Women in Engineering: Where Software Meets Hardware | Olya Royall
Meet an inspiring woman in the software engineering industry.
Watch as DroneDeploy’s Olya Royall talks with Builder Nation Podcast host Elisa Muñoz about her experience as a woman in the software engineering industry, why it’s important to recruit more women for engineering roles, and shares some sage advice for those in the industry.
You’ll learn
The biggest challenges with being a woman in the industry, according to Olya
Ideas for ways to get more women into the software engineering industry
Why Olya thinks that women make great software engineers
Who is this for?
Host
Guest speakers
Transcript
0:00 hello everyone and welcome to builder
0:02 nation where your favorite engineers
0:04 share their tips and tricks in the
0:06 industry
0:09 [Music]
0:09 [Applause]
0:14 [Music]
0:20 i'm alisa and i get to speak with really
0:22 cool engineering leaders creating real
0:24 change within their fascinating
0:26 companies today as part of our female
0:28 power initiative where we get to know
0:31 inspiring women in the industry i have
0:33 the pleasure to speak with oli ariel
0:35 engineering manager at drone deploy a
0:38 cloud software platform for commercial
0:40 pros hi olia and welcome
0:43 hi thanks for having me and let me give
0:45 you a little bit of context guys oya has
0:47 four years working teams to drive
0:49 product usage and growth and basically
0:52 we're gonna talk about your professional
0:54 background olea your experience as a
0:56 woman in the industry some challenges
0:58 some role differences anything that you
1:01 can share but oh yeah since we have it
1:03 here we have a lot of questions and i'm
1:05 super excited to get to know you so i
1:07 want you to tell me
1:09 what is all like what is being a
1:11 software engineer all about if you can
1:13 tell us a little bit of your experience
1:16 when you start in this industry
1:18 i'll take it back a little bit because i
1:21 have over a decade of experience um in a
1:24 non-inter role i didn't have sort of a
1:28 traditional career path um
1:31 i have spent most of my career working
1:34 in some
1:36 various sales business development and
1:38 operational rules
1:41 and then i
1:43 ventured into biotech briefly
1:47 and i decided it wasn't the right path
1:49 for me
1:50 i
1:51 pivoted into software engineering in
1:53 2016.
1:54 i went to a dev boot camp and
1:59 we gathered sort of a team of close
2:02 classmates and started
2:05 getting into hackathons and just
2:07 building up portfolio and developer
2:09 skills
2:10 and then i landed a job at drone deploy
2:13 in april 2017
2:17 where
2:18 it just felt like the right fit you know
2:21 i never
2:23 had experience sort of the state of flow
2:27 as i did when i first started working as
2:29 an engineer it's
2:31 one of the most frustrating things to be
2:33 an engineer sometimes you're trying to
2:35 solve a problem and you're
2:38 sitting there and it's
2:40 you're just beating your head against
2:42 the wall and then it's suddenly things
2:44 click and it's like a very
2:47 uh
2:48 high highs and low lows
2:51 trying to figure something out
2:54 uh but it's it's very exciting and i
2:57 really enjoy working as an engineer as
3:00 an individual contributor
3:02 initially um it just
3:05 felt like the time would pass by so fast
3:08 um
3:10 you're solving interesting problems
3:12 you're trying to make something work
3:14 it's a very creative endeavor in some
3:16 ways
3:18 so i
3:19 really enjoyed it and i mean i have to
3:21 tell you i did a little bit of research
3:24 in your past experience and i did see a
3:27 lot of recommendations
3:29 from your past teams saying like olia is
3:31 such a big leader and olia knows how to
3:35 how to lead the teams and how to work
3:37 correctly and how to motivate people
3:40 and how do you feel being the leader in
3:42 the industry i still have a bit of an
3:45 imposter syndrome
3:48 uh you know
3:49 i am a senior engineering manager now
3:52 and i manage two teams i manage the
3:54 growth team
3:55 which
3:56 our mission is to help expand existing
3:58 customer base and drive monthly active
4:01 users and basically just drive
4:04 general user engagement
4:06 and now i also manage another team
4:08 that's
4:10 in charge of
4:12 internationalization we're actually
4:14 expanding into
4:15 spanish and portuguese so
4:18 pretty exciting but a completely new
4:21 greenfield project
4:24 so
4:25 it's been really interesting experience
4:28 because i got to build both teams
4:30 basically from the ground up i
4:33 went for managing four people to
4:35 currently managing 12 people and
4:38 some of them are located in poland i
4:41 have a qa engineer who's in the
4:43 netherlands
4:44 and then the rest of the team is spread
