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weetracker-blog · 6 years ago
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abckidstvyara · 7 years ago
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The 2017 TechCrunch Include Progress Report
The 2017 TechCrunch Include Progress Report
This is the second annual TechCrunch Include Progress Report. Covering diversity and inclusion in the tech industry cannot be done in a vacuum. As aspects of identity are intersectional, so too should be the way in which media approaches its coverage of the tech industry. With each passing year, companies big and small release diversity data, highlighting the need for more inclusive hiring. As a media company, it is our job to report these stories through a diversity and inclusion lens. You can track our coverage here.
Complementing our editorial coverage is a series of annual events produced by our outstanding events team. Our editorial and events teams work hard together throughout the year to bring you the most unique tech events that give startups from around the world a chance to pitch judges from the most prestigious venture capital firms. In 2017, TechCrunch added to its slate of global events, bringing together startup founders, developers, scientists and technologists. From our Disrupts, Hardware Battlefield at CES, and the Crunchies to our inaugural Sessions and Battlefield X events, we set out to ensure that we had a diverse roster of speakers, judges and contestants.
The importance of diversity and inclusion in the tech industry has generated much attention since we published our last Include Program progress report. At TechCrunch, we understand the importance of diversity, and it begins with hiring. In keeping with our commitments in the core principles and mission for Include 2016, we assembled the following progress report on our initiatives, staff and workplace culture.
As in 2016, our methodology for collecting data on our event participants evolved. To date, we have tracked the gender and racial breakdown of our speakers, judges and Battlefield contestants through observed traits. In 2018, we will be implementing the use of anonymous, self-reporting surveys for all onstage participants in our events.
TechCrunch Events
Disrupt
In 2017, we hosted our TechCrunch Disrupt events in New York, San Francisco and Berlin. We continue to make strides in ensuring diverse attendance numbers in all facets of participation, from speakers, judges, Battlefield contestants, and nonprofit groups. We also host groups of underserved and underrepresented students from local schools, sourced via local groups and representatives.
For all Disrupt events, we offered a Battlefield Scholarship Fund, which we piloted in 2016, to offset the costs of participating in the program. Tickets to Disrupt have been and will always be free for Battlefield participants. Five teams applied and received financial support ranging from $200 to $7,000, which they used to cover airfare, housing and other associated costs.
Finally, to mark the start of TechCrunch Disrupt, TechCrunch parters with organizations to host the Women in Tech(Crunch) event. This is a private event specifically for female speakers, female judges, Battlefield female founders and the TechCrunch editorial team. In addition to our Women in Tech(Crunch) event in each city, we also hosted Women of Disrupt Breakfasts, all of which included programming.
Disrupt New York
The number of women who appeared onstage at Disrupt New York in May 2017 improved over the prior year, with an increase in judges (6 percent) and Battlefield founders (8 percent). However, we saw 8 percent fewer female speakers. We made gains with racial diversity onstage in 2017, as well. Speakers (5 percent) and Battlefield founders (18 percent) saw increases, but we had about 4 percent fewer judges who were people of color.
We hosted 100 female founders, investors and TechCrunch staff at the Women in Tech(Crunch) event in partnership with General Catalyst. And with Live a Moment, we hosted 80 attendees at the Women of Disrupt Breakfast.
Our efforts to ensure attendance from all groups included providing five free Startup Alley tables to nonprofits selected from a pool of over 30 applicants through an open application process announced on TechCrunch. In addition, we provided a 90 percent discount on Disrupt tickets for students.
      Disrupt San Francisco
Disrupt San Francisco 2017 in September would be the last time we decided to hold this event at one of the piers off the San Francisco Bay. This year, Disrupt SF will be held at Moscone West, the sheer size of which will require us to step up our inclusion efforts.
In 2017, we saw an improvement over 2016 with female representation onstage, with speakers increasing 12 percent and judges increasing 13 percent. However, female representation on the Battlefield founder front decreased almost 6 percent.
