New study of 1,500 women reveals that over a third would consider returning for better pay, progression, and flexibility.
The UK tech sector is losing women as they hit their stride, according to new UK-wide independent research commissioned by Akamai. The research reveals women are leaving tech roles at a pivotal point in their careers, taking years of expertise and experience with them. However, the study reveals better pay, work-life balance and hybrid working would encourage a return.
The new research, commissioned by Akamai, conducted by Censuswide, was based on 1,500 women across the UK, comprised of 1,000 of which who have left a tech role and 500 who have returned to a tech role after a career break.
The key findings from the research reveals:
- Fifty-five percent of women leave tech roles or tech companies within 5 years of being in the industry, and nearly 9 in 10 (87%) leave within 10 years.
- Company culture plays a key role in women leaving the sector, with lack of a sense of belonging (52%) and lack of gender diversity in leadership (40%) ranking highest.
Nearly 4 in 10 (39%) women who have left tech said they would be likely to consider returning under the right conditions. - Fifteen percent are not currently working, while other women have moved into finance (13%), education (13%), professional services (12%) and healthcare (12%).
Of those that returned to the tech sector, higher salary (52%), work-life balance (43%) and better career progression (43%) were cited as key reasons.
Bringing women back to tech
The decision to leave, for most women, was by choice rather than necessity. More than a third (35%) said they left entirely by choice and did not want to return, while 31% said they left mostly by choice and preferred their current situation. So what would it take for them to choose differently, and return to tech?
Nearly 4 in 10 (39%) women who have left tech said they would be likely to consider returning under the right conditions. Thirty-eight percent cited improved work-life balance and flexible working arrangements (37%) — like part-time, a compressed workweek or job share opportunities — or hybrid working (38%) would encourage them to return to tech.
Of the women polled who had returned to tech after a career break, the findings are clear:
- Higher salary (52%)
- work-life balance (43%) and
- better career progression (43%) are valued most highly.
Natalie Billingham, EMEA Managing Director, at Akamai explains further:
“These insights illustrate that the UK tech industry has a window of opportunity to impact the choices of women in tech — from the past and present, and in the future. By providing opportunities for progression, flexible work and appropriate remuneration, tech leaders on the precipice of technological innovation have the chance to create impactful change on the tech workforce, fostering longer-lasting tenures, diverse leadership and an environment where women can thrive.”
The talent drain
Findings show that women are leaving tech at the critical mid-to-senior junction, and thus taking years of expertise and experience with them.
Company culture plays a key role in women leaving the sector. Respondents cited:
- lack of gender diversity in leadership (52%)
- lack of company culture and a sense of belonging (52%) and
- gender bias (10%) as reasons to leave the UK tech industry.
Among those that have left the tech sector, inflexible working hours (56%) and a lack of work-life balance (42%) were also cited as significant reasons to leave.
Of those who have left the tech sector, only 15% left the job market and are not currently working. Others moved into finance (13%), education (13%), professional services (12%) and healthcare (12%), which suggests a significant “brain drain” from tech into other sectors of the economy.
“We lose women from cybersecurity at the exact moment their expertise becomes most valuable. This isn’t a pipeline problem; it’s a leadership one. Diverse teams build stronger defences. Until organisations commit to inclusive leadership, not just diversity hiring, they are actively weakening their own security posture,” said Zoe Mackenzie, President, WiCyS UK & Ireland Affiliate.