4:46 across the united states
4:48 so it's a very interesting challenge
4:51 being a remote manager and trying to
4:54 do only remote activities and figuring
4:59 out ways to communicate across different
5:01 time zones and
5:02 kind of build trust and
5:05 lead the teams but
5:06 we have a lot of support add drone
5:08 deploy because
5:11 initially when you become manager you
5:13 have to go through like a series of
5:16 management leadership training that
5:19 spends everything from how to properly
5:22 coach people how to have good
5:23 one-on-ones how to
5:25 interview people how to
5:28 do feedback all of those really
5:30 essential skills in general this topic
5:33 of psychology and leadership and
5:35 organization and
5:37 how to build good processes in
5:39 engineering is really interesting to me
5:41 so
5:42 i read a lot on my own
5:45 there's a bunch of publications but the
5:48 most
5:49 valuable ones that i found are from
5:51 first round review
5:52 software weed software uh lead weekly
5:56 uh harvard business review and then
5:58 there's this
6:01 kind of like
6:03 cliff notes for business books called
6:05 blinkist you need to figure out how to
6:10 communicate what others need to do in
6:12 such a way that makes sense to everyone
6:15 and how to delegate some of these things
6:18 and how to
6:20 switch your mind shift from
6:23 thinking oh i'm just putting off work to
6:25 somebody else to no i'm actually
6:27 providing opportunities for for
6:29 leadership and growth to others by
6:32 delegating some of these tasks so that i
6:34 could focus on a larger picture
6:37 and
6:38 bigger sort of more longer term
6:39 initiatives the key i think is building
6:42 psychological safety and trust
6:44 i believe in leadership by example and
6:48 enabling
6:49 my p my team
6:51 by providing appropriate tools and
6:53 frameworks and opportunities to them
6:55 give people the knowledge of why they're
6:57 working towards something like why are
6:59 we building something the business
7:01 context i think empowers them
7:04 very much to be able to do the best work
7:06 that they can because they know why
7:08 they're building something and
7:10 how it it helps the company
7:14 to grow and and then
7:16 how it affects them
7:18 if they're just building stuff for the
7:20 sake of building stuff it's really hard
7:22 to keep motivated if you don't know why
7:26 you're doing something
7:27 you don't have much of a purpose totally
7:30 it makes total sense to me i mean
7:32 making sure that you know the why are
7:34 you doing what you're doing how you're
7:36 doing it and especially yeah building
7:39 the trust within your team sounds really
7:41 really important the key to a successful
7:43 team now when it comes to being a woman
7:45 and to be in a directive role and having
7:48 to handle teams you started having like
7:51 five people and now you have 12 people
7:53 and you're working with different sides
7:56 of the organization what do you feel
7:58 that it's the biggest challenge for you
8:00 being a woman in the industry at drone
8:02 deploy i haven't
8:04 felt like it's a challenge
8:06 but you know
8:08 i am
8:10 one of
8:11 the few
8:12 women engineers and i am i'm the only
8:15 engineering manager who's who's a woman
8:19 but i don't
8:20 find it as
8:22 challenging i feel like we have a
8:24 diverse enough background
8:26 on a lot of the team members i don't
8:29 feel excluded
8:31 let's say
8:32 i did earlier on when i was trying to
8:35 kind of push through to
8:37 the leadership role and kind of
8:40 grow in my individual contributor role
8:43 have gotten some pushback and
8:45 a few individuals have expressed concern
8:47 of me not being technical enough
8:50 which kind of cut me pretty deep
8:54 but the majority of my engineering team
8:56 has recognized that i do have good
8:58 problem solving skills and technical
9:00 skills and trusted me to be the mentor
9:02 and the tech lead and eventually promote
9:05 me
9:06 so
9:06 a lot of like a few of these kinds of
9:10 sort of like concerns of me not being
9:12 technical enough
9:13 have gone away just because i've proven
9:16 myself
9:18 and maybe this is the challenge i always
9:20 feel like i have to prove myself and it
9:24 could be my own
9:25 personal
9:26 mental
9:28 challenge but
9:30 maybe it's also a bit part of because i
9:33 feel like i'm the not coming from a
9:36 traditional background in computer
9:38 science but in general overall i feel
9:43 like i'm pretty well supported and i
9:45 don't have to fight an uphill battle
9:49 how do you feel that we can
9:50 get more women in the industry and how
9:52 do you feel that we can make them feel
9:55 secure it's a tough question you know
9:56 that's a million dollar question and
10:00 how do we get them working