To help introduce students from underserved communities, we hosted 86 middle and high school students from Dev Mission, Bishop O’Dowd High School, Hack the Hood, Founders Bootcamp and Albany High School. Student groups were selected from an applicant pool of over 35 student groups through an open application process announced on TechCrunch.
We partnered with Greylock Partners to host 165 attendees for Women in Tech(Crunch). And for our Women of Disrupt Breakfast, Silicon Valley Editor Connie Loizos moderated a conversation with female founders from Away and Science Exchange and discover Alice, an artificial intelligence platform for women. We partnered with Intuit for this event that held 120 attendees.
We also offered the same student ticket discount and free Startup Alley tables to nonprofits as we had in prior years; this year we expanded on that effort.
    Disrupt Berlin
Disrupt returned to Berlin in December 2017 after three years in London. We saw a 14 percent increase in female judges on stage over 2016. But female speakers and Battlefield founders decreased year-over-year by about 3 percent and 12 percent, respectively.
As part of our inclusion efforts, we hosted 32 refugees learning at the ReDI School of Digital Integration. They brought a group of 30 students who had the opportunity to explore Startup Alley, listen to our speakers on the main stage and have an intimate conversation with Slack co-founder, Cal Henderson. We also supported some of the Battlefield companies with our scholarship fund and continued the student ticket discounts.
Factory Berlin helped us host 65 attendees at our Women in Tech(Crunch) event. In addition, we hosted 80 attendees at the Women of Disrupt Breakfast.
    Hardware Battlefield at CES
In January 2017, we once again hosted a Hardware Battlefield at CES. Female representation for speakers, judges and Battlefield founders were down slightly from 2016. By contrast, for the first time in a Hardware Battlefield, minority founders were represented equally, with 50 percent.
    Battlefield X
Building off of the overwhelming success of Disrupt Battlefield, we decided to spin it out into its own event and give it a new name: Battlefield X. In 2017, we sent teams to Africa and Australia with the intent to showcase startups doing amazing work in their respective corners of the globe.
Battlefield Africa
For the competition in Nairobi in October, we specifically looked for companies targeting social good, productivity and utility, and gaming and entertainment. Sub-Saharan African startups are helping unleash the region’s potential, from last-mile technologies that deliver edtech, agtech, and medtech to remote areas, to mobile-based fintech innovations that ease financial transactions and lending in bustling cities.
    Battlefield Australia
To bring Battlefield to Australia in October 2017, TechCrunch partnered with the ELEVACAO Foundation, whose mission to empower women tech entrepreneurs globally aligns with TechCrunch’s Include program to encourage more diversity in tech. We are also joining forces with Founders for Founders, a group dedicated to supporting tech entrepreneurs across Australia, and Hoist, which is promoting innovation through collaboration between entrepreneurs and corporates.
      Sessions
Last year we debuted Sessions, our new one-day events that dive deep on a single topic, bringing together experts in the field and those interested in the theme.
With these events, we intend to drop the barrier between speaker and attendee to allow for plenty of interaction with networking time and a big reception at the end of each day. Our very first event was Sessions: Justice in June followed by Sessions: Robotics in July.
Sessions: Justice
During the one-day event in June around diversity, inclusion and justice in tech, we heard from social justice activist DeRay Mckesson, Uber Global Head of Diversity and Inclusion Bernard Coleman, Salesforce Chief Equality Officer Tony Prophet, Safety Pin Box co-founder Leslie Mac, The Last Mile co-founder Chris Redlitz, Cryptoharlem founder Matt Mitchell and others.
TechCrunch Sessions: Justice was the most racially inclusive event we’ve ever put on. That said, we could’ve done better with getting more Latinx speakers on stage. In addition, we collected statistics about gender and sexual orientation.
        Sessions: Robotics
Our aim with this one-day event, which was hosted at MIT in July, was to bring together the key players in robotics. MIT CSAIL, iRobot, CyPhy, DARPA and Mass Robotics were represented. As you can see from the data below, we need to ensure higher numbers of women and people of color are represented.
