Women excel in every field – commanding aircraft, leading countries, and forging groundbreaking technologies. Yet, a recent Capgemini report reveals a perplexing truth: men often label AI capabilities as inherently ‘masculine.’ In 2025, is this truly our reality?
While the world celebrates technological advancements, it subtly embeds age-old biases within its core. Women in tech have long faced marginalization, be it through overt exclusion or subtle biases in perception. As AI reshapes leadership, this persistent narrative resurfaces in a more insidious form, suggesting that patriarchy has merely adapted to the digital age.

The Paradox of Progress: Confidence Without Conviction
The Capgemini Research Institute’s latest report, “Gender and Leadership: Navigating Bias, Opportunity and Change,” starkly highlights this modern paradox. Surveying 2,750 leaders across 11 countries, the findings initially suggest significant strides: a remarkable 77% of both men and women agree that female leaders are as effective as their male counterparts. Confidence levels are nearly identical, with 58% of women and 59% of men expressing self-assurance. Furthermore, 68% of respondents believe that increasing the number of women in senior roles positively impacts business performance.
Yet, despite these encouraging figures, an enduring, subtle bias persists.
Alarmingly, close to half of all male respondents continue to characterize critical future-oriented skills—such as artificial intelligence, automation, innovation, and data analytics—as “inherently masculine.”
These statistics reveal a truth often obscured by politically correct corporate rhetoric: equality in sentiment doesn’t translate to equality in perception. The underlying bias hasn’t disappeared; it has simply shape-shifted, now cloaked in technological jargon.
In contrast, most women surveyed consider these skills to be gender-neutral, with over a third even perceiving innovation as “inherently feminine.”
The Masculinization of the Machine
It’s quite telling that Artificial Intelligence—a domain fundamentally rooted in logic, precision, and immense power—is persistently envisioned through a masculine lens. This mirrors the unconscious bias that leads us to picture corporate executives in suits and programmers as solitary men in hoodies. The ingrained association of intellect with masculinity hasn’t disappeared; it has simply migrated to the digital sphere.
While Capgemini’s research indicates that most women see AI and innovation skills as gender-neutral—and some even describe innovation as “inherently feminine”—the perceptions of male leaders continue to dictate opportunities. When technological proficiency is unconsciously attributed to a specific gender, it constructs an invisible barrier, acting as a leadership filter that prioritizes skewed perception over actual capability.
This isn’t an algorithmic bias; rather, it’s the bias that informs our algorithms what to prioritize. When those in power envision future leadership through a predominantly masculine perspective, they risk embedding existing societal hierarchies into the foundational systems of our digital future.
The Silent Reprogramming of Leadership
Today’s workplaces often pride themselves on transcending bias, armed with progressive slogans, diversity statements, and intricate “equity strategies.” However, perception bias, particularly within technology-driven sectors, operates with far greater subtlety and insidiousness.
When AI and data analytics are implicitly labeled masculine, women in leadership are subtly shunted to the sidelines. They’re expected to manage human resources rather than technological infrastructure, to nurture rather than to innovate. Their empathy is lauded, but their technical expertise is questioned. This continuous, corrosive erosion of trust has profound, cumulative effects.
Technology is actively reshaping the definition of leadership, yet this redefinition isn’t unfolding equitably for all. If digital fluency becomes the ultimate benchmark for leadership, and that fluency is filtered through gendered assumptions, then women risk being excluded from the very future they helped envision. The Capgemini report issues a stark warning: this perception bias has the potential to “reinforce the leadership divide” at a time when technology should be liberating leadership from traditional constraints.
The Digital Ceiling: A New Glass, Harder to See
The proverbial glass ceiling hasn’t shattered; it has merely become transparent. Its modern iteration isn’t characterized by overt exclusion but by a subtle, creeping erosion of credibility—a pervasive perception that women are inherently less suited for our technology-driven future.
Despite women achieving mastery in data science, spearheading innovation labs, and shaping AI policy, they often remain outliers in a professional narrative largely dominated by men. Patriarchy, once overtly celebrated in societal structures, now thrives subtly within the digital economy.
Rewriting the Leadership Algorithm
If technology truly represents the new language of power, then democratizing who gets to “speak” it becomes a moral imperative. Organizations cannot simply automate their path to equality. Instead, they must actively dismantle the cultural biases that mistakenly link intellect with aggression and innovation with masculinity.
Authentic digital leadership transcends mere coding proficiency; it critically examines the hidden assumptions that underpin our technological advancements. This demands a rich diversity of perspectives, particularly from those voices historically marginalized from these crucial conversations.
The Capgemini report is more than a collection of statistics; it’s a sobering reflection revealing our collective delusions. It reminds us that progress is rarely linear, and we are far from being free of deeply entrenched prejudices.
The Final Question: Who Codes the Future?
The future is undeniably being programmed and will continue to evolve. But the crucial question remains: by whom, and for whose benefit? If the creators of tomorrow’s world still cling to the belief that power, logic, and innovation are the exclusive domains of one gender, then AI won’t usher in liberation; it will merely automate and solidify our existing hierarchies.
Women are not merely passive recipients of AI’s impact; they are shaped by the narratives we construct about who is worthy of engaging with it. Until we actively rewrite these stories in our boardrooms, classrooms, and crucially, within our code, we will remain entangled in a web of limiting stereotypes.
Ultimately, intelligence—be it artificial or human—will inevitably reflect bias until the individuals shaping it are free from their own prejudices.