Keeping women in tech matters more than recruiting them
- Published
- Letters to the Editor

Until progression, culture and flexibility improve, taskforces risk diagnosing a problem everyone already understands
Sir,
The government’s decision to establish a Women in Tech taskforce should be met with cautious approval. Anyone who has spent time in the sector knows the imbalance is real, and the figures cited in your article (‘UK government sets-up women in tech taskforce amid gender imbalance’) merely put a cost on what has long been obvious in practice.
Speaking from experience, the problem is not simply getting women into technology roles – which is hard enough – but keeping them there once they arrive. Too many capable people leave because progression stalls, workplace cultures remain hostile, or flexibility disappears at precisely the life stages when it matters most.
A taskforce will not fix that on its own. But if it forces boards and senior managers to confront why women continue to drop out mid-career, it will have served a purpose. The real test will be whether industry listens once the recommendations are published, or whether this becomes another well-meaning report that changes very little.
Yours faithfully,
Sarah Whitcombe
Cambridge, UK
Sign up to The European Newsletter
TOP STORIES
-
Scientists crack dinosaur egg mystery by building life-size nest -
Nobel laureate Omar Yaghi launches global science network -
Cardiff drivers safest in Britain as London comes last -
Former Kyndryl Germany boss joins Infinigate in growth role -
Volunteers collect 11m rare seeds to restore Scotland’s native forests -
Trump threatens 'immediate 100pc tariffs' on European countries over tech taxes -
World’s biggest golf tour lands global eSIM deal with Yesim -
Facebook owner Meta signs Texas solar deal with Turkish renewables firm -
UK universities take top four places in European global rankings -
Hurghada gets new 442-room Red Sea resort as Britons chase year-round sun -
Home routers named ‘Europe’s forgotten internet security risk’ -
New documentary explores water safety as Europe confronts soaring drowning deaths -
Venice tourists say £43 day-trip fee will turn city into ‘playground for the rich’ -
King Charles to reveal personal tax bill for first time -
AI lab says brain-like engine could slash chatbot bills by 98 per cent -
Explorer who pulled out of Titan sub dive says damning report proves disaster was inevitable -
Britain to rank among Europe’s hottest places as 40C heatwave closes in -
Sir Keir Starmer says he will become a family man after quitting as UK PM -
EasyJet rejects reported £4.7bn takeover approach from U.S investment firm -
Street-by-street maps to reveal where England’s poorest communities face worst environmental risks -
Stanley Johnson: the Government must ‘follow Ukraine back into Europe’s green network’ -
Ukraine joins European environment network in major conservation step after war damage to land and wildlife -
Titan firm never proved doomed hull was safe, damning report finds -
Europe’s €4bn Frankfurt terminal named among world’s most beautiful airports -
The fist-bumping, selfie-taking humanoid guide that could usher sightseeing tours into the AI age



























