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Career advice General Mentorship Tech Tech For Good

When She Leads: Women in Leadership and Technology Roles in Africa

Spread across history are the many contributions of women and the woman folk to development and civilization. In today’s world, women have become major players in almost every important sector of the world, leadership, and technology inclusive. The role of women as key players in leadership and technological advancement becomes even more pronounced as the world advances towards complete dependence on technology. 
This article seeks to beam the spotlight on the many women who are working tirelessly to contribute effectively to technological advancement in Africa. It further highlights the importance of women in Leadership roles.

Women In Leadership Roles

Leadership has never been gender-dependent. It’s the qualities inherent or cultivated by an individual that determines their success as leaders. Let’s take a look at some of the women who have chosen to challenge the status quo wherever they find themselves, who fight for a more equal future, and who have helped shape history!

  1. Ngozi Okonji Iweala Development Economist

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is a Nigerian- American economist and international development expert who has served since March 1, 2021, as Director-General of the World Trade Organization. She is the first woman and the first African to hold the office. She sits on the boards of Standard Chartered Bank, Twitter, Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization, and the African Risk Capacity(ARC). Previously, Okonjo-Iweala spent a 25-year career at the World Bank as a development economist, scaling the ranks to the number two position of managing director, operations (2007-2011).
She also served two terms as finance minister of Nigeria (2003-2006, 2011- 2015) under President Olusegun Obasanjo and President Goodluck Jonathan, respectively. She was the first woman to serve as the country’s finance minister, the first woman to serve in that office twice, and the only finance minister to have served under two different presidents. Okonjo-Iweala is the founder of Nigeria’s first indigenous opinion-research organization, NOI-Polls. She also founded the Centre for the Study of the Economies of Africa (C-SEA), a development research think tank based in Abuja, and is a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Center for Global Development and the Brookings Institution.
Since 2019, Okonjo-Iweala has been part of UNESCO’s International Commission on the Futures of Education. Since 2019, she has also been serving on the High-Level Council on Leadership and Management for Development of the Aspen Management Partnership for Health (AMP Health).
Okonjo-Iweala Okonjo has received numerous recognitions and awards. She has been listed as one of the 50 Greatest World leaders (Fortune, 2015), the Top 100 Most Influential People in the World (TIME, 2014), the Top 3 Most Powerful Women in Africa (Forbes, 2012). She was listed among 73 “brilliant” business influencers in the world by Conde Nast International.
 Okonjo-Iweala has received honorary degrees from 14 universities worldwide, including some from the most prestigious colleges: -University of Pennsylvania (2013) -Yale University (2015) -Amherst College (2009) -Trinity College, Dublin (2007) -Colby College (2007) 

  1. Graca Machel Politician and Humanitarian

Graca Machel is a prominent Mozambican woman who, for decades, has worked for women’s rights, education, and peace. Despite a long career as a feminist leader, she is best known for her two marriages, initially to Mozambique’s first president Samora Machel, and later to Nelson Mandela, when he was president of South Africa. 
Graca Machel is an international advocate for women’s and children’s rights and was made an honorary British Dame by Queen Elizabeth Il in 1997 for her humanitarian work. She is the only woman in modern history to have served as First Lady of two countries, South Africa and Mozambique.
Graca Machel is a member of the Africa Progress Panel (APP), a group of ten distinguished individuals who advocate at the highest levels for equitable and sustainable development in Africa. As a panel member, she facilitates coalition building to leverage and broker knowledge and convenes decision-makers to influence policy for lasting change in Africa. She was chancellor of the University of Cape Town between 1999 and 2019. Graca Machel received the 1992 Africa Prize, awarded annually to an individual who has contributed to the goal of eliminating hunger in Africa by the year 2000.
Machel received the 1992 Africa Prize, awarded annually to an individual who has contributed to the goal of eliminating hunger in Africa by the year 2000. Following her retirement from the Mozambique ministry, Machel was appointed as the expert in charge of producing the groundbreaking United Nations report on the impact of armed conflict on children.
On 17 January 2016, she was announced by UNESCO as a Sustainable Development Goals Advocate.
Ms. Machel is a current member of The Elders, an independent group of global leaders who work together for peace and human rights that she co-founded with her husband, former President Nelson Mandela of South Africa.

