管家婆免费开奖大全

'It鈥檚 really shocking': 管家婆免费开奖大全 alumna and entrepreneur on the tech industry's lack of gender diversity

Photo of Huda Idrees
Huda Idrees is the founder and CEO of digital medical records startup Dot Health. She will appear on a Women-in-Tech panel Tuesday as part of 管家婆免费开奖大全's Entrepreneurship Week (photo by Pam Lau)

Huda Idrees thought she entered the male-dominated tech industry with her eyes wide open. But the 管家婆免费开奖大全 engineering alumna says she was totally unprepared for what she found.   

鈥淚鈥檝e actually been in situations where my employer has tried to pay a male subordinate of mine more money than me,鈥 says Idrees, who has worked for several Toronto startups before launching one of her own. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 really shocking.鈥

Yet, while tech's  has been well-documented, , Idrees doesn鈥檛 believe there鈥檚 anything particularly unique about her chosen industry. 

Rather, she says tech鈥檚 gender diversity problems have more to do with the sector鈥檚 rising social and economic clout since all powerful industries tend 鈥渢o be dominated by people who are already in power 鈥 and for the last thousand or so years, it鈥檚 been men.鈥

This Is The Place: Read more stories about entrepreneurship at 管家婆免费开奖大全

Idrees, who is the founder and CEO of digital medical records company Dot Health, is one of four panellists participating in a Women in Tech event tomorrow night at 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 OnRamp co-working space, part of the university鈥檚 Entrepreneurship Week. 

The event is being hosted by 管家婆免费开奖大全 Mississauga鈥檚 ICUBE accelerator 鈥 one of several 管家婆免费开奖大全 entrepreneurship hubs 鈥 and information giant Thomson Reuters. The other panelists are Julie Roussin and Leyla Samiee of Thomson Reuters, and Sonia Kang, an assistant professor in the department of management at 管家婆免费开奖大全 Mississauga with a cross-appointment at the Rotman School of Managem ent.

Idrees also has a message for men in the tech business who are pushing back against the #MeToo movement: Get educated about the issues 鈥 and quick. 

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 afford to be ignorant today,鈥 she says.

管家婆免费开奖大全 News caught up with Idrees to learn more about her experiences, and how she鈥檚 trying to do things differently at her startup.


There was a report out recently from the Information and Communications Technology Council that said women only account for about a quarter of all tech jobs in Canada, despite representing half the overall workforce, and the further you move up the ranks the smaller that number gets. Why is this industry such a boy鈥檚 club?

There鈥檚 a bit of an oscillation within industries once they become more lucrative. If you go back to the beginnings of computer programming, there were a lot of compiling engines and a lot of menial work 鈥 and a lot of that work was actually done by women. So I disagree with those who say there鈥檚 some sort of predisposed genetic or biological condition that keeps women away from tech. I think it鈥檚 because technology is one of the most 鈥 if not the most 鈥 lucrative industry that we know of. And whenever we have industries with more power, it tends to be more dominated by people who are already in power 鈥 and for the last thousand or so years, it鈥檚 been men.

So because tech has become such an important industry, with so much focus, it鈥檚 brought to the fore, or even concentrated, the inequality that exists throughout the job market? 

Yes. I would compare it to any other industry that鈥檚 highly lucrative, with lots of high-paying jobs. If you look on Wall Street or Bay Street, I鈥檓 sure you would find similar if not worse representation of women. Sometimes we talk about tech as though it鈥檚 this special snowflake. But it鈥檚 mimicking a lot of trends in other industries as well. I about workplace culture and how it鈥檚 biased against women, and a lot of the responses I got were actually from the medical and legal industries, which are also high-paying, lucrative industries. So I think tech is seeing a lot of the same things. On top of that 鈥 this is somewhat related 鈥 tech is built on top of a lot of venture capital and venture capital has traditionally been in the hands of men. 

管家婆免费开奖大全 Engineering has one of the highest levels of enrolment for female students in Canada. But engineering is a field that has traditionally been male-dominated. What鈥檚 been your personal experience? 

