We recently hosted our third summer cohort of Girls Who Code here at Autodesk, and I was honored to speak at their graduation to share my thoughts with them as they go back to their junior or senior years of high school. I love seeing so many young women learning to code and getting interested in tech careers. As someone who has worked in the software industry for almost 30 years, it’s troubling to me to see the percentage of women in tech going down rather than up, and I am tired of being the only woman in the room in too many of the meetings I attend. I support Girls Who Code because they are working to get more women into tech and to bring gender equality to the workplace. In conversation with the girls, I asked them about the most important skills that they learned this summer; their answers ranged from working with others to being willing to ask for help, and to being persistent in solving hard problems. Not one of them said that the most important skill they learned was coding. Their perception aligns with recent research about the skills required in our rapidly changing, digital world. While technology and coding skills are important, they are not enough. The World Economic Forum developed a report about the future of work, and these are the skills they identified as the most important skills for 2020:
- Complex Problem Solving
- Critical Thinking
- Creativity
- People Management
- Coordinating with Others
- Emotional Intelligence
- Judgment & Decision Making
- Service Orientation
- Negotiation
- Cognitive Flexibility
Their conclusion is that “social skills—such as persuasion, emotional intelligence and teaching others—will be in higher demand across industries than narrow technical skills, such as programming. In essence, technical skills will need to be supplemented with strong social and collaboration skills.”

Minette Norman, VP Engineering Practice, Autodesk, delivers the keynote graduation speech to the 2018 Autodesk cohort of Girls Who Code in the Gallery.
But times have changed since I went to college, and now it’s common to combine disciplines, to have not just a STEM education but a STEAM education. I’ve recently met university students who have double majors that combine a technical discipline with the liberal arts; computer science/Spanish and computer science/sociology are just two examples from students I talked to this summer. I urged the girls to expand their world and their education, not to have too narrow a focus. The jobs that exist today will be very different in the future, so what we need is the ability to continue to learn and to develop our uniquely human skills that will not be replaced by robots. I am so encouraged by the young women I’ve met in our cohorts these last three summers at Autodesk. Each session teaches me new things about the minds of young women and what gets them excited about all things technology-related. I look forward to our continued relationship with Girls Who Code and staying connected to and inspired by the next generation of female technologists.