Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TRENDING :
    • Can we trust scientific images in the era of AI?
    • The personal brand trap: Why humans shouldn’t think of themselves as brands
    • Why the founder of David protein bars says controversy can be good for business
    • Women could solve the AI trust gap, but they aren’t in the room
    • US Strikes Deal For Kenya’s Rare Earth Minerals
    • Gloria Steinem talks parental leave, women in leadership, and saving democracy
    • Japan: The First Domino In The Sovereign Debt Crisis?
    • Pete Hegseth got a live look at the Pentagon’s laser weapons
    Populist Bulletin
    • Home
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Headline News
    Populist Bulletin
    Home»Business»Women could solve the AI trust gap, but they aren’t in the room
    Business 5 Mins Read

    Women could solve the AI trust gap, but they aren’t in the room

    Business 5 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    When I was offered the CEO role at Smart Communications, a digital customer experience company, my instinct was to say no. I thought I wasn’t qualified, lacking depth of experience in product or engineering. I believed a CEO needed a background in every department, and by that standard, I didn’t measure up.

    Thankfully, the people I trusted convinced me otherwise. They helped me see that the perspective I brought – having spent my career in marketing and strategy, obsessed with how customers experience a product rather than how it gets built – was my strength, not a gap.

    I’ve thought about that moment many times since. But never more than when I started looking closely at how women experience AI.

    What the data told me about my own career

    Every year, my company surveys thousands of consumers across healthcare, financial services, and insurance about their experiences and expectations. Over the past two years, I’ve noticed a recurring trend in how women respond to questions about AI.

    Women aren’t less interested in AI than men. But they are more cautious about its risks. Across every industry and geography we surveyed, women expressed higher levels of concern about AI than men and lower levels of confidence in AI-powered tools. The gap was widest in healthcare and financial services, exactly the sectors moving fastest to deploy AI in consequential customer interactions.

    The standard read on data like this is that it represents a problem to solve. Women need more education, more reassurance, and better onboarding. Close the confidence gap, and adoption will follow.

    But, as a female CEO, I read it differently. Women’s caution about AI is not a gap in understanding. It is a considered response to real questions about accountability, transparency, and what happens to the person on the receiving end when something goes wrong. The same questions that I have spent my entire career learning to ask.

    The question nobody is asking

    The industries we support are making consequential decisions about how AI will interact with their customers. How much of the claims process gets automated, how a benefits change gets communicated, and how a financial decision that affects someone’s family gets delivered. These interactions carry real emotional and financial weight. And the people shaping those decisions are, more often than not, optimizing for speed and cost.

    The question of how it lands for the person on the receiving end gets less airtime. So does the question of who is accountable when it goes wrong. Women who have spent careers being told that their instinct toward empathy and relational thinking is a liability rather than a skill are exactly the people equipped to ask these questions. But those women are rarely in the rooms where AI strategy gets made. According to the World Economic Forum, women hold just 15% of executive AI roles worldwide. This is a significant strategic blind spot, not just a pipeline gap. 

    This isn’t about innate differences

    I am not arguing about the innate differences between men and women. I’m making an argument about what happens to your perspective when you spend years navigating a culture that treats relational thinking as soft. You get very good at holding two things at once: the business requirement and the human one. You learn to ask not just whether something is efficient but whether it’s right. You also develop an instinct for the gap between how a decision looks on a slide and how it feels to the person it affects.

    That instinct is the foundation of every AI strategy.

    Trust is the obstacle nobody is measuring

    Consumers are genuinely open to AI playing a bigger role in their lives. But trust is the consistent obstacle. People want to know that someone is accountable for the decisions being made about them. They want to feel known, not processed.

    We’ve gotten good at measuring what AI saves. Time, cost, headcount. We’re less good at measuring what it costs when a communication lands wrong, when a customer feels like a case number, and when trust erodes quietly across dozens of small interactions. Those costs are real. They show up in churn, in complaints, and in regulatory scrutiny. They’re just harder to put in a slide. And they’re exactly what you miss when the people designing your AI strategy aren’t oriented toward the human on the receiving end of it.

    The two problems are connected

    I accepted the CEO role because people I trusted told me my skills and experience were enough. That the perspective I’d been quietly undervaluing was exactly what the role required.

    I recognize that I am fortunate. Too many women lack someone in their corner making that case. And in most organizations, that’s not a personal failing. It’s a structural one. Companies are investing heavily in AI tools while underinvesting in the talent mix needed to deploy them well. Women are being brought in to manage AI outputs, but rarely to shape the strategy behind them. That’s a career pipeline problem as much as it is a business one. And most AI strategies don’t have someone in the room asking the questions that need to be asked.

    Those two problems are connected. The same instinct that makes women more cautious consumers of AI is the instinct that makes them valuable architects of it. And solving the second problem starts with recognizing that the first one isn’t a problem at all.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Can we trust scientific images in the era of AI?

    June 24, 2026

    The personal brand trap: Why humans shouldn’t think of themselves as brands

    June 24, 2026

    Why the founder of David protein bars says controversy can be good for business

    June 24, 2026
    Top News
    Economy 2 Mins Read

    Ukraine’s Army+ App Reveals A Much Larger Problem

    Economy 2 Mins Read

    Ukraine’s government is celebrating a new feature inside the Army+ app that allows soldiers who…

    7 Key Factors Influencing Business Credit Line Interest Rates

    March 14, 2026

    Why people are suddenly hesitant to watch Zendaya’s new movie, “The Drama”

    April 3, 2026

    I Blew an Audition with Robert De Niro — But the Surprising Lesson Now Helps Me Crush Every High-Stakes Moment

    September 6, 2025
    Top Trending
    Business 6 Mins Read

    Can we trust scientific images in the era of AI?

    Business 6 Mins Read

    A photograph of Earth glowing in deep space, the moon’s cratered horizon…

    Business 7 Mins Read

    The personal brand trap: Why humans shouldn’t think of themselves as brands

    Business 7 Mins Read

    When I was a wee little boy growing up, I wanted to…

    Business 8 Mins Read

    Why the founder of David protein bars says controversy can be good for business

    Business 8 Mins Read

    David protein bars went from startup to one of the hottest consumer…

    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    About us

    The Populist Bulletin was founded with a fervent commitment to inform, inspire, empower and spark meaningful conversations about the economy, business, politics, government accountability, globalization, and the preservation of American cultural heritage.

    We are devoted to delivering straightforward, unfiltered, compelling, relatable stories that resonate with the majority of the American public, while boldly challenging false mainstream narratives that seem to only serve entrenched elitists, and foreign interests.

    Top Picks

    Can we trust scientific images in the era of AI?

    June 24, 2026

    The personal brand trap: Why humans shouldn’t think of themselves as brands

    June 24, 2026

    Why the founder of David protein bars says controversy can be good for business

    June 24, 2026
    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    Copyright © 2025 Populist Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.