Lesbians Who Tech + Allies

Lesbians Who Tech + Allies was founded by Leanne Pittsford in 2012 to create a community for queer women and their allies in the field of technology. Its tagline is Queer, Inclusive, Badass. The organization is the largest LGBTQ technology community in the world, with 50,000 LGBTQ women, non-binary people, people of color and allies in tech in over 42 cities worldwide.[1]

History

The community was started based on a small meet up in the Castro Theatre in San Francisco in December 2012.[2]

By the end of 2013, small events were launched in New York, Seattle, Boston, Los Angeles, London, Berlin and Toronto and the community had nearly 4,000 people.[3] In October 2013, the Lesbians Who Tech website was launched. The first official Lesbians Who Tech Summit was held in February 2014 in San Francisco.[4]

In June 2015, Lesbians Who Tech was awarded a $165,000 grant from the Arrillaga-Andreessen Foundation, starting a nonprofit arm of Lesbians Who Tech. The grant money was used for two pilot programs; "Bring a Lesbian to Work Day" and coding scholarship fund.

Community Inclusion

Lesbians Who Tech is committed to convening queer women in technology (and allies) in a vibrant and inclusive community. The term lesbian is used to honor those who crossed a firewall with it, it is not a requirement to identify as lesbian, bisexual, transgender, or queer to be part of the organization. The only requirement is to follow the organization's mission and goals; promote the visibility and inclusion of women, LGBT people, and people from other back-grounds under-represented in technology.[1]

Mission

Lesbians Who Tech's mission is to increase visibility and intersectionality, and change the face of technology. Their mission is to create a culture of inclusion for everyone in order to encourage oneself and others to be influential and make positive changes in their work environment. Lesbians Who Tech embodies four main goals; (1) to be more visible to each other, (2) to be more visible to others, (3) to get more lesbians and allies into technology, and (4) to connect Lesbians Who Tech to other LGBTQ and Women's organization who are already doing work for the community.[1] Lesbians Who Tech aims to build a network of colleagues, associates, and friends in the industry that share the same sexual orientation, in order to help make comfortable connection within the work space. The organization aims to create more visible lesbian leaders that have the ability to serve as public role models besides the already famous lesbian role model (such as Ellen DeGeneres). As women are still underrepresented in technology industry, Lesbians Who Tech aims to reach out to women, especially lesbians, and encourage their contributions to technology. Additionally, the organization promises to support other groups who are fighting for the same right (women and LGBTQ rights) and raise awareness of their work, while connecting these organization to women in the tech community.[1]

Bring a Lesbian to Work Day

Participants are matched with mentors in the tech field for a one-day on-site program focused on showing them what it takes to be leaders in whatever field they're interested in. Pittsford's goal is to encourage building relationships where people are comfortable with each other.

Edie Windsor Coding Scholarship Fund

Named after the LGBTQ and technology legend Edie Windsor, the Edie Windsor Coding Scholarship Fund provides opportunity for future generations of LGBTQ, technical women, and non-binary and trans individuals. The scholarship was funded through a Kickstarter campaign, pledging more than $100,000 towards educating 15 women. The bootcamp sponsor, Dev Bootcamp, kicked in another $100,000 in scholarship funds. Lesbians Who Tech continues the process to raise money in order to provide more queer women with learning opportunities. The more money raised through private and public donors, the more individuals can be educated. The scholarship subsidizes tuition for women and non-binary individuals who need financial assistance to attend coding academies. Through an application process the next round of coding scholars is determined. Each scholar as the chance to choose and apply to the coding school or bootcamp of their choice. In addition to tuition coverage, scholars are also provided with a network of lifelong mentors for support throughout their career[5]

Summits

All 3-day summits kick off with an opening address, tech crawl, and networking parties. Content sessions and more will begin the following day, and continue on for the remainder of the summit.

Summits also include:

  • TED Style Talks
  • Ignite Talks
  • Speed Mentoring
  • Recruiting Zone Workshops
  • Tech Demos
  • Recruiting & Retention Sessions

All Summits manage to pass the Bechdel Test.

All Summits cover topics like top technical trends, how technology will shape the future, career growth, to encourage the community to grow and thrive.[1]

Noteworthy Summits

The first White House's LGBT Tech and Innovation Summit took place in July 2014 with the aim to explore how technology can be used to end discrimination. Technology and LGBT community leaders were invited to generate answers to some of the major issues the United States is facing, including racial and economic justice, criminal justice reforms, economic inclusion, climate and citizenship.[6] The event had over 150 participants, and was opened by Aditi Hardiker of the White House Office of Public Engagement.

The sixth-annual Lesbians Who Tech + Allies Summit was the largest LGBTQ event in the world. The three day event took place in San Francisco and started on February 28th and lasted till March 2nd 2019. The attendees were roughly 80 percent queer women. Of those who spoke on stage, half were women of color, 30 percent were black or Latinx, and 15 percent transgender or gender non-conforming.[7]

Noteworthy Speakers

Black Lives Matter co-founder Alicia Garza, U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin, former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, San Francisco Mayor London Breed, and Emerson Collective founder Laurene Powell Jobs have given speeches at Lesbians Who Tech + Allies Summits. Among many others, further noteworthy speakers include Hillary Clinton, Stacey Abrams, Sheryl Sandberg and Marc Benioff.[8]

References

  1. "About Lesbians Who Tech & Allies". Lesbians Who Tech + Allies. Retrieved 2019-04-23.
  2. Archambeau, Kathleen. Pride & Joy : LGBTQ Artists, Icons and Everyday Heroes. ISBN 9781633535510. OCLC 994207280.
  3. Restauri, Denise. "Lesbians Who Tech, From Silicon Valley To The White House". Forbes. Retrieved 2019-04-23.
  4. Shevinsky, Elissa HerausgeberIn. Lean out the struggle for gender equality in tech and start-up culture. ISBN 9781939293862. OCLC 1054568286.
  5. "The Edie Windsor Coding Scholarship Fund for LGBTQ women". Kickstarter. Retrieved 2019-04-25.
  6. "White House hosts LGBT tech and innovation summit". Gay Star News. 2015-08-11. Retrieved 2019-04-25.
  7. Lagorio-Chafkin, Christine (2019-04-05). "More Than 150 Companies Are Hoping This Woman Can Fix Their Diversity Problems". Inc.com. Retrieved 2019-04-24.
  8. "Speakers Archive". Lesbians Who Tech + Allies. Retrieved 2019-04-25.
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