The world has many problems to solve. Billions live without reliable energy and lack adequate access to water, healthcare, and education. More people die from lack of clean water than from war. Our food system, the primary source of income for billions, must grow to meet the needs of another two billion people. Poverty is endemic. These are some of humanity’s grand challenges.
The good news is that solutions to these grand challenges are at hand. The processing power of computers has doubled, every 18 months, for more than 100 years. We are seeing exponential advances in every technology that computers touch, such as sensors, artificial intelligence, robotics, medicine, and 3D printing. These technologies are also converging—and making amazing things possible. Entrepreneurs can build smartphone apps that act as medical assistants to detect disease; body sensors that monitor heart, brain and body activity; technologies to detect soil humidity and improve agriculture; and robots that serve the elderly.
Yet Silicon Valley, which could be taking the lead in ridding humanity of its ills, is focused on scoring big hits by solving small problems. The venture-capital system, which fuels the technology industry’s growth, is geared toward rolling the dice in the hope of receiving returns of five to ten times the invested capital within five to seven years. For these investors, the quickest hits usually come from building apps or games that go viral or websites that automate business processes. That is where the big money is being invested—and it is going to the boys. Women are largely left out.
The big venture-capital successes are, however, rare, so the entire system is in decline. For the last fifteen years, most venture-capital firms have produced lower returns than the stock markets have. Billions are being needlessly wasted on building mindless apps.
Join a Twitter chat on gender diversity in tech with Voto Latino
This creates a big opportunity for women who want to solve the world’s problems.
Women are beginning to dominate many fields in education, and are gaining an increasing share of the degrees. They now earn 61.6% of all associate’s degrees, 56.7% of all bachelor’s degrees, and 58.5% of graduate degrees in the U.S. More women than men graduate in fields such as biology, education, health sciences, social/behavioral studies, and arts and humanities. Girls now match boys in mathematical achievement.









