My role has varied a lot over the years as it is shaped and driven by innovation and complex change within financial services. Predominately my experience lends itself to the delivery of large-scale technology focused projects, with a regulatory/audit requirement underpinning those change programmes.
I have been fortunate to lead large teams to deliver a diverse set of solutions and change across multiple client engagements. I currently lead the OSS Management capability for Capco which has successfully implemented Functional Operating Models for the integration of Open Source Software Security Management processes, tools and automation within the financial sectors SDLC cycle.
If I am honest it initially chose me, and was unavoidable based given the period during which I began my career. Technology was the ‘new’ answer to many high volume/manual operating processes in the mid-1990s and my business, operational and product knowledge enabled me to translate between the two worlds. Despite not actively making the choice initially, I made the decision to remain aligned to technology as it constantly engages me – and I tend to get bored quickly! I also enjoy technology’s transformative potential to enable solutions to a myriad of problems, whether business, product or regulatory in naure, for the benefit of clients and their customers.
No. I went into banking young, and when I was at school there was no GCSE for computing – the ICT suite was green screen 1 terminal per 10 and basic. The explosion in the use of Microsoft software and the internet in banking only happened around 1993-94. For context, I used basic green screen updates (with no CDU functionality) in my product and operational roles for the first six years before moving into an area call Business, Process, Design and Technology in 1994.
That BPDT role was my first role technology experience in a bank and I have remained associated and aligned to Business and Technology Change throughout my career.
I do believe there is a lack of senior female representation in technology. In the Nineties through into the early 2000s that was the case across all levels, so the industry has done well in targeting women early on in their careers to try and rectify that deficit. However, this has not translated into leadership roles, and we need to do better.
Yes, there is a stereotype that technology is deemed too ‘complex’ or uninteresting for women and (sadly) due to this propaganda some women choose not to explore the discipline in earnest.
A simplification and demystification of certain topics would help. There can be an intellectual arrogance associated with technology subjects. I have always had the greatest regard for those male senior technology colleagues who took the time over the years to break down the complexity. On the other hand, I have in the past been tested by male technology Project Managers on my understanding and credentials, despite having a career and CV which matches or extends beyond their own capabilities or skillsets. Fortunately this happens less today, which shows progress is being made.
There are fewer barriers today than 25 years ago, however, there is still a ceiling between junior and more senior roles. I do not fully understand why – I can only put it down to lack of acknowledgement and promotional opportunity perhaps? On my journey, I was conscious of the lack of female representation and people who will step up as mentors, and I had to push hard to be heard or taken seriously.
We need more woman who have charged through and made a senior-level career for themselves who can encourage and mentor other women on their journeys. We also require more male allies at the CIO/CTO and CEO level to actively promote and encourage female representation within industry and across high-profile IT programmes and innovation projects.
This is certainly a broad question and doesn’t just cover IT. However, here goes: