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priyankaporwal
Advisor
Advisor
Dear All,

recently I did the keynote demo in DKOM 2019 and received lot of congratulatory messages, some also for being the only woman on stage. The same had happened when I joined the CTO circle for the line-of-business for being the only woman in a primarily men's club. While I don't exactly consider this as an achievement, it brings me to ponder why is it that there are so less women on stage demoing the solutions which they helped create? Why is that there are so few women in higher roles? Why is it that women who are good technically, migrate more towards management and execution roles? Why is it that there is a leaky pipeline with regards to career levels for women as time passes? And last but not the least, what would encourage more women to consider Technical/Development Architect roles ?

While there is no silver bullet here, I thought of sharing some of my learnings. It may be applicable for you, if not please ignore them and apply based on the situation.

  1. Stay curious: It may sound philosophical, but life is a journey of continuous learnings. Keep updating your skills and knowledge. There may be areas which you do not find useful in your current role, but it may be useful down the line either to use in current solution or to completely innovate a new product. What brought you here, will not take you there, so keep learning. Do join some of the professional courses/workshops, technical publications to improve your knowledge and skills.

  2. Appreciate yourself: Women tend to be perfectionist by nature. We are our own worst enemies. The thought process starts with 'I probably could have done it better'. While that may be true and there are always areas of improvement. But please stop, take time to look back on challenges, acknowledge what you achieved despite these challenges and appreciate yourself. Mark Twain once said "A (wo)man cannot be comfortable without his own approval. So acknowledge your achievements.

  3. Networking: It's important to network with others in your organisation and industry experts. While you may be good in your work, there are always better solutions, areas where one needs help in. It's important to expand your knowledge, seek opportunities, get advice, building your brand or to simply make friends which networking results in. So do take time to make a new contact at regular intervals.

  4. Good Domain knowledge: I always say that to be a good expert, one has to be able to apply technical feasibility to business viability to create robust products. One has to have good domain knowledge, being only technically good is not enough. For experts, one needs to be Techno-functional to provide a wow experience for end users.

  5. It's ok to say "I don't know": No one is a "sarvagna", every day there is something new to learn. Do not be afraid to say that you don't know something, but take time to learn it. Seek help from other experts and learn. When we don't share that there are areas where we are not strong, it's assumed that one already knows it. The whole journey, the challenges, the learnings, the achievements are in direct proportion to where we started from. I will share one incident from my college where I was appearing for a viva-voce exam. My professor asked something and I clearly said I don't know. The next question my professor asked with rider that you don't know, but I explained that question in full detail with backing evidence. Later my professor mentioned to other professors it was one of the best viva-voce that year. So it's OK to say "I don't know".

  6. Think your career choice: I have had some conversations with few colleagues on the career path one should go for. It's completely subjective to individual choice. Do take time to analyse and decide on whether you are most happy interacting with customers, selling a solution, delivering or designing a product etc. It's important to devote some time to think of your career choice and also share your long term plan with your manager. Please also realise that your managers don't have a magic wand. Once you share the plan, they will keep you in mind in case an opportunity arises in future. But unless you think of your career choice and discuss it with your manager, this will not happen. So do take some time to think what you want to be and take that first step.

  7. Be assertive :  Make yourself heard. There may be cases when your opinion is against the popular choice or you have a good idea to solve a particular problem. But if you choose to remain silent or don't express your idea assertively, someone else may present the same or rephrase your idea.  So express your opinion.

  8. Mentoring: It's important to have a mentor at any level of your career. For an organisation, it helps in retaining practical knowledge and wisdom from more experienced colleagues. For oneself, it not just helps in professional development and growth but also helps in breaking silos. So do get yourself a mentor. At the same time, mentor others and share your knowledge. When you mentor others, it helps in building your communication skills, leadership skills, learning newer perspectives and brings lot of personal satisfaction. Indirectly it also leads to advancing your career.


Happy to hear more from you.

Best Regards,

Priyanka
8 Comments
its so true and such a great read!
priyankaporwal
Advisor
Advisor
0 Kudos
Thanks rajashree.raghavendra . Appreciate your feedback.

 
Thank you Priyanka!  Great advice.

I also encourage you to post this in the "You go girl/You go Dude" blog series in the Business Women's Network Jam Page!  We have some great content out there and this would fit right in!

 

You are something to aspire to and I appreciate your insight!

Mel
priyankaporwal
Advisor
Advisor
0 Kudos
Thanks Melissa for the kind words and the suggestion. Will check the jam group you mentioned.
Dear Priyanka, thank you so much for sharing your thoughts. Many of your comments were the reasons why I initiated the Women in Tech movement within SAP 1 1/2 years ago, and build the Technically Speaking speaker roster. We have so many diamonds within SAP - strong technical talents but so difficult to find and it sometimes take a lot of persuasion to get them to speak at a Women in Tech event or at events like SAP d-kom. SAP d-kom this year was from a diversity point of view a huge improvement from previous years. Karlsruhe has 24% female speakers (7% increase from 2017), Bangalore 30% were female speakers (a 5% increase from 2017), Shanghai 30% female speakers (1.2% increase from 2017) and Silicon Valley 26% female speakers (0.5% increase from 2017). The numbers are great but it was quite a time investment to locate the female speakers, encourage them to speak and commit to do it. Tools like Technically Speaking (https://technicallyspeaking.int.sap) is meant as encouragement to become a speaker within your area of tech comfort, try out various speaking opportunities (smaller event and over time bigger ones). We all have to work on putting also female faces to technology to also encourage the new generations to seaking a career within tech.
LishaP
Advisor
Advisor
 

Thank you priyanka.porwal for providing quite concise yet effective advice!
priyankaporwal
Advisor
Advisor
0 Kudos
Thanks Lisha for the kind words.

 
priyankaporwal
Advisor
Advisor
0 Kudos
Thank you. Appreciate your feedback and I completely agree with you that we have so many strong female colleagues, it's about investing efforts and encouragement to get them to shine. Really happy to meet colleagues who have similar thoughts in this direction. So thanks so much for your comment.