Growing your Career in Tech through Mentorship
03-17, 18:20–18:50 (Europe/Berlin), Stage 1

Improving diversity and inclusion is a difficult challenge in virtually all companies, as well as in open-source communities. Attracting more diverse talent is half the battle, but supporting that talent into staying and growing to become key contributors and leaders can be even harder. In this talk we’ll focus on this second part of the problem: how can you help Women, People of Color, and LGBT people to grow in their careers and become leaders in your community.

Studies have shown that mentorship can play an important role. Sometimes a small piece of advice at the right time can radically change the trajectory of a career. Underrepresented people can benefit more from organized mentoring, because it’s harder for them to find role models that they can identify with.

For a few years, we have been running tupu.io, a non-profit mentorship platform for matching mentors and mentees from different tech companies and communities. We will share what we have learned during this time, and hopefully inspire you to give mentoring a try.

See also: slides (1.8 MB)

Monica started Tupu after leaving Elastic when she realized that she will miss the internal mentoring program at Elastic and that no other free mentorship platform exists. In her day job, Monica is the founder & CEO of Xata.io, a serverless database for Jamstack and Low-code. Before, she served as Director of Engineering at Elastic for many years, after her company Packetbeat was acquired by Elastic in 2015. Outside work, she enjoys traveling and is usually busy raising her daughter.

Madalina decided to enter the computer world after seeing a movie about hackers. Since then, she hacked multiple software engineering departments. She is grateful for the many champions she had in her career and has now with Tupu.io the possibility to be the champion of diversity in tech.