TechCrunch News 04月15日
Girls Who Code founder Reshma Saujani spills business tea with Meghan, Duchess of Sussex
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非营利组织Girls Who Code的创始人Reshma Saujani在Meghan, Duchess of Sussex的播客节目中分享了她的创业故事。Saujani坦言,她并非技术出身,但凭借对女性在STEM领域发展的关注,创建了Girls Who Code,帮助了超过67万年轻女性。节目中,Saujani探讨了女性创业者面临的挑战,包括如何在事业与家庭中取得平衡,以及在逆境中保持希望。Meghan希望通过对话,鼓励更多人探索社会创业的道路。节目还讨论了AI时代女性面临的挑战,强调了支持女性的重要性。

👩‍💻 Saujani分享了她创办Girls Who Code的经历,她没有编码背景,但看到了年轻女性在STEM领域的缺失,从而创办了该组织。

💡 播客中,Saujani和Meghan讨论了创业中的实用建议,例如寻求建议可能带来资金支持,以及女性创业者在事业与家庭之间的平衡问题。

💔 Saujani坦诚分享了她在创业过程中面临的个人挑战,包括流产和自身免疫疾病,以及如何在这些困境中坚持。

👧 Saujani强调了支持女性的重要性,尤其是在AI时代。她指出,女性在AI领域的人才比例较低,并且面临着Deepfake等新兴技术的威胁。

🌱 播客也探讨了Saujani后续创办Moms First的经历,该组织倡导为母亲们提供更好的工作环境,并获得了Meghan的支持。

Reshma Saujani, founder of the non-profit Girls Who Code, got straight to the point. 

“If I had applied to be the CEO of Girls Who Code, I wouldn’t have gotten the job,” she told Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, on the latest episode of the duchess’ podcast, “Confessions of a Female Founder.”

“I didn’t code,” Saujani continued. “I majored in polyscience, speech communications, and the only thing I’d ever built was a failed [congressional] campaign,” she said, referring to when she tried running for Congress and lost. (She was the first Indian-American to run for Congress back in 2010).

Saujani’s lack of experience in coding didn’t stop her from launching what has become one of the most well-known coding camps in tech.

Girls Who Code says it has helped train more than 670,000 young girls, women, and nonbinary individuals in STEM and, at one point, received support from high-profile names in the tech industry, including Jack Dorsey and Microsoft. (The organization still seems to be kicking, whereas other groups, like Girls in Tech and Women in Code, have faced the reverberating impacts of the anti-DEI sentiment sloshing through Silicon Valley.)  

Saujani chatted with Meghan about her early days of building the organization, while touching upon themes of motherhood and life after leaving Girls Who Code. Her interview illustrates the sacrifices many female founders make — and often conceal — while they focus on running a business. The conversation revealed Saujani’s drive as an entrepreneur to remain on the front lines pushing for change. 

“This conversation was such a full-circle moment for me,” Saujani told TechCrunch, adding that she first met Meghan when she expanded Girls Who Code to the UK in 2019.

“Confessions of a Female Founder” promises to talk to important women and share lessons about building a business. The podcast, which launched last week, has had a successful beginning. It’s currently the No. 1-ranked business podcast on Apple, ahead of Scott Galloway’s “The Prof F Pod.”

In a comment given to TechCrunch, Meghan said she hoped the conversation inspired others to “explore a different vertical of being an entrepreneur: social entrepreneurship.” 

“My conversations throughout ‘Confessions of a Female Founder’ have each been illuminating in their own way, and with Reshma, we chat about what it looks like for a woman to lead and succeed while also navigating motherhood with grit and grace,” she said.  

Saujani’s conversation is at its best when business nuggets are dropped. For instance, the pair discussed the adage that when you go to someone for money, you get advice, but if you go to someone for advice, you will probably get money. 

“You’re just going for advice, and then if it makes sense for them, they’ll offer up what they think you might need,” Meghan said. 

But there were intimate moments too; Saujani chatted about her struggles running the nonprofit while dealing with miscarriages and an auto-immune disorder. “I was performing in front of these children that I desperately wanted,” she said. “It was eating me up inside.” 

One of the main lessons in Saujani’s founder journey is, of course, taking leaps and not giving up. She took her chance in 2012 when she launched Girls Who Code after seeing that young women, especially women of color, were not entering STEM jobs.

A child of Indian immigrants, she spoke about how she was bullied as a child and how that impacted her path in life.

“I got beat up pretty bad,” she said, adding that she tried hard to assimilate into the white culture she grew up around. “But I also realized I am not white, and I’m never going to be, and I have a responsibility to actually teach people about difference [sic].” 

Betting on women another theme — and one worth reiterating. 

When Saujani launched her podcast, she thought it was important for young girls to have and understand the tools needed to solve the problems they will inevitably face.

As the artificial intelligence revolution kicks off, betting on women has become more important than ever. Women make up just 22% of the global AI talent, with representation dropping as a role becomes more senior. AI is also threatening young women in unprecedented ways, most notably through the rise of shockingly accurate deepfake videos. (Girls Who Code says it has taught more than 8,000 students about AI).

Saujani, now a mother, went on to launch Moms First, which advocates better working environments for moms. Meghan, she revealed, was an early supporter of the cause. The lesson there is a simple one. 

“I might die with women having less rights than they had when I was born,” she said, adding that she realized she, like other women, were probably put on earth to keep hope alive. “You lose, you lose, you lose, you lose, and then you win.” 

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Reshma Saujani Girls Who Code 女性创业 STEM Meghan
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