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#empowHERaccess Global Prestige Awards 2025: A Global Celebration of Women in AI, Technology, and Economic Leadership

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The highly anticipated #empowHERaccess Global Prestige Awards 2025 returns for its fifth year, honoring global leaders who are shaping the AI-powered economy while driving corporate ESG and UN SDG goals. Hosted in both the U.S. and India, this industry recognition platform builds upon the success of the 2024 campaign, which reached 4.5 million impressions.

Presented by Women in Cloud (WIC) in collaboration with The Mainstream (formerly CIO News), the awards celebrate women technology and business leaders, impact filmmakers, entrepreneurs, investors, donors, wellness champions, and allies who are pioneering innovation in AI, cybersecurity, film, technology, and wellness.

“The #empowHERaccess Global Prestige Award 2025 honorees represent the future of leadership in the AI-powered economy,” said Chaitra Vedullapalli, President of Women in Cloud. “These women are leading transformative initiatives within their organizations, driving innovation and measurable business outcomes. Companies with women in senior leadership roles are 30% more likely to outperform their peers, proving that visibility and recognition of these leaders are critical for building a thriving, inclusive AI-powered economy.”

Women in Cloud’s past awards have showcased groundbreaking contributions, fostering equitable economic access, industry inclusivity, and policy-driven innovation. This year, the program expands globally to honor over 200 changemakers whose leadership is shaping critical industries.

Nominations officially opened on March 25, 2025.

The #empowHERaccess 2025 Awards Gala will be a premier gathering of industry leaders, investors, policymakers, and changemakers, celebrating transformative contributions to the AI-powered economy. This year’s ceremony will introduce two new award categories:

  • The Wellness Champion Award – Honoring leaders fostering corporate and community wellness initiatives.
  • The Impact Film Award – Recognizing films that champion women’s experiences in AI, wellness, and sustainability.

This global recognition platform also features signature categories, including:

  • Trailblazer Leadership Award – Recognizing women leaders or allies accelerating ESG and ERG efforts.
  • Technologist Visionary Award – Honoring pioneers in cloud, AI, and cybersecurity innovation.
  • Women Tech Entrepreneur of the Year – Celebrating B2B and B2C women-led companies making an impact.
  • Mentor of the Year Award – Recognizing individuals championing women tech entrepreneurs and professionals.
  • Ally of the Year Award – Honoring those who empower and support women in tech.
  • Community Leadership Award – Highlighting individuals building inclusive, diverse talent ecosystems.
  • Generative AI Innovation Award – Recognizing leaders advancing equitable AI solutions.
  • Corporate Equality Advocate Award – Celebrating corporate champions of gender equality.

Being recognized at the #empowHERaccess Awards was a transformative moment, amplifying our mission and opening doors to global opportunities.” – Cara South, Trailblazer Leadership Award Winner 2024.

Join the Movement: Nominate a Leader Today

The #empowHERaccess Global Prestige Awards are a catalyst for change and recognition. By honoring the leaders, innovators, and allies shaping the future of AI, technology, and inclusivity, we drive a more equitable, diverse, and sustainable industry.

Now is your chance to be part of this transformative journey.

Submit your nominations today: https://womenincloud.com/empowheraccessawards2025/

Join the conversation on social media using #empowHERaccess2025

Mental health

Scaling startups risk increasing gender gaps, study finds

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Rapidly scaling startups often make rushed hiring choices that disadvantage women, a recent study has found.

The findings draw on more than 31,000 new ventures founded in Sweden between 2004 and 2018.

Researchers at the Stockholm School of Economics report that in male-led startups, scaling reduces the odds of hiring a woman by about 18 per cent, and the odds of appointing a woman to a managerial post by 22 per cent.

Mohamed Genedy is co-author and postdoctoral fellow at the House of Innovation, Stockholm School of Economics.

Genedy  said: “During those moments of rapid growth, even well-intentioned leaders can fall back on familiar stereotypes when assessing who they believe is best suited for the role.”

The patterns emerge even in Sweden, regarded as a highly gender-equal national context.

