Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Celebrated Women in Technology

The world celebrated women’s day last week. But in technology, Silicon Valley still remains largely a boys’ club except few women personalities who made their way up into great positions.


Here we list a few among the celebrated tech women.



Virginia Rometty



CEO, IBM


Marissa Mayer


VP Location and Local Services, Google



Mayer was the first female engineer hired at Google and one of their first 20 employees, joining the company in June 1999. She is significantly responsible for the success of the UIs of Google Search and Gmail, which made her the ideal candidate to control company’s main business – advertising. As the Vice President of location and local service now, she is responsible for generating the maximum revenue for the company.



Sheryl Sandberg



COO, Facebook



Sandberg might be the most experienced person in Facebook. Prior to joining Facebook, this Harvard topper in economics served as the vice president of global online sales and operations at Google and before that, she was the Chief of Staff for United States Department of Treasury.With her experience in the field, this highest paid employee of Facebook turned company into a $100 billion worth business.


t female CEO of IBM. She joined the company as a systems engineer more than 30 years ago andas a Senior VP of Global Business Service in 2002, she completely changed the direction of IBM by helping lead its $3.5 billion takeover of PricewaterhouseCoopers, a tedious task due to the size and difference in corporate culture of the company. She is also responsible for pushing the company into emerging markets like China and Brazil.







Shaherose Charania



Charania might have invented the most supporting platform for the women- Women 2.0, a global network and social platform for aspiring and current female founders of technology ventures. This expert of mobile and telephony startups is now running Founder Labs, a pre-idea incubator for mobile startups. Earlier she had worked in Ribbit, which was acquired by British Telecom and also at Jajah, later acquired by Telefonica.
















Katie Jacobs Stanton



Head of International Strategy, Twitter



Katie was appointed as the head of international strategy at Twitter in beginning of 2010. Prior to that she was a prominent figure in Google where her work included Google Finance, Google Moderator and Open Social initiative. She was also a special advisor to the Office of Innovation at U.S. Department of State. She was behind Twitter’s revised censorship policy


















Ursula Burns





Chairman and CEO, Xerox



Ursula is a perfect example for an American success story. She joined Xerox where she worked as an intern and build her way up in the ladder till she became the first Afro-American woman to head a Fortune 5oo company. Ursula presided over the $6.4 billion acquisition of Affiliated Computer Services,Xerox’s largest deal in history.







Caterina Fake



Cofounder, Flickr



Millions of people around the world will be thanking Flickr every time they upload an image into the website which save their space and manage their memories. But the credit goes to Caterina, who along with her then-husband Stewart Butterfield, invented the photo-sharing site, taking idea from their own business failure- Ludicorp a company which developed “Game Neverending”- a multiplayer online role playing game. Eventhough her first attempt went bankrupt, she made$35 million when Yahoo acquired Flickr in 2005. She recently launched Pinwheel, which lets you find and leave notes around the world.



Jessica Livingston



Cofounder, Y Combinator



Jessica, along with her husband Paul Graham and Robert Morris and Trevor Blackwell launched Y Combinator, the popular three month boot camp for startups in Silicon Valley. Their programme had already launched more than 300 startups including Dropbox, Reddit and Airbnb and is processing a lot more.





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