T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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248.1 | various thoughts to prime the pump | ULTRA::ZURKO | More than enough rope | Mon Jul 16 1990 10:54 | 35 |
| > 1. We are located in Colorado and it's hard to have people relocated
> out here. Especially if you are from a dual career family, you have to
> have two jobs lined up here before you can move, but the economy in
Interview Lesbians. If you're lucky, you could find a couple that would
both want to move to your group.
> 2. Our group has a strong slant toward higher degreed engineers.
Is there a list of consulting engineers for this corporation? Many women
network with each other; if you could find a woman consulting engineer, even
if she doesn't do databases, maybe she could help you.
Check the GEEP office; see if they put any women through programs in DB (or if
they can help you at all).
> 4. A lot of people who work here landed on this job because they
> already knew someone who work here. We really do not have women's
> personal connection and it's a disadvantage.
Can you hook up with other groups doing DB? Via notesfiles or conferences? Of
course, it's incredibly bad manners to steal anyone from another group, but
making connections, and mentioning the market, might help.
> My boss said the ratio of resumes come across his desk is 100 male
> resumes to 1 female resume and it has been very hard to recruit
> women.
How do resumes get to his desk in the first place? Maybe you can help there.
For instance, I didn't have OS on my resume, and it would never have gotten to
the group I'm in unless I knew someone in the group (point 4). And I was
eminently qualified for the job I did; it's just that I didn't have the silly
keyword match. Maybe a more sophisticated algorithm?
Mez
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248.2 | I think it is the location | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Jul 16 1990 14:03 | 17 |
| I think the problem is the location (CXO). You'd have a lot easier
time recruiting women for these positions if the openings were in an
area with more oppurtunities - as you noted, most professional women
are in two-career families and are going to find it hard to relocate,
so your best approach may be to try to target new college graduates
(who tend to have fewer roots anyhow). You'd be hiring the latest
academic theories that way (may be good or bad...).
My master's thesis was on relational database query optimizations, by
the way. But I don't want to move to CXO; if I left New England it
would be for Silicon Valley or Minneapolis. My SO works in NaC, and I
currently write VLSI CAD software in Hudson, MA (HLO). Even with the
depressed economy around here, there are enough oppurtunites for
two-career families.
/Charlotte
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248.3 | Ratios... | SCHOOL::KIRK | Matt Kirk -- 297-6370 | Mon Jul 16 1990 17:30 | 14 |
| re .0
I don't have any statistics to back this up, but when I was in college I
worked for a professor whose specialty was databases. He had seven or eight
grad students studying under him. Of those, three were women, and two were
PhD candidates. This appeared to be typical.
Also, in a class I took at the same university last year (3 years after
I graduated) there were six people enrolled, and two were women. One
was a masters student, and one was a PhD candidate.
Admittedly, these are tiny samples.
Matt
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248.4 | | ASDS::BARLOW | | Tue Jul 24 1990 09:23 | 15 |
|
I think that hiring women into any engineering group is difficult. I
am a software engineer for the Merlin, (Ultrix MCC), group and we even
have a couple of outside rec's. However, I personally went through
about 200 resume's and 3 of them were women. Of those women none had
the qualifications that we're looking for. (BTW- only 5or 6 men had
those qualifications.) The people (all men but me), in my group are
very conscious of the gender imbalance but they can't find any
qualified women either. I think that when you're looking for senior
engineer and above, there's not too many women out there. (So that's
why the percentage of women is less than what you might see in
college.) And, we're in Mass.
Rachael
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248.5 | UNIX background, too? | 8596::MHUA | | Tue Jul 24 1990 12:24 | 10 |
|
Well, we knew that female engineer with Database background is hard to
find. We were hoping that since we are going to have unix related
positions this year, we can fill out some of the unix reqs with women,
but it sounds discouraging.
I guess unix background is in high demand and hard to get also.
sigh...
Masami
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248.6 | | ABSISG::THIBAULT | Crisis? What Crisis? | Wed Aug 01 1990 08:34 | 5 |
|
did somebody say unix AND Colorado in the same sentence?
hmmmm... :-)
Jenna
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