    Crunchies
The 10th anniversary of the Crunchies was also the last. In 2017 we renewed our intention to showcase and reward the diversity across Silicon Valley and beyond. We gave Project Include the second-ever TechCrunch Include Award. The goal of Project Include is to make the the conversation a lot easier to have. Led by Erica Joy Baker, bethanye McKinney Blount, Tracy Chou, Laura I. Gómez, Y-Vonne Hutchinson, Freada Kapor Klein, Ellen Pao and Susan Wu, Project Include provides tools for tech CEOs to help foster working environments of inclusion for underrepresented groups.
    Include Office Hours
Launched in 2014, TechCrunch’s Include program applies resources uniquely available to TechCrunch, including our editorial and events platforms, to create access and opportunity for underserved and underrepresented founders.
TechCrunch Include Office Hours are a part of this effort. The program, which launched in October 2015, Each month, TechCrunch partners with a VC in New York or San Francisco to host private 20-minute sessions that are valuable opportunities for entrepreneurs to gain key insights and advice from seasoned investors.
In 2017, we hosted eight Office Hours in San Francisco and New York. There were 317 total applications that resulted in 78 founders having meetings totaling 26 hours. The following firms participated:
Betaworks Ventures
BCV & Matrix
Flybridge
General Catalyst
Canaan Partners
Intel Capital
Greylock Partners
Cavalry Ventures
TechCrunch Staff/Culture
Beginning last year, TechCrunch made it a priority to improve our recruiting and hiring in order to make our workplace more diverse, and we will continue to do so.
With respect to gender representation, TechCrunch is ahead of typical tech companies. Compared to internet-based media companies, however, the TechCrunch editorial staff is in the range of most other publications, with women holding about 27 percent of newsroom jobs. This is far from where we aim to be. We have the most work to do, however, in the area of racial diversity, where we are over 80 percent white on the editorial staff and 78 white percent across all company departments.
As the issue of diversity and inclusion in tech continues to command conversations all over Silicon Valley and beyond, it will remain at the forefront of our coverage and around the world at our events.
With contributions from Alexandra Ames, director of marketing, and Neesha Tambe, Battlefield and Crunch Match manager.
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viralhottopics · 8 years ago
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Dev Patel: Im just this guy from Rayners Lane how the hell did this happen?
The star of Slumdog Millionaire on his journey from star-struck wannabe to playing Nicole Kidmans son in his new film, Lion
After appearing in the TV series Skins, aged 16, Dev Patel, has not looked back. He starred in the Oscar-winning Slumdog Millionaire, The Second Best Marigold Hotel (as a super-keen hotel manager) and The Man Who Knew Infinity (as the great Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan). Now he stars in Lion, based on the true story of Saroo Brierley, an Indian street boy who got lost 1,000 miles from home, was put in an orphanage and sent to Australia for adoption. Twenty-five years on, Saroo started to search for his mother, using Google maps.
Congratulations on your Golden Globe nomination for Lion. Is Saroo the most demanding role youve played? Im 26 and, like most actors my age, hungry to show emotional range. This role enabled me to play a character suffering real pain, a change from the scripts that want you as a funny sidekick. It took eight months to prepare. I wanted to commit every fibre of my being to getting it right. I had to bulk up, grow my hair, learn the accent. At my last audition, where I met the director Garth Davis, Id been in The Man Who Knew Infinity and was skinny, with a buzzcut. I had to get myself a personal trainer and started eating like a glutton downing the protein shakes.
It is a movie about mothers and sons. What did your mother make of it? I brought my mum, father, sister and grandparents to the London film festival premiere in Leicester Square. It was a beautiful, full-circle moment. Ten years previously Id stood outside that cinema at the Hancock premiere waiting, for three hours, for Will Smith. I got a picture of his forehead and remember thinking: wow, this is so incredible. Now my goofy mug is on these pictures and Im standing next to Nicole Kidman. My mum was very proud, and torn to pieces by the film.