Founders with human resources-related education counteract these challenges.

In ventures led by founders with HR training, the odds of hiring a woman increase by more than 30 per cent, and the odds of appointing a woman to a managerial role increase by 14 per cent for the same level of growth.

Genedy said: “When founders have experience with structured hiring practices, the gender gaps shrink, and in some cases even reverse.

“This shows that getting the basics of HR right early on really pays off.

“When things start moving fast, founders with HR knowledge are less likely to rely on biased instincts and more likely to hire from a broader talent pool.”

Prior experience in companies with established HR practices also helps, though to a lesser degree.

It raises the likelihood of hiring women as ventures scale, but does not significantly affect managerial appointments.

The study additionally shows these patterns are not driven by founder gender alone.

Even solo female-led ventures display similar tendencies when growing rapidly, though to a somewhat lesser degree.

In female-dominated industries, rapid growth increases the hiring of women for regular roles but still reduces the likelihood that women are appointed to managerial positions.

“When scaling accelerates, cognitive bias kicks in for everyone. Female founders are not immune to these patterns,” said Genedy.

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Midi Health closes US$100m Series D

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Midi Health has closed a US$100m Series D, lifting the menopause care provider to a valuation above US$1bn and achieving unicorn status.

The company, originally focused on virtual menopause care, says it will expand to what it calls lifelong care, adding cardiology, obesity management, autoimmune survivorship and longevity services.

Joanna Strober is co-founder and chief executive officer of Midi Health.

She said: “This is validation for the movement we’re leading.

“Women’s health has been treated like an afterthought for too long.”

Midi reports it now sees more than 25,000 patients per week and has insurance coverage reaching 45 million women nationwide.

To support scale, the firm is rolling out a proprietary artificial intelligence engine intended to slot into clinical workflows.

It analyses patient charts before virtual visits to help personalise care, automates triage and documentation, and reviews data on midlife women to refine protocols.

The company has also strengthened its leadership. Jason Wheeler, formerly in senior finance roles at Tesla and Google, has been appointed chief financial officer. He joins chief marketing officer Melissa Waters, previously at Meta and Lyft, and chief commercial officer Matt Cook.

Each year, about two million women in the US enter menopause.

Untreated symptoms are estimated to cost the economy US$25bn annually.

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Entrepreneur

Women’s telehealth company WISP acquires TBD Health

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Women’s telehealth company Wisp has acquired TBD Health, a sexual health platform, in its first acquisition and expansion beyond direct-to-consumer care.

The deal adds TBD Health’s diagnostics infrastructure and hospital partnerships to Wisp’s platform, which the company says serves 1.8 million patients across the US.

Wisp, which describes itself as the largest women’s telehealth company in the US, said the acquisition marks a move into enterprise and hybrid care models that combine consumer-first digital care with hospital systems, enterprises and public health programmes.

TBD Health operates a sexual health and diagnostics platform across all 50 states, combining routine STI and HIV testing, virtual clinical support, and partnerships that help remove cost barriers for patients.

The company has established relationships with Mount Sinai Health System, San Francisco AIDS Foundation and Planned Parenthood Direct.

Monica Cepak, chief executive of Wisp, said: “This acquisition reflects where healthcare is going and where women have been left behind.

“TBD Health brings the infrastructure and partnerships that allow us to move into hybrid and enterprise care quickly, while staying true to Wisp’s patient-first approach.

“Together, we are making preventative care more accessible especially to women and integrating them into proven care models.”

The companies say gaps in access remain in sexual health and preventive care, particularly for women.

While women account for 19 per cent of new HIV diagnoses in the US, they remain underserved by existing prevention models, which have historically been designed and marketed for men.

Of the 2.4 million people eligible for PrEP, a medicine that reduces the risk of getting HIV, only around 25 per cent are currently enrolled.

Daphne Chen, co-founder of TBD Health, said: “By joining forces with Wisp, we can provide partners with a turnkey solution for PrEP along with sexual health diagnostics and care that integrates seamlessly into their existing workflows, ensuring no patient falls through the cracks.”

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