10:03 in the industry it's changing the
10:05 landscape and
10:07 kind of
10:08 the type of cultures that you have and
10:11 and drone deployment
10:13 is a really good example of a good
10:16 inclusive and collaborative and
10:18 supportive culture
10:19 maybe
10:20 having
10:21 opportunities at startups
10:23 that provide support for
10:26 for varying different backgrounds the
10:29 research that i've read
10:31 talks about how a lot of women won't
10:34 apply for a job for example if it has a
10:37 very specific
10:39 job description so if you have like
10:42 a thousand different
10:43 requirements
10:45 where really only five of them are
10:47 really important
10:49 maybe don't put the whole kitchen sink
10:51 in your job description
10:53 so that people can
10:55 feel like they are actually qualified to
10:58 apply
10:59 there's a stark difference between how
11:01 men apply to jobs and how women apply to
11:03 jobs
11:05 in terms of
11:06 a lot more under qualified men will
11:08 apply for a job whereas women will only
11:12 apply for a job if they feel like they
11:15 are exactly qualified for all of the
11:17 requirements
11:19 so only put the requirements that are
11:21 truly needed on your job descriptions or
11:24 most of the times it's us who keep like
11:27 putting these barriers you know or
11:30 creating these barriers these mental
11:32 like blocks instead of just saying like
11:35 hey i'm a woman i'm capable i can do it
11:37 i can be a manager of team you know yeah
11:40 engineering is so much more than just
11:42 problem solving it's
11:44 it's very communication driven and women
11:47 are generally pretty good at
11:49 communicating
11:50 we have talked about women in the
11:52 industry you talk about your experience
11:54 and drone deploy what is your everyday
11:57 like routine what is your everyday at
12:00 the company oh it's quite different as
12:03 an engineering manager from when i was
12:06 an individual contributor but
12:08 i have some time in the morning where i
12:11 do planning and kind of map out
12:14 what i need to do and prepare for the
12:16 week i have
12:18 a lot of meetings where um
12:22 i'm part of sort of like team
12:24 discussions so i could have all of the
12:26 context uh and bring it to my team
12:30 i try to protect our time
12:33 as much as possible as i know that even
12:36 15-minute meetings can
12:38 be a total distraction from
12:40 your
12:42 getting into something and trying to
12:43 solve a problem talking about drone
12:46 deploy can you share a success your
12:48 favorite success story from a company
12:50 that started using drone deploy uh my
12:53 favorite success story is
12:55 actually not from a single company but
12:57 uh dronedeploy has a dot org uh arm
13:01 where we work with non-profit
13:03 organizations and it's uh the story that
13:06 i love
13:07 is from the disaster relief efforts uh
13:10 my company has helped out uh during the
13:14 campfire in 2018 and it was one of the
13:17 most devastating fires to that date in
13:21 california
13:23 where over three days
13:26 16 teams of public safety professionals
13:29 from various different
13:31 regions
13:32 had to um
13:35 complete 500 plus drone flights and they
13:38 captured
13:39 a ton of imagery uh surrounding the
13:42 areas that suffered from the fire i
13:43 think was
13:45 um
13:46 the result was 500 gigabytes of drone
13:49 data
13:50 which
13:51 drone deploy helped process and turn
13:53 into
13:56 15 000 acres of high resolution aerial
13:59 maps
14:00 and it was
14:01 enabling um state agencies and the
14:04 public to assist in the recovery efforts
14:07 um
14:08 it it helped
14:10 search and rescue operations it assisted
14:13 the planning
14:15 and the response for potential mudslides
14:17 it helped with relief fund issuance
14:21 and it helped a bunch of the people that
14:23 have lost their homes
14:25 to process the insurance claims so much
14:27 faster because
14:29 they have photographic and aerial
14:31 evidence of um
14:33 of their houses which
14:36 were completely unrecognizable a lot of
14:39 that fires just
14:41 low visibility there was trees that were
14:44 kind of melting together you couldn't
14:46 recognize what the street names were
14:49 anymore and
14:51 i'm just really proud to work for a
14:53 company that enabled such a massive
14:56 effort we had to work through
14:59 the weekend and
15:01 and the next day we delivered 75 maps
15:05 it's like
15:07 we spun up this whole area and um
15:10 it was all like stitched together nicely
15:13 and you not only had a aerial 2d map
15:16 view from the top but there were
15:19 markers with video footage and 360
15:21 footage i think that was that was really
15:24 cool
15:25 and one of my favorite
15:26 stories and how you could use drones for
