On the TechWalk runway: This is what real KC Women in Tech look like
November 15, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Tech careers are available to everyone, said Ventura Rangel.
Kansas City Women in Technology, a nonprofit dedicated to growing the number of women in technology careers, played host to its second annual TechWalk fashion show, showcasing female tech professionals on the runway, said Rangel, event director for KCWiT.
The goal is to inspire young girls or women changing careers to move into the tech industry, she said.
“Hopefully [attendees saw] a familiar face, or someone they can relate to or hearing about a career path that looks exciting. We are giving them the tools that they need and encouraging them to step in and start exploring those opportunities for themselves,” said Rangel.
Wednesday’s TechWalk at Plexpod Crossroads is the second iteration of the five-year old KCWiT program TechTalk, which presents events and activities relating to tech, she added, with previous topics covering data science panels, coding projects, or internet safety.
“Some of the [fashion show] models may not be big-name people, but they are people who have their hands on technology everyday,” she added.
The 17 different models operate in fields ranging from IT development to software engineering, said Rangel, and even included one of two high-school students, Hannah Poe, who mentors youth in programming.
TechWalk encouraged the models to wear exactly what they wear to work, she added.
“If they work from home and wear pajamas every day then we want them to walk down the runway in pajamas,” said Rangel. “If they have to dress up for board meetings we want them to wear that on the runway to show all the different areas that impact what they do and what that looks like.”
The event is based on the “This is What an Engineer Looks Like” campaign that showcased real women internationally in engineering careers, said Rangel.
“It featured women of all different engineering backgrounds, of all different ethnicities, and ages, to show that anybody could be an engineer,” she said. “We wanted to do that here at home.”
“I hope that [in the same way, the TechWalk] can release some of the biases people have of what it looks like to be in technology,” she added.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
GEWKC returning to familiar venue (but its new destinations might surprise ticket holders)
When Global Entrepreneurship Week pulls into the station later this fall, Kansas City participants can expect a fresh experience inside one of the region’s most iconic landmarks, said Callie England, noting an intentional effort behind the scenes should help reroute the “best of the best” events onto custom agendas. “While you’ll see a few familiar…
Wichita program drives highway of resources to more KC startups; founders tout who they met along the way
Opening its doors to Midwest companies outside Kansas for the first time, a Wichita-based program that connects startups with the tools to better engage enterprise partners offered an added benefit to Kansas City entrepreneurs: a new ecosystem of support just a few hours from home. “The program’s Wichita location inspired us to broaden our outreach…
Report: Tech drives nearly a 10th of Kansas City’s economy (and those employers are hiring)
Advocates tout KC for top-tier tech talent; a new report affirms its status as an emerging market with potential for big impact A combination of economic stability, depth and skill of talent, and operational efficiency creates conditions for companies to grow and succeed in Kansas City, said Kara Lowe, detailing new data that suggests the…

