Study Finds Only 4% of UK Devs Are Women

Logan Westbrook

Transform, Roll Out, Etc
Feb 21, 2008
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Study Finds Only 4% of UK Devs Are Women



Long hours and poor workplace structures are just some of the reasons given for the tiny number of female videogame professionals in the UK.

A study conducted by PhD student Julie Prescott at the University of Liverpool suggests that women account for just one out of every twenty-five people working in the UK videogame industry, representing a drop of 8% since 2006.

Prescott gathered data from over 450 women working in the videogame industry via an online survey. The participants hailed from countries all over the world, mostly the USA and UK, but also Canada, Australia, New Zealand and more besides. Of those surveyed, Prescott found that a third worked forty-five or more hours a week and eighty percent felt that their company had a "long hours" culture. According to Prescott, more flexible hours, and better provisions for childcare would help the industry retain more women, and she said that one of the biggest reasons given for women thinking about leaving the industry was dissatisfaction with their working environment.

4% is incredibly low, although I'd be surprised if dissatisfaction with their working environment was the only reason for so few women in the UK videogame industry. It would be interesting to get more information from those who actually had left the industry, rather than those who were just thinking about it. It seems like it would give a more complete picture.

Source: Develop [http://www.develop-online.net/news/35806/Female-count-of-UK-dev-workforce-falls-to-4#after_ad]


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Ranooth

BEHIND YOU!!
Mar 26, 2008
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This is quite interesting, in my Games Design Uni class there are about 260 students, about 15 of them are girls. What's more worrying is after the first year most of them have dropped out.

Although there are more female gamers playing games it still seems that making them is still a little taboo which is a shame.
 

Plurralbles

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Jan 12, 2010
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well... working conditions kind of suck for everyone in the industry.

I guess a larger percentage of women say, "screw this" than men. maybe women areactually smarter than men in this regard.
 

Jared

The British Paladin
Jul 14, 2009
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Dosnt surprise me...when I did my course at university...yeah
 

AngryMongoose

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Jan 18, 2010
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How does poor working environment reduce the number of women specifically? It should reduce the numbers of both genders equally.
 

Cousin_IT

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Feb 6, 2008
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AngryMongoose said:
How does poor working environment reduce the number of women specifically?
When it's the men who are the poor working environment
 

mad825

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Mar 28, 2010
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Cousin_IT said:
AngryMongoose said:
How does poor working environment reduce the number of women specifically?
When it's the men who are the poor working environment
I think you are taking the survey way out of context as the survey never suggests sexual harassment ect.
the main argument that is given in the survey are long working hours.
 

Jake Martinez

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Apr 2, 2010
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I graduated (admittedly over a decade ago) from a major university as a computer science major (back when we were hardcore, before all these bullshit "I.T." degrees that prepare you for a life of developing excel macros).

In my graduating class, we would have been *ecstatic* if we even had 4% of the engineers being female.

Now, I'm in the position where I am the head of software development for a very big bank. Recently I went to hire about a half dozen positions for .NET Developers, which is a skill set that is pretty prevalent, I think on our throughput of received resumes were something like 1 in 20 where female. When you're looking at those kind of odds, I don't know how I could justify having even a double digit female representation in my development team without seriously favoring female applicants. Hell, we actually gave nearly every woman who applied an interview just *because* they are so under represented in our department (which is something I don't think is good for the general work environment) - but when it comes down to brass tacks, you have to hire the person who is the best for the job... and like I said, at 1 in 20, your odds aren't that good.

I'm certain that in some jobs that could encompass "Development" like graphic artists, UAT/QA testing, project management, etc, the gender imbalance probably isn't as bad as it is for straight up developers/engineers - but given how bad that area is, I'm not surprised how these numbers skew.