I鈥檓 a huge fan of 管家婆免费开奖大全 Engineering, so I will give [the faculty] a lot of credit for doing a really good job on this. Dean Cristina Amon has been really phenomenal in terms of how many women are being accepted and graduate. The numbers have really risen over the past several years. As for my experience from within the engineering community 鈥 as someone who was a complete outsider, as an immigrant to Canada and an international student 鈥 I didn鈥檛 see the [gender disparity] issue as much as I see it in tech. That鈥檚 despite the fact only 18 per cent of engineers were women in my year, which is very low. 

I think it鈥檚 now over 40 per cent.

Which is incredible 鈥 and Dean Amon has a lot to do with that. But I actually didn鈥檛 see the problem so much in engineering because the community was very supportive and welcoming to me. So it was a bit of shock when I entered tech. I wasn鈥檛 prepared for how much worse it was. I knew I had operated in a male-dominated industry 鈥 or faculty, at least 鈥 so I figured it would be similar. But what I found in tech, which is also the 鈥渞eal world,鈥 was that it was much harder for me, as a woman, to ask for, and receive, higher salaries. I鈥檝e actually been in situations where my employer has tried to pay a male subordinate of mine more money than me. It鈥檚 really shocking. Now, I raise venture capital for my own company, Dot Health, but when I walk into an investor鈥檚 office, they haven鈥檛 seen people who look like me come and ask for money. Historically, the biggest [tech] success stories haven鈥檛 been built by people who look like me. In their eyes, the biggest successes have been people like Mark Zuckerberg [Facebook] and Evan Spiegel [Snapchat], who are privileged, upper class men. But I don鈥檛 fit that mould. So I鈥檝e found it harder to make the case for why I should be entrusted with money and why I would have a bigger return than my equivalent male counterpart. And it鈥檚 not like people have something written on them that tells you they鈥檙e going to discriminate against you. You just have to figure it out. 

That must be incredibly frustrating.

It is. But it鈥檚 hard to quantify. You can鈥檛 give people a survey and have them say: 鈥淥n a scale of one to 10, I was most or least likely to have discriminated against you.鈥 So it鈥檚 a lot of feeling the room out. But it's hard because you have to learn to read people while also being a young person trying to navigate the world of venture capital. I started noticing certain red flags. I would walk into a room and it would be full of men, but I have an all-female team. So when I put up our team slide, some of them would have an aversion it. 

They would actually say something to you?

Yup. My chief technology officer has this incredible pedigree. She comes from Shopify. She鈥檚 a leader in the community when it comes to the technology that we build on. And yet, when we put her name on the slide, the questions we get are: 鈥淗as she led teams before? Is she actually good?鈥 That鈥檚 versus when I had a male co-founder shortly after I launched the company and I never got those questions. It鈥檚 an apples-to-apples comparison so I feel like I can speak to that quite confidently.

So, basically, you walk into a room and discover you鈥檙e facing an obstacle a male entrepreneur coming in behind you doesn't have to deal with. Do you think that鈥檚 held your company back in any way?

I鈥檝e spent my entire working career in tech so I know what I鈥檓 up against. It鈥檚 not so much discovery of bias as it is a confirmation. What I鈥檓 focused on more than anything is numbers. The reason people invest in you is because they want a return, so you need to convince them you can deliver a bigger return on investment than somebody else. For better or worse, pushing past the gender discrimination and actually making a business case has been the way I鈥檝e gone about it. I believe Big Data in health care is a hugely untapped market, and that we鈥檙e uniquely poised to excel in it. That鈥檚 really my go-to argument. I鈥檓 not trying to highlight the fact that my company is women-founded or women-led. I鈥檓 trying to focus on the things that should matter the most to venture capitalists. So they can be prejudiced against me, but if I can promise them a 20 times return and prove I deliver it, I鈥檓 in a better spot.

In addition to issues of equality, there鈥檚 also the question of what we, as society and customers, are missing by not having as many women in these industries and in positions of power.