Wasnt your mother responsible for getting you into acting in the first place? She is a big inspiration. She is a social butterfly, jovial, a real character. Im far more introverted. She is the one made to go on screen, not me. The reason Im in the industry is because of her. She saw an advert for the Skins audition in Metro, tore it out and dragged me along to the National Youth Theatre in London. I had to bunk off school.
You had lots of energy as a boy. Do you still? Its different now Id call it drive. When I was younger I was hyperactive. I did martial arts. When my friends saw me at the martial arts academy, theyd say: This is a different Dev: youre so calm and disciplined. That is a big part of acting too. Part of the prep with Garth was trying to find stillness. Saroo is split in two the child [Sunny Pawar] reacts to a harsh city and uses street smartness to survive. The Australian adult is more inward, battling demons, trawling through pixels on his laptop, trying to find his mother.
How did the real Saroo contribute? He is a generous, confident young man. Weve become close friends. He told me that when he first came to Australia as a child, hed go to bed, his heart would race and hed feel himself coming out of his body, hovering over India. He felt himself materialise on the streets, hed find his mother and brother and tell them he was OK. Hed do that every night and wake in the morning sweating and exhausted.
Do you keep discovering new aspects of India with each film you make there? India is a constant source of inspiration. Im on my fifth film The Hotel Mumbai about the attacks on the Taj hotel in 2008, another Australian/Indian co-production. For Lion, I travelled across India on trains and felt the isolation partly because of not speaking the language. At each stop Id hear a different dialect as the landscape slowly changed
youtube
Watch the trailer for Lion.
You used to worry that the roles on offer for you were limited do you still? Yes and no. There should not be any limitation to playing my culture. Im a British Asian, it is part of the fabric of who I am. My grandparents are from India and Nairobi. So what Im trying to say is that Lion and Marigold and The Man Who Knew Infinity are completely different. Journalists sometimes label them as Indian guys as if this were an umbrella term.
What have you learned from working with great actors such as Judi Dench, Maggie Smith and Nicole Kidman? And what do they have in common? They have a curiosity about life, a sense of humour and emotional reserve. I never went to acting school. Everything Ive learned, Ive learned from great directors and my co-stars. Acting is about honesty. When I began, I was trying to squeeze as much emotion out of roles as I could and get big laughs. Now its about doing less, cutting away the fat.
Did Google advise on Lion? And are you technical your clapped-out BlackBerry has been mentioned in interviews Google helped us by digging out the 2008 version of Google Earth from their archives and, no, Im not technical. Ive updated my BlackBerry only because I needed Uber. I have an iPhone but a very old one.
Do you ever feel your life is a dream? All the time. Im just this guy from Rayners Lane, how the hell did this happen? Ive a friend, Sam, who tells me a story about perspective: think about living even two doors down from where you started imagine how drastically different your life would have been. Im lucky to have incredible parents. It takes a lot to let your son go at 16 to chase his dream. Im excited to be bringing them to LA for the first time to stay in my new house.
Dev Patel in Slumdog Millionaire. Photograph: FoxSearch/Everett / Rex Features
What projects of your own are you working on? Im writing a hyper-modern action film, based on 5,000-year-old Hindu mythology, set in a heightened Bombay an anthem for youth.
Do you ever stop working? Im about to catch a plane to Australia and have 22 hours peace. Saroo and his family will be there for the Sydney premiere.
Do Saroo and his family approve of the film? Our producer told me that they rented a private theatre to see it. Saroo sat in one corner to experience the film alone. Sue and John, the mother and father, were in the middle, holding hands. Mantosh [his adoptive brother] was in the other corner. When the lights came up, they all came together and were holding each others hands and crying. I thought that was beautiful.
Lion opens on Friday
Read more: http://ift.tt/2jLCuoH
from Dev Patel: Im just this guy from Rayners Lane how the hell did this happen?
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