15:29 good i mean at the end of the day it's
15:31 something that makes you just like you
15:33 said it makes you feel proud of what
15:35 you're working on of your team you know
15:37 like i'm pretty sure those extra hours
15:40 that you worked on the project you were
15:41 like i'm super tired but i feel
15:44 oh overall i feel satisfied i feel proud
15:48 i feel
15:49 thankful of being working for a company
15:51 that not only helps
15:53 clients to solve their necessities but
15:55 also i'm helping people just like you
15:58 said my favorite stories are coming from
16:00 a lot of the non-profit organizations
16:02 that we work with like i said emergency
16:04 response and rescue teams
16:06 there's a lot of companies that use
16:08 drone deploy for forest restoration
16:11 uh there's one really interesting one
16:13 that did a
16:15 mapping of the coral reefs and it's
16:18 quite a different
16:19 challenge than doing ground uh mapping
16:23 but it helps that a lot of the places
16:25 where you have coral reefs the water is
16:27 really clear and still so you could
16:30 actually see under the water pretty well
16:32 and something else i mean last but not
16:34 least i want to ask you any advice that
16:37 you can give to your to our audience the
16:39 engineers ceos managers who are
16:41 listening to this podcast treat your
16:44 people that you work with as human
16:46 beings and they will treat you back as a
16:49 human being and they'll they'll give the
16:51 best that they can
16:53 and trust that they will do the best
16:55 that they can that's the only way to
16:57 work we can no longer treat
17:00 people as
17:01 numbers and employees i mean i'm sure
17:04 it's harder to do at a larger company
17:07 but i feel like most successful
17:09 companies
17:10 not even just in engineering but in
17:12 general treat their people
17:15 well and in return they get people that
17:18 are happy
17:19 people that are loyal and people that
17:21 are giving as best as they can you could
17:24 try to make the most amount of money as
17:26 fast as you possibly can but
17:29 you can't do it without a team and
17:31 i don't know if it should be the goal of
17:34 a company to maximize your profits like
17:37 maximize your people and the profits
17:40 will follow they may not be i don't know
17:42 like a billion less from like your 10
17:45 billions that you're making it as as a
17:48 company it's not going to matter that
17:50 much if you have a workforce that's
17:52 that's happy and continuously supporting
17:54 you the longevity of everyone matters
17:57 more totally totally it doesn't matter
18:00 if you i mean at the end of the day
18:01 you're not gonna be able to make any
18:03 profits if you haven't if you don't have
18:05 a great team or a good team at least or
18:08 if they're not happy if they're not
18:09 motivated the amount of work that they
18:12 will they will build at the end of the
18:13 day it's not going to be
18:15 the same it's not going to be as good
18:17 and you're probably going to have lots
18:18 of turnover and i think most
18:22 people realize that the turnover
18:25 is
18:26 what kills the companies because you're
18:28 constantly having to throw resources at
18:30 hiring people training people and that's
18:33 it's it's difficult it's
18:35 expensive thank you so much for
18:38 this it's not only one advice it's like
18:41 thousands of advices from you
18:43 thank you so much we're super happy to
18:45 have you here and to have the
18:47 opportunity to talk to you and to learn
18:48 from you especially do you have any
18:50 social media handles where can we find
18:52 you i'm on linkedin like uh only a royal
18:56 on linkedin so if you want to find me
18:59 there that's probably the the best way
19:01 um
19:02 i checked that once in a while and i
19:05 tend to respond to people that reach out
19:07 for advice or you know i'm
19:11 one of my favorite parts of the job is
19:13 to to help people
19:15 um grow so you know i
19:18 generally am trying to be responsive to
19:21 people that are looking for advice or um
19:24 asking questions or how they could grow
19:27 in their career i'm happy to help
19:29 oh thank you so much julia thank you for
19:31 your ability
19:32 and remember guys that you can also find
19:35 more information interesting articles
19:38 really interesting interviews like this
19:39 one directly on our website
19:42 controlhub.com
19:43 builder dash nation
19:46 so thank you so much for being a part of
19:47 this community we'll be seeing each
19:49 other we'll be hearing each other soon
19:51 with more stories to share an exciting
19:54 guest to introduce so thank you so much
19:56 olea for your time and we're super lucky
19:59 to have you today thank you so much
20:01 elisa appreciate it
20:04 [Music]
20:11 you