The a16z Show - a16z Podcast: These Girls Code
Episode Date: July 30, 2015We sat down with four jet-lagged high school hackers from Nigeria, Brazil, and India -- representing some of the finalists in this year’s Technovation coding competition in San Francisco -- to hear ...about the mobile apps they created, the culture of coding in their home countries, and what’s coming next for their nascent software empires. Stay Updated:Find a16z on YouTube: YouTubeFind a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Show on SpotifyListen to the a16z Show on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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Welcome to the A16Z podcast. I'm Michael Copeland. We talk a fair bit about getting more girls to code.
And we wanted to hear about the issue from some hacker girls directly.
Hi, I'm Soma from Nigeria.
I'm Praise David from Croatia State, Nigeria.
I'm Jacqueline, and I'm from Hesifi, Brazil.
I'm Sama, Tisham, and I'm from India.
The voices you just heard are four high school girls representing some of the finalists.
year's Technovation coding competition. And as you'll hear, also representing the future of tech.
We had a chance to sit down with the jet-lagged software engineers in San Francisco before the final
presentations at the competition to hear about the mobile apps they created, the culture of coding in
their home countries, and what's coming next for their nascent software empires. The apps themselves
were designed and built by the teams to address a particular problem that each of their
communities faces. So the team from Nigeria tackled the increasing trash in their home cities by
building a mobile app that provides on-demand trash pickup. You can think of it as a marketplace of
trash haulers connecting to people that need their trash picked up. So after a lot of brainstorming,
we decided to come up with the app that will help users, that to help people to sign up,
color cards to come to their different houses and pick up the trash. The Brazil squad designed a game to
teach kids better water usage habits for their parched region of the country.
In our country, there's a lot of water, but in some states and cities, people suffer with the
lack of it. In our group, one member of the group, she suffers with this problem every two days.
So we decided to choose that thing, and we made a game for children so they could learn
how to save water in their house.
And the Indian team engineered a marketplace
for a part of the Indian population
that has the toughest time finding work,
people with disabilities.
So what we try to do is make a platform
to connect people with disabilities
to NGOs who can provide them with trainings
and also employers who can provide them with job opportunities.
So we did that by creating a sign-up page
for all three contenders
where they could put in their advertisements for jobs and trainings
and where candidates could search for these jobs through a search portal.
Mobile is the key to it all, the girls say.
For them, mobile is simply the natural outlet for their work
for reasons of reach, ease of use, and competitive advantage.
It just makes everything easier and brings everything to your doorstep,
so you just have to click and then everything is done.
We had a slider which would increase the font size
and we had a text-to-speech option, which were both accessibility features,
which were going to make it easier for people with disabilities.
Being mobile-based, it has a larger market reach,
considering India is the third largest growing market for smartphones.
And while it may seem that everyone on the planet already has a smartphone bristling with the latest apps,
there are plenty of people in their home countries who don't, these girls say.
So how to reach them with a mobile app?
To solve for that, the team from Nigeria, for example,
is taking a sort of hybrid digital and analog approach,
putting up flyers with phone numbers
that people can call from any phone
to tap into their trash hauling marketplace.
We accept the fact that we have poor people,
so we actually plan on doing something that accommodates everyone
who have to print out flyers,
and on the flyers you have contact phone numbers and the address.
So even though you do have a mobile phone to sign up,
you could as well call,
and everything will be recorded in that database,
and we'll come to your help.
Talk for very long with all these girls,
and you can go down a rabbit hole of features they want to deploy,
or the problems they face syncing their database with Google Maps,
or the difficulty in getting their apps live in the App Store.
In other words, they talk like every other software engineer.
Except they aren't.
They are still a relatively rare breed.
Both girls from Brazil and India allowed that there was a healthy group of coders in their schools.
Girls, too, as Jacqueliney proudly pointed out.
But when asked if they are typical in Nigeria,
Soma's response was straightforward and unequivocal.
No.
It's not an average girl in Nigeria that could, okay?
It's very rare because in Nigeria it's a developing country.
So all these opportunities are just for the boys and the masculine gender.
So it's very rare for girls to actually learn such.
Yeah, they feel we are not scientifically forward.
Fortunately, the Nigerian team, which ultimately took the top prize in the competition,
has a plan for proving that negative contingent back home wrong.
Back then in a country, before we came over, a lot of people actually heard what we are doing,
and they were so, so happy they wanted to join.
They were asking us, how would they join?
So when we go back, would create a public enlightenment, like a campaign,
and then we would organize girls who would come over and learn coding.
And that way we hope to increase the number of girls in our country who actually want to do coding.
And it definitely doesn't stop there.
All the girls have plans to keep their budding software empires going
while they knock off graduating from high school.
And then, what happens next?
What happens, according to these four girls,
is what ultimately changes the tech industry,
around the world.
We all plan to continue being developers and coders to solve more problems which are already
in our communities and of course find better ways to solve these problems.
I intend to do computer science in university so in the future I want to continue to
programming and coding so that way I could help more people with more apps.
Actually my team members and I are thinking of
other things we could come up with so for now we have four other ideas so as a
project director we're trying to see how we can proceed come up with small
projects that will help our community so it's not going to stop here we're
going further we're going to learn coding hi I'm Esoma from Nigeria I'm
Praise David from Cross River State Nigeria I'm Jacqueline and I'm from
from Hesifie, Brazil.
I'm Samhah Tejim, and I'm from India.
From Menlo Park, California, USA.
I'm Michael Copeland for A16Z.
Thanks for listening.
