Stephanie 'Steve' Shirley. I'd never heard of her. But what a remarkable woman. What a remarkable life.
When she started her software business, Freelance Programmers, in 1962, British women could not work on the stock exchange floor or even drive a bus. Her initial financing was six pounds (roughly $16.85 then and about $220 today), but she needed her husband’s signature to open the company’s bank account and deposit her own money. (Source: NY Times)
And when she established her company - which she founded sitting at her dining room table - Shirley was driven by a very powerful and innovative idea: "create a place where women could find a work-life balance."
At the time, many educated women left the computer industry after marrying or having a child. Ms. Shirley provided them an opportunity to re-enter the work force while remaining at home, writing code part time with flexible hours.
When Shirley was getting her business off the ground, the letters she wrote to prospective clients often went unanswered. (Hmmmm. Why might that be?) At the suggestion of her husband, she started using the name Steve Shirley, which turned out to be a door opener. (Hmmmm. Why might that be?)
Admittedly, when Steve Shirley showed up for interviews, those prospective clients were shocked. But her business took off and she experienced quite a bit of success.
The company designed software for the black-box flight recorder on the Concorde supersonic jet, and for scheduling buses and freight trains. It also developed software protocols that were eventually adopted by NATO.
Ms. Shirley disguised the flexible, work-from-home nature of her business by offering clients fixed prices for projects.
...“Who would have guessed,” she said in a 2020 speech to the British Computer Society, that programming for the Concorde’s flight recorder “was done by a team of 30 women working in their homes?”
In 1993, Shirley sold her business for "150 million pounds, or $225 million at the time." Oh, and lest we forget her greatness, a few years prior she had restructured the company around share ownership, which turned 70 of her employees into millionaires.
In her retirement, she wrote a memoir, gave talks (of course, she gave a TED Talk!), and became a philanthropist, giving away nearly $100M "primarily to support causes related to information technology and autism" (which her son suffered from). And she has received all sorts of British honors. She's Dame Steve, etc.
Here's a picture of the travel document of the brilliant and beautiful little girl who survived the Holocaust thanks to the Kindertransport:
On BlueSky, I follow the account of the Auschwitz Museum, which regularly publishes the pictures of children who perished there. When I see the pictures of those bright and lovely children, I always wonder who they might have been. With Steve Shirley we get to know.
“She was ridiculously ahead of her time,” Sue Black, a computer science professor at Durham University in England, said in an interview. “The thing is, we haven’t even got companies like that now, 65 years later, that really champion women in that way and are led by a woman.”
She should be “one of the best-known people in tech in the world, or at least in the Western world,” Professor Black said.
During her 2015 TED Talk, here's what Steve Shirley had to say:
“You can always tell ambitious women by the shape of our heads. They’re flat on top from being patted patronizingly.”What a remarkable life. What a remarkable woman.
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Image Source for Shirley at work: Science Museum UK

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