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Women in Analytics notes
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Speakers: | |
Jenni Romanek - Dir. Analytics Instagram; DS at twitter previously | |
Nell Thomas - DS manager FB 2 years | |
Gayatree Ganu - DS Manager monetizaton, FB 6 years, worked in search before ads | |
Yuko Yamazaki - Lyft Dir of Eng., data; read Lean In 100x | |
Sarah O'Brien - head of global insights at LinkedIn | |
Amy Sample - VP of BI at PBS, AOL 8 years before that | |
Omoju Miller - ML Eng at Github | |
Katya Skorobogatova - VP growth at VentureCity, was at FB for 7 years | |
• Omoju: ML infrastructure is really important, but it's not sexy. | |
• If you have hypervisibility, use it to bring others along with you. | |
• It's ok to leave. Be patient: it's always slower than you want, try to have fun. | |
• Sarah: if you're not in the flow, take a break | |
• Compelling Storytelling is important | |
• Gender insights report: Recruiters are 13% less likely to click on a female profile, but after that there's approximately equal follow-through | |
•Katya: have to know how to pull back and when to ask for help | |
--- | |
Jennifer Prendki - CEO and Founder, Alectio | |
was a manager at Walmart Labs; Chief DS at Atlassian; VP of ML at Figure Eight (labeling company, which got acquired) | |
• She has experienced even more sexism for female managers than ICs | |
• Investors said "no sole female founders allowed" and offered money on the condition that she let them name a (male) cofounder | |
• Men are judged on strengths, women are judged on weaknesses | |
# Pyramid of Professional Needs: | |
5. help inspire other women | |
4. feel valued | |
3. equal pay and opportunities | |
2. job safety and moral integrity | |
1. physical safety at work | |
--- | |
Hilary Parker - Stitchfix | |
Challenge: only get feedback on 5 items per user at a time, and not even that frequently | |
Idea to a 'tinder for clothing' | |
Chrid Moody built it: "style shuffle" | |
Ended up with a "geyser of data" | |
(as much data per user in 1 day as they previously had in 1 year) | |
matrix factorization model | |
next step: understand clothing interaction model | |
fed back into style shuffle so they could have users rate outfits | |
Actual design process is not a lightbulb moment! | |
Ingest, Influence, Reinvent | |
•Empathy for yourself first so you can take care of others | |
--- | |
Cheryl Dartt & Sheryl Sandberg | |
- lots of stats in Lean In, her editors didn't like that, they tried to make her take it all out | |
Sheryl will be 50 this year and has never worked for a woman. She assumed her generation would change that, but instead no one would talk about it. | |
LeanIn.org and optionb.org | |
annual comprehensive study of women in the workforce | |
Doesn't change much year to year | |
Women are applying for jobs at the same rate as men, but we're not getting promoted at the same rate | |
First management role is critical | |
Facebook: Increased women in technical roles to 22% (7x since 2014) | |
36% in the company | |
57% of those are new grads | |
FB University for URMs, summer of Freshman year in college, talk them into majoring in CS | |
50% of small businesses using FB or Instagram are hiring. FB is the largest job platform in the world now. | |
• Half the things you're doing aren't necessary. Do it quickly. "a little worse, and a little faster" | |
First draft of Lean In had 4 pages on the Masai tribe's matrilineal governance | |
And 5 pages on video games, about how girls do better when they're not being watched, otherwise boys do better | |
42k Lean In Circles meet monthly | |
--- | |
Tammy Ball - Army of Allies workshop | |
- works on identifying bad actors at FB | |
* This workshop was FANTASTIC, but it was hands-on so I don't have many notes for it. I want to ask her if they're going to make the materials available. | |
We did an abridged version - I would love to do the full thing some day. | |
Women get a lot of personality feedback. If you receive this kind of feedback, ask for specific suggestions on how to improve. | |
When you give feedback, don't just say thanks, be specific about impact. | |
When you receive feedback from someone with less power, it may be more serious than it seems. Mentally add weight to feedback from URMs to account for that. | |
Make it obvious, say out loud: | |
"this is a crucial conversation" | |
"Ask how long it will take to get it fixed" | |
"I plan to check in weekly until this is resolved" | |
--- | |
Mandy Gerdes - DE Manager, Instagram | |
when something goes wrong, it looks like this: | |
1. email with a weird question | |
2. "is something wrong with the db?" | |
3. initially assume it's fine (probably user error) | |
4. then panic | |
5. then, professional attitude | |
6. your manager should step in at this point | |
What to do: | |
1. have a plan | |
2. implement procedures to protect against this happening again | |
3. postmortem | |
4. build resilience | |
#Picture someone riding an elephant | |
#Who is in control? | |
#What happens if the elephant gets scared | |
(elephant is emotional self, rider is cognition) | |
- Label the physical feeling (to help build self awareness) | |
- Accept that your elephant is stronger than any reins | |
- Have an escape plan and be disciplined about using it | |
- If you don't fear failure, it means you don't care that much | |
--- | |
Susan Sun - freelance full time about 4 years | |
- became a manager of a remote team straight out of grad school | |
- asked for management training and it was all about sexual harrassment (i.e. not useful at all) | |
- prefers to work onsite because of privacy/GDPR rules | |
- feeds off of team energy | |
- initially took on way more than she could handle (3 clients is about the max concurrency) | |
Freelance: | |
- no benefits | |
- NDAs | |
- customer-client relationships | |
- no mentorship built-in | |
FTE: | |
- benefits | |
- at-will | |
- manager-direct relationships | |
- still have to seek out mentorship/manage up | |
Job boards (none of which have ever yielded clients for her): | |
The Mom Projects, UpWork, Fiverr, Freelancer, Vettery, Experfy | |
Instead got all her work from "accidental" networking | |
1. Hire a lawyer to set up your single-member LLC ($1000-3000); read about it on the IRS page. | |
2. Sign contract with clear start date, and work fully scoped | |
Timing matters. | |
Freelance usually peaks at the end of the quarter (leftover budget) | |
Other costs/things you need: | |
Save 1 year of buffer $ + healthcare ($600/month) | |
WeWork charges $300-600/month for a single desk | |
$ travel to pitch non-local clients | |
$ infrastructure costs (AWS, etc) | |
business cards, domain name (required for an LLC in NYC, $40/year) | |
logo design | |
Quickbooks/Harvest/Toggl for granual tracking (down to the minute) | |
How much to charge? | |
old: current or desired annual salary/2080 hours per year X 2 = $rate/hour | |
better: total expenses/year x (10-20)% profit margin = desired annual revenue/1134 hours x 2 (factors in vacation, etc) | |
Gut check model: | |
- price hourly to avoid scope creep | |
- set price by level of interest and past experience with the client | |
- ask trusted friends to check your rate about once a year | |
- adjust for annual inflation (2-3%) | |
- there are no laws to protect freelancers from getting paid late or unfairly. 58% have had the experience of not getting paid | |
- in 2017 NY passed a Freelance Act. | |
- look for a Freelancers union | |
Hard to feel a strategic impact of freelance work. It's mostly short-term programmatic; a dataset or a model | |
Better companies will forget you're not an FTE |
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