  1. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Novelist and Feminist Campaigner

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie was born in 1977 to a middle-class Igbo family in Enugu, Nigeria. Her mother became the first female registrar at the University of Nigeria, while her father was a professor of statistics there. Pressured by social and familial expectations, Adichie ‘did what I was supposed to do’ and began to study medicine at the University of Nigeria. 
After a year and a half, she decided to pursue her ambitions as a writer, dropped out of medical school, and took up a communication scholarship in the US. Chimamanda has bagged nothing less than 15 honourary doctorate degrees from respected universities around the world. Adichie’s three novels all focus on contemporary Nigerian culture, its political turbulence, and at times, how it can intersect with the West. She published Purple Hibiscus in 2003, Half of a Yellow Sun in 2006, and Americanah in 2013.
Her novels and wider writings are the best windows into Adichie’s incisive and emotive imagination. She has delivered several impressive talks that get to the heart of their subject. They broadly encompass race and gender and our tendency to accept what we are taught without recognizing ingrained prejudice.
Her 2009 lecture, The Danger of a Single Story, is a brilliant discussion of race, but her argument is cleverly applicable across many broader contexts. In this lecture, her discussion of US perceptions of Mexicans as the ‘abject immigrant’ during the early 2000s, could just as easily be transferred to our current hysteria about Syrian refugees entering Europe.
Adichie’s 2013 lecture We Should All Be Feminists discusses the damaging paradigms of femininity and masculinity. We teach girls to shrink themselves, to make themselves smaller. We say to girls, “You can have ambition, but not too much. You should aim to be successful, but not too successful otherwise, you would threaten the man.”
Adichie argues that Feminism should not be an ‘elite little cult’ but a party ‘full of different feminisms.’ It is an important message to take to heart – we are imperfect. We are attempting to unlearn what we have unconsciously learned and simultaneously discover new ways of seeing.

  1. Daphne Nkosi Executive Chairperson at Kalagadi Manganese Pty Ltd

Daphne Nkosi is the executive chairman of Kalagadi Manganese Pty Ltd, which is the first African- woman-founded and predominantly African-women-led mining company in the world. Daphne Nkosi’s formidable drive as a business powerhouse, social worker, political activist, and women’s rights campaigner, has its roots in the impoverished rural environment and staunchly patriarchal society of her birth.
In 2015, the Africa Female Business Leader of the Year was awarded to her The international title was presented to her at the 2015 African Business Awards held in New York, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.
Daphne is committed to the people of South Africa and uses every available resource to enrich the lives of the average South African. She is responsible for the creation of more than 30 000 jobs in the Northern Cape and will go down in history as the mother of the largest mining venture.

Importance Of Women In Leadership and Technology roles

It’s no secret that women are highly underrepresented in the tech industry. But have you ever considered the great benefits of a gender-inclusive team in your organization? Read further to learn more about the importance of women in the tech industry and the value they can bring to organizations that employ them.

  1. Diversity of Thought

Collaboration between team members of different backgrounds, genders, and races can open a world of creativity and innovation, work efficiency, better communication, and increased team success.
Men and Women see things from different perspectives so having a diverse team can lead to an input of unique ideas which will enable better problem-solving skills and eventually boost performance level!
Having a diverse team also means having the capabilities to understand the pain points of all members of a target demographic and, this aids in proferring the best solutions.

  1. Mentors and Role Models

Imagine facing a gender-based issue at your workplace and not having a mentor of the same gender to talk to at the end of the day!😔😔
Having a female mentor that helps you as a woman in tech is very beneficial. It causes a ripple effect because the more women mentor other women, the more it encourages them to come into the tech space and thrive! 

On 8th March 2021, First Check Africa introduced #ChooseToChallenge with a focus on highlighting the 30 Nigerian Women in Tech challenging the Status Quo. Read about them here.
Conclusion: There are more women in leadership and technology who are breaking ancient ideologies, it is of utmost importance that we see them as allies than as threats. The tech space is vast enough to accommodate people from every work of life, gender, and race. Women in technology and leadership positions is a yes in the 21st century given the pace at which technology evolves daily. From little children to teen girls, to nursing mothers and aged women, tech and leadership should become dominant.  

