day, y’all!
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Using your power, position, or privilege to uplift other people
that are marginalised, disadvantaged, or subject to frequent
and unfair treatment.
Allyship creates Equity
Gender
Race
Age
Neurodivergence
Sexuality
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People are finding success in higher education more than ever, especially
women with their majority domestic enrolment over the last decade.
More than just a pay gap
Australian Bureau of Statistics (2020) & Australian Government Department of Education and Training (2020)
93% 88%
Women (20-24) vs Men have attained year 12 or higher
48% 36%
Women (24-29) vs Men have a Bachelor’s degree or more
60%
2022 University
Female Enrolment
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Women are generally better educated, but less
likely to win the full-time, higher paying jobs
More than just a pay gap
Workplace Gender Equality Agency, 2021-2022
Female Male
Part-time
Full-time
Full-time
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•Remember: Systemic change comes a little at a time.
•When breaking barriers, a small push can make a big
impact when made as a collective.
•Persistent and incremental efforts add up,
building momentum.
•Can be as simple as listening or as active as hosting
forums and conferences.
Breaking Barriers
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• My first boss sought Juniors because he valued adaptability
over skill, and dedicated himself on providing a path for
subordinates to learn.
Managing meets mentorship
• Another used his position of power to even the pay gap and
promote women to leadership roles, resulting in process
efficiency and improved team morale.
• VP started a small lunch group to encourage discussions and
create a safe space for female and non-binary teammates.
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Find where you can provide that extra support, and leave a
positive impact regardless of whether it comes back to you.
• Extra check-ins so remote teammates have more of a voice.
• Weaknesses can become strengths with the right project.
• If you can’t push the plateau, then you need a new
environment – and maybe a new team.
Creating opportunities
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Despite experts and elders advising that I’d need to adopt a
cut-throat attitude to get anywhere in life, my first break was
by doing the exact opposite.
Career built on compassion
My insistence of running things with a strong sense of
hospitality and empathy won hearts, even after I’d sowed the
first seeds.
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As a Peer:
• Appreciate others openly and frequently to foster a safe space
for transparent discussions and feedback.
• Set up reoccurring events that create regular opportunities to
share team’s work and achievements (more than stand-ups).
Knowledge silos are bottlenecks just waiting to happen.
• Buddy systems are a great way to share knowledge and
resources to encourage and upskill each other.
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As a Lead:
• Find a platform where even the ‘quiet ones’ have a say.
Company-wide showcases are a great way to amplify
achievements, but might be too much attention for some.
• Be on-call support for your team, especially if someone needs
back-up in meetings to keep feedback objective and fair.
• During performance review, discuss skill sets as well as
career paths. Nurturing a new interest could become a
new talent.
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As Human Resources:
• Increase awareness and understanding by facilitating
sensitivity training with courses about marginalised groups
that were authored by those same groups.
• Guard against disparity with regular audits for gaps, such as
pay, leadership, or race distribution.
• Actively diversify by seeking talent specifically from
communities that are underserved at your company.
• Relying on automation creates gaps of missed potential.
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2021-2022 Workplace Data Explorer by
Workplace Gender Equality Agency (WGEA)
https://www.wgea.gov.au/data-statistics/data-explorer
Guide to Allyship by Amélie Lamont
https://guidetoallyship.com/
How to Be an Ally by Camille Styles
https://camillestyles.com/wellness/3-questions-to-turn-allyship-into-action/
Sourcesand further reading