HACKER Q&A
📣 BlackJeffBezos

Why there are few older people and women in tech?


Why there are few older people and women in tech?


  👤 hindsightbias Accepted Answer ✓
Cisco, HP, Dell, IBM, Oracle have lots of olders and women.

Maybe the hiptech should think on why that is.


👤 klooney
Older people, because the denominator has gone way up. Women, you know, it's complicated.

👤 hw-guy
At several points during a typical engineer's career, he/she will be offered the "opportunity" to move into a less-technical role; for example, engineering management, product management, or sales. These transfers, even if intended to be temporary, nearly always turn out to be one-way: after a couple of years away from hard development, the engineer finds that his/her skills have grown soft, and that technology has advanced to the point where it's difficult to catch up. So the older that an engineer is, the greater the probability that he/she has fallen into one of these non-technical career sinks.

👤 rhelz
Never been a woman, but I've been an older programmer for about 20 years now, so I can only speak to the kinds of things I've faced. Yeah, anecdotes are not evidence, yada-yada, take my words for what they are worth.

Programmers are not just expensive, they are damn expensive, and that goes double for experienced programmers. If you have to lay off programmers, would you rather lay off 1 older programmer, or 2 younger programmers?

So how is an older programmer supposed to demonstrate that his experience justifies his higher salary? We've talked in other threads about how hard it is to measure programmer productivity. It takes a very talented management chain to make the right call. But any idiot can compare two salaries and see which one is the largest.

If you are in this biz long enough, you are going to find yourself trying to explain to a manager with 5 years experience what it took you 20 years of hard experience to learn, and they are just not going to get it.