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Build4SocialGood General Mentorship Tech

Using Your Tech Skills for Social Good: The Role Of Mentoring

You’ve probably been advised to find a mentor in your chosen area, someone with whom you can speak and who can provide you with excellent advice and assistance as you embark on your chosen career path. But have you ever pondered over the benefits of having a mentor? And the reason to have one if you don’t already? 

This article discusses the importance of having a mentor and the benefits of having one.

Why You Should Have A Mentor?

A mentor is a person or friend who acts as an advisor or coach to a less experienced person and guides them through a learning process using their professional knowledge.
When it comes to breaking into the tech sector, having a mentor is crucial – whether you’re learning to code or looking for your first (or next) job.
Here are seven reasons why you should seek out a mentor:

  1. Learning from their experiences: Your mentor can help advise you or warn you if you’re going to make the same mistakes they did, saving you time, money, and other valuable resources.

    Think of them as your guide. 
  1. Shortcut to Best Practices: It’s fantastic when someone can tell you about their tried-and-true best practices. You will learn much more quickly and efficiently this way.

    So mentors help you apply methods that work straight away. 😎
  1. Source Inspiration: It’s awesome to have someone you look up to as your mentor because hearing their stories and experiences motivates and inspires you even more which makes you more ambitious and excited to be doing what you are doing

    This makes you more ambitious and excited to be doing what you are doing.
  1. Learning to ask the right questions: Good mentors ask probing questions to get you to reflect on the process you’re going through, whether it’s learning to code or advancing your career. But, surprise, surprise! Many times, you are the only one who can respond to these inquiries.

    And Learning how to ask yourself those types of questions is very important.
  1. Accountability: Mentors can be super helpful in your career journey by keeping you accountable and making sure you are sticking to your goals and, keeping up with the learning process.
  1. Objective Feedback: A mentor sees you as you are (without being biased) and, they can give you honest and objective feedback, which makes you better.
  1. Networking: A mentor can help you become better at networking and improve your professional and communication skills. They can also expand your horizons by introducing you to the right people in their network and, this is super valuable.

Why It’s A Win-Win for Both The Mentor and Mentee?

Yup! That’s correct. Mentors gain from sharing their expertise with mentees as well. Most of our attention is focused on people who are being mentored, but what are the benefits for mentors? Why should they devote their time to assisting others in honing their abilities? Let’s have a look at some of them:

  1. Builds soft skills: Mentoring allows you to expand your soft skills. It requires you to put yourself in your mentees’ shoes, which in turn, will help to build soft skills like empathy, leadership skills, effective communication, and collaboration skills.
  1. Continuous learning: Mentorship allows you to keep on learning and growing in your field. The more you share knowledge with your mentees, the more you reinforce that knowledge.
  1. Builds confidence: Consistently sharing your knowledge with someone else can improve your self-confidence. The more you teach your mentees and help them with the challenges they face, the more confident you’ll be.
  1. Establish strong connections: Mentoring is another opportunity for you to build great relationships with individuals from different backgrounds.

Three (3) Ways to Become A Great Mentor.

  1. Good listener: A great mentor should demonstrate active listening skills. Active listening helps you identify issues and find better solutions to the problems your mentee might be facing. Having good listening skills will help you to guide your mentee in the right direction.
  1. Constructive feedback: What better way to help your mentee than giving helpful feedback and actionable suggestions! But remember that there is always a way to deliver criticism without breaking your mentee’s confidence. Educate them, not tear them down. 🤝
  1. Willingness to share knowledge: Great mentors are always willing to share what they know. As a mentor, you understand what it felt like starting your career so this motivates you to pay it forward through mentorship.

Yes! You’ve made it all the way to the end of this article. I’m confident you now know what a mentor is and the advantages of having one!
If you want to be a part of a structured mentorship program designed to help you succeed in your chosen career path in the tech industry, Visit: Techrity Mentorship Program
Thanks for reading!

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Social Tech

Women Can’t Code: Tech Myth or Not?

