A woman who wrote an explosive blog post calling out sexist men in tech explains why she did it

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leah weitz

Leah Weitz

Leah Weitz

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Leah Weitz works in marketing for a cloud cost management startup called Cloudability.

Last week, her startup was heading to a big tech event. Weitz asked one of her female coworkers if she'd be joining the rest of the Cloudability team there.

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"She'd been asked but she didn't want to, she had declined, because she had had such a negative experience the year before," Weitz said.

"I kind of already had this mental list going, and when I was thinking about the fact that women can be affected so much that they actually want to not go to remove themselves from the situation," she told Business Insider.

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"That's when I decided to write the post."

On Monday night, Weitz published the post she's referring to - an explosive blog post called "Things men have actually said to me at tech events."

Overnight, Weitz's post shot up to the top of tech news aggregator Hacker News.

"It's been pretty wild," Weitz told Business Insider. "I was not the one who posted it on Hacker News. I saw this morning it has way over a hundred comments at this point."

Weitz's post talked a bit about her experiences as a woman working for a tech company. It also included a bunch of shocking, though not at all uncommon, quotes she's heard from men at tech events since starting to work in the field two and a half years ago, including statements like:

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  • "I'm married, you know." [wink]
  • "I was hoping to talk to someone who can actually explain what your company does. Are any of those guys available?" [points towards male coworkers]
  • "Are you actually technical?"
  • "What size t-shirt are you wearing?" [stares at my bust, smirking] "Can you turn around for me so I can see the back?"
  • "Can I take a selfie with you?"
  • [approaches me as I'm handing out t-shirts] "I don't want a t-shirt - just a smile. [pause] You look stressed out. What's wrong?"
  • [discussing a widely-circulated piece of writing that I authored] "Who wrote that? Did you write that? [points at male coworker to my left] Oh. Did you, then? [points at male coworker to my right] Wait, so you wrote that?"
  • "They only let you work here 'cause you're hot."

"I had been kind of thinking about writing a post like this for a while," Weitz told Business Insider. "I take a mental note of every weird, bizarre, uncomfortable, sexist thing that ever gets said to me so I can go to my friends afterwards and be like 'Can you believe these people said these things to me? Isn't that outrageous and bizarre that people think that's okay?'"

The response

Less than a day after publishing her post, Weitz has received a barrage of both supportive and critical messages.

"I've gotten some really negative feedback, as I kind of expected, but lots of positive feedback as well," Weitz says. "Lots of folks who know me and don't know me, saying 'this is so on point, I'm sorry you have to deal with this and what the commenters are saying.'"

The negative comments are mostly anonymous, Weitz says. "They say things like, 'Well, I looked at your resume and it looks like you're not on the technical side, so I don't know why you're offended,' or 'I don't know why you'd be offended that someone thinks you're hot and wants to ask you out.'"

leah weitz

Leah Weitz

Weitz and a coworker from her startup, Cloudability

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Weitz, who graduated from college with an English lit degree and immediately went to work at Cloudability in Portland, Oregon, a couple years ago, still remembers the first comment made to her at a tech event.

"There was a party networking event at this big tech event, and a female coworker and I were at this party," she says. "A guy comes up to us out of nowhere, without even introducing himself, and just says, 'Can I borrow you two for a second? I made my coworker a bet I could find two girls at this party.'"

"The fact that he just thought he could come up to us and say that and call us girls was all kind of weird," Weitz says. "Looking around, I realized that we were some of the only women in the room, too. That was a wild moment for me."

Awareness is key

Weitz makes it a point to tell her colleagues when people make comments like the ones she's heard. Surprisingly, she says, she's "seen such a positive response. When I don't really tell people what's going on, if it seems like everyone else is enjoying the event and doing their jobs and I sort of feel like I'm alone in being burdened with this other issue, and that can be really stressful and terrible for morale," she says.

Silicon Valley has a longstanding reputation as being a place where women don't thrive, and where sexism can run unchecked.

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At a 2012 SXSW talk called "Adding Value as a Non-Technical No Talent Ass-Clown," Matt Van Horn, then an executive at social-media startup Path, told stories about sending "bikini shots" of women to the company's cofounders and talked about using campus recruitment as a way to "attract the hottest girls."

"Van Horn wasn't even 10 minutes into the talk [when] several clearly irritated women (and a couple of men) had gotten up and walked out," says Mother Jones' Tasneem Raja, who attended the talk. "I joined them."

The "bro-grammer" and frat-house mentality extends beyond employees.

Female entrepreneurs seeking funding for their startups are both ignored by investors who say they don't invest in women because they "don't like the way women think" and hit on when they're trying to present their pitch decks and talk business.

Weitz says one part of making the tech industry a better place for women is just raising awareness about the casual sexism women regularly encounter.

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When Weitz makes her colleagues aware of what she and other women deal with regularly, she says, "we're sort of a team against this issue. The vast, vast majority of people in the tech industry are horrified by this just as I am. The awareness is the goal."

"It's astonishing to me that people can have no idea that this stuff is going on and then once you tell them and point it out they're like, 'Oh, of course, that's awful. What can I do?'" she adds. "It's the awareness aspect that's important. Just feeling valued and heard goes such a long way."

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