Tell us about your career and education and how your career choices led you to the technology sector.
At university, I studied finance and HR. I had grand plans of being an accountant, but I didn’t come from a particularly well-off family and ended up not finishing my degree. I got a job in what was then called personnel services. I spent my twenties working in HR and in my thirties, worked within a human resources information system (HRIS). It was when I joined GSK about six years ago that I made the true shift into pure tech, but still supporting it from the HR side.
What was your introduction to Workday?
My journey with Workday started back in 2013. I was a consultant at Diageo, and we were deploying a business solution globally. It was then that I heard the word Workday for the first time, and all of a sudden, we had a big shift in direction and were deploying Workday globally.
You had an interesting journey from an HRIS background to a technology leader role. Can you share how that transition felt?
While HR and IT are so intrinsically linked, when you move over to tech, you do notice the abundance of women in HR. Then suddenly you’re like, ‘Oh, now I’m in the minority’. Your role and view of yourself change because you aren’t just one of many sitting around the table anymore. You stick out.
How do you think the rise of SaaS has changed the landscape for women in technology?
I think the evolution of technologies has been an enabler for women. Women often gravitate toward roles that include consultation, business analysis or project management, whereas for a whole range of reasons, there's a fairly significant gap with women in pure engineering and technical roles. But now, we have SaaS solutions at our fingertips and the skills you need to set up a SaaS solution are more geared toward the skills women have developed. And that’s a wonderful thing, because it's meant that so many more women have been able to move into the tech space. People like me. You don’t need to be a coder anymore to make that shift.