“She is a woman. She can’t code” This has to be one of the biggest tech myths ever! Every year we see more women venture into the tech space, challenge the stereotype, and excel in whatever path they’ve chosen. But the gender in the tech space cannot be overlooked. Taking one of the world’s premier centers for tech as a case study, the UK records “19% of women employed in tech jobs, despite women making up 49% of the overall workforce in the country“. 
But do these statistics confirm the myth that women can’t code based on their reduced numbers in the tech space? 

Breaking the Myths

Women have continuously broken bounds in the tech space, though seemingly glaring, it still needs to be pointed out – You don’t need to be a man to be a programmer. Though recent stats shows men still make up the majority of programmers, this is rapidly changing. Any business of thoughtful leadership has understood the importance of gender-diverse teams. It’s not just good for equality, but a gender-diverse team make better decisions and are less likely to be biased.
Gender type is not a factor in how good of a programmer you can be. Programming is mostly about problem-solving and we need as many perspectives as possible to solve a problem in the best way.

Going Against the Stereotype

In times past, women have been recorded to being on top in influential programmer lists. Here’s a brief list for you:

  1. Ada Lovelace – An English mathematician and writer. She was the first programmer in the world. 

You can read more of her interesting journey in tech here.

  1. Grace Murray Hopper – Grace Murray was a pioneer of computer programming and one of the first programmers of the Harvard Mark 1 computer. She also developed the first compiler for programming language. 

Learn more about her tech journey here.

  1. Adele Goldstine – Adele Goldstine was an American computer programmer. She wrote the manual for the first electronic digital computer, ENIAC. 

You can read more about her here.

  1. Jean E. Sammet – Jean was an American computer scientist. She developed the FORMAC programming language in 1962. She was also one of the developers of the influential COBOL programming language. 

Read more about her story here.

  1. Marissa Mayer – Marissa Mayer is an information technology executive. She was one of the earliest programmers in Google.

Read more about her tech journey here

In conclusion, your gender is not what makes you a good coder or programmer. Far from it! 

You can become whoever you want to be, once you set your mind to achieve it!

I Am a Woman. I Can Code. 😎

Categories
Best practices General Tech

5 Practical Ways of Overcoming Procrastination as a Techie

Do the phrases “I’ll do it tomorrow,” “This project can wait,” “I still have enough time,” “Just one more episode!” sound familiar to you?   Most likely. Truth be told, we all have been victims of procrastination at one point or another, and I believe that your resolve to overcome this habit is why you’re on this page. 

Please read to the end of this article to know how to overcome procrastination!

  • Plan your tasks – Having a clear picture of what you need to do goes a long way in determining the success of the task. You need to have a proper vision of the day’s tasks. I personally have a way of planning out my tasks effectively with the aid of an app – The Todoist App.

Todoist is a to-do list app that helps you organize, prioritize and manage your personal and professional tasks. Using this app will help you keep track of the tasks you’ve set to achieve.

You can download the Todoist app using this link .

  • Break down goals – Often times, procrastination sets in when we focus on the size of a project at hand. So in order to minimize that overwhelming feeling, break down your tasks into smaller units. For example, as a designer, your next personal project might be to design the homepage of an e-commerce website. This would require a lot of thought process as there are many things to take into consideration. So break down your task into smaller units as this will make them more manageable and easy to achieve. 
  • Get rid of distractions – There are various sources of distractions. It could be from your phone, tv, or something else. As long as you do not need these things to achieve your goal, put them away or turn them off. When you get rid of these distractions, you’ve made it harder to procrastinate!
  • Have an accountability partner – This is another important step in overcoming procrastination. Find someone you can trust to keep you accountable. It could be a family member, your friend, colleague, mentor or even the online tech community you belong to! When you let others in on what you hope to achieve, it becomes harder to procrastinate.
  • Reward yourself – One way to motivate yourself to finish a task is to create a reward that you will give yourself once you’ve accomplished that task. This is very important but easily overlooked by many. Were you able to complete that project you vowed to? Give yourself a pat on the back. Were you able to accomplish the tasks scheduled for the day? Give yourself a treat. No matter how small you think your accomplishments are, never forget to reward yourself.

Remember that you are not perfect so pat yourself on the back for the times you overcame procrastination but also make a firm resolve to take the above steps when next procrastination comes knocking. 

You can do this! 💪