26 February 2013

Women in Tech Listserve Email

The Listserve is a huge email list that I signed up for a long time ago. I get daily emails from people all over the world. Today, there are 21,446 subscribers. Also today, my email was sent out to those 21,446 subscribers. Also today, I turned 28.

I've been inundated with a lot of emails and tweets showing appreciation for what I had to say. I'll share some later, but right now, I think it's worth it to get my post up so that it can be spread even wider (more than 21,446? no way!) and bring people interested to a blog that will help them find out more about women in tech.

Some background information: I was overwhelmed with things to do two weekends ago and didn't notice that I'd gotten an email saying I'd won the Listserve lottery. Since Monday was a holiday, I spent the day catching up on emails and ran into that email. Unfortunately, by that time, my 48 hours were up. I decided I was going to try anyway and put out an email in record time. I clicked on "Send" right as Michael's parents arrived to pick us up to celebrate our birthdays, hoping that I'd still get my chance. Add a week and a day, and my Listserve appeared in my own inbox to greet me on my birthday. Enjoy:


Women in Tech



Until recently, I was floundering. For years, my life focused on becoming a professor and finding someone to spend my life with, and neither of those was working out. I applied for jobs, considered an MBA, almost moved to China, and read. Then I met Michael playing soccer. Somehow he saw past the shell I’d become. He dated me for five months until I made the conscientious decision to love him and really started dating him back. I finally found a job at a startup in San Francisco. The pay was so lousy that I had to stay in a relative’s basement while the job killed me slowly. A book made me realize that I’m an introvert, so I decided to talk to my boss the next day about making some changes. On the way to work, with a spring in my step, I broke my foot.

Working from home, I started opening tabs about learning technical skills. On the deadline for a school that trains women to become web developers/software engineers in ten weeks, I sent in a rather cursory application, though I didn’t have a clue what things like “Python,” “Backend,” and “Git” referred to.

But then I was in a wheelchair for a while and I had to defer, and to make things worse, I needed a new apartment. (Wheelchair-friendly places in San Francisco? Ha!) Michael and I debated getting married, but life was too hectic.

Finally, finally, things started clicking. We were offered lowered rent for managing a building, and the owner preferred couples. We became engaged and decided that with the apartment and school starting soon and in hopes of getting gift money to pay for Hackbright Academy, we’d get married in one month.

Our wedding was wonderfully simple and the stability of marriage countered the intensity of the program. Hackbright Academy was one of the most difficult and best things I have ever done. I slaved through pair programming, learning a new vocabulary, and building my first application, BookFairy. Within a week of graduating, I was offered a job. I nervously made a brave counter offer, and it was accepted!

How come I didn’t find my niche earlier?! I was in technology clubs in school and fascinated by techie stuff. So why didn’t anyone ever say, “Michelle, you actually aren’t that great at essays, but you like computers. Did you know that you could have a career making them do cool things?” I blame it on my gender. Girls aren’t introduced to technology as early and they are subliminally encouraged to get impractical educations when they could excel in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Did you know that the amount of female developers has decreased since the 80s? It is now down to about 9-11%. It can be difficult to work in a male-dominated field, but that’s all the more reason for more women to forge the tech pathway.

I can’t recommend this path enough. My husband and San Francisco’s techies have been amazingly supportive, I love what I’m doing, and my salary is about 18 times more than my total income last year. I want to tell everyone, “Women can rock at web development, too! Girls, here are some cool things I’ve built that you could build too, being a dev is awesome! You can have love and a great career!”

If you want to read more about my experience and/or to help me support women in tech, you can find my blog and Twitter by googling my name, Michelle Glauser. (Please keep it positive.)

Michelle Glauser
San Francisco, CA

3 comments:

  1. Hi!
    I read your listserver email, googling your name, i'm here!!
    So many hugs from a brasilian girl!

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  2. Did you have multiple applications when graduating? Just curious "how many" to have in a portfolio when looking for positions. Would love to chat with you more about that part of the experience if you have time. Congratulations on finding your thang and doing it!

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    1. Hi Jenny, I only had the one app that I'd made (BookFairy). What people are looking for is proof that you'd fit in well with their team and that you know how to do enough things to help you learn how to do more things. :)

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