The business case for diversity, basically. There鈥檚 a lot of conversation about that 鈥 and I do agree with a lot of it. But there鈥檚 a weird split to this discussion. It鈥檚 been proven again and again that if we have more diverse teams, we perform better as businesses. There鈥檚 studies going back a decade. But that doesn鈥檛 seem to have changed anything for companies today. Clearly that鈥檚 not getting us anywhere. So the split is a moral question: Is the only reason we should have women or minorities in the workplace because it鈥檚 better for business, or should we help them get those positions because of equality? I think those are two completely different things. We always say, 鈥淥h, we should do it because it鈥檚 better for business.鈥 But what if it wasn鈥檛? Would we say, 鈥淲omen are bad for business so we should just keep them out?鈥 

So we shouldn鈥檛 be making that argument? 

I want us to move toward a conversation about whether we鈥檙e keeping women out on purpose. I think that becomes a much more interesting conversation because people start to question it morally. It鈥檚 about rights and equality. I would love to have that conversation. At some point, the businesses of the future will be different from the businesses of today, and one of my top reasons for having women be part of technology teams, and particularly emerging technology teams, is that the technology will impact everybody alive. So if you鈥檙e excluding them, we鈥檙e going to build technology that鈥檚 biased against a certain group because they weren鈥檛 involved in designing it. Think about virtual reality, which makes some women nauseous but doesn鈥檛 have that effect on men. Or facial recognition technology that doesn鈥檛 recognize the faces of Black people 鈥 these are things that will affect us in a major way. I鈥檓 more interested in involving a representative group in our team so we can build a technology that鈥檚 going to be better for the world.

This whole discussion in tech is now happening against the backdrop of the #MeToo movement, and some prominent people are warning of a backlash. How do you see this playing out?

What I think is interesting about the #MeToo movement is the changes it鈥檚 bringing 鈥 the good that鈥檚 coming from it 鈥 rather than the social media frenzy it鈥檚 causing. Men who say they don鈥檛 want to work with women [because they're afraid of being accused] are completely missing the point. It鈥檚 a little bit juvenile. I don鈥檛 fear a backlash so much as I do men self-selecting out of these conversations 鈥 which is really just about a willingness to learn and be educated. If someone were to say Black Lives Matter is too prominent and I鈥檓 going to be discriminated against as someone who鈥檚 against Black people, that has more to do with the people self-selecting out than the movement. I wouldn鈥檛 change anything about the #MeToo movement. But I would change the attitude of people who feel like they're being attacked so they seek out education. You can鈥檛 afford to be ignorant today. 

Now that you鈥檙e running your own company, what steps are you taking to build an inclusive, forward-thinking organization? 

What we鈥檙e starting to be really conscious about is who we hire and how we bring them on, and what values and principles we set for the company. We鈥檙e slow to hire and quick to fire. We have actually let two people go in the short period of time we鈥檝e been around, which is coming up to a year now. The reason we did that is we鈥檙e very focused on crafting a culture that ensures people aren鈥檛 making their teammates uncomfortable. We actually call it 鈥 pardon my swearing 鈥 the no asshole rule. During hiring, you have to pass the no-asshole test, basically. That鈥檚 not so much a culture fit as it is checking references and asking how prospective employees fit with their former teammates 鈥 and then having them come in and work for us for a few days. It鈥檚 very easy for someone to act nice during an interview for an hour, but it鈥檚 a lot harder to change your behaviour for a day or two.

For 管家婆免费开奖大全 students, particularly women, who are curious about starting their own company or working at a startup, but might be turned off by what they hear about the industry 鈥 what advice would you offer them?

It鈥檚 the reasons for staying versus the reasons for quitting. I think I鈥檝e been given a lot of reasons to quit tech. But the reason I stay 鈥 and this is what I tell everyone who is considering joining 鈥 is that I want to be able to build a better world for the future. And the fastest way to do that is by building technology. I think that鈥檚 quite motivating. The other side of that is living in a community with technology that does not help you or is designed against you. That鈥檚 a scary alternative. There鈥檚 tons of problems that people who have been shut out of this industry can solve 鈥 and you can be one of them. 

UTC