WASHINGTON — Nearly 50% of women founders and women working in tech have experienced harassment, a statistic that has barely budged since 2017, according to Women Who Tech’s new report State of Women In Tech.

Even more alarming, 41% of women founders who were harassed experienced sexual harassment, the data showed.

That includes 65% who said they were propositioned for sex (+9% from 2017); 59% of women founders who experienced unwanted physical contact (-3% from 2017); 32% of women founders who were groped (+7% from 2017); and 24% of women founders who were sent graphic photos (+14% from 2017).

“Despite the #MeToo movement that spurred trending hashtags, diversity pledges among Silicon Valley’s biggest VCs, and tech companies hiring Chief Diversity Officers, women in tech continue to face significant sexism and toxic workplace culture,” the report concluded.

Women Who Tech anonymously surveyed 1,003 tech employees, startup founders, and investors about their experiences in tech and startups. The survey identified trends and shifts in the treatment of underrepresented tech founders and employees since 2017.

Source: Women Who Tech

Other trends noted: 44% of women founders said they experienced harassment. Women of color (47%) and LGBTQ (65%) founders experienced persistent harassment. 43% of those who experienced harassment said it occurred within the last 12 months, after the peak of the #MeToo movement.

Of the women of color founders who were harassed, 46% were harassed by a potential investor, compared to 38% of white women founders.

“Quite frankly, the amount of harassment that women in tech and women founders experience is disturbing. We need less ally theater and more people in positions of power to recognize that power, not abuse it, and support women in tech,” said Craig Newmark, founder of craigslist and Craig Newmark Philanthropies and a member of Women Who Tech’s Advisory Board.

Added Allyson Kapin, founder of Women Who Tech: “With startups shuttering due to COVID-19 and 97.3% of funding still going to startups led by men, there’s a clear need for diverse innovation. But how can women founders thrive in a broken system where a startling 44% of women founders experienced harassment? And especially when 59% were explicitly propositioned for sex in exchange for funding and introductions.”

Disconnect with investors who are men

While the data illustrates that barriers for women are still being upheld at unprecedented levels, the report said the data also exemplifies the “disconnect between founders and investors who are men, and those who are women.”

“Only 2.7% of investor funding goes to women-led startups and .02% for Black women founders, yet 56% of investors don’t think access to funding is a big deal, assuming that the best startups always rise to the top. This is a complete disconnect from the reality and biased pattern recognition that women and underestimated founders face,” shared Kapin.

More findings: 48% of women working in tech as employees experienced harassment. 43% of this harassment was sexual in nature.

Of the women working in tech who were sexually harassed: 75% were told offensive “jokes;” 54% experienced unwanted physical contact; 51% had sexual slurs directed at them; 35% were propositioned for sex.

When women reported the harassment to HR, 85% said their harasser faced no repercussions at work after it was reported.

Of the women working in tech who were harassed, 30% reported it to HR and 45% reported it to senior leadership. Further, 45% of women working in tech said they faced negative repercussions after reporting the harassment at work.

“It is this very data that illustrates how the existing systems in HR contribute to the barriers women face, while doubly protecting the very power structures that construct and proliferate them,” the report said.

Founded in 2008, Women Who Tech draws global attention to the significant gender bias in venture capital funding by shaking up a culture and an economy that has made it exceedingly difficult for women to launch and scale startups. The nonprofit provides capital, mentoring, direct access to leading investors, and other resources for women building the most innovative tech companies, with the ultimate goal of closing the funding gap for good.