this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2023
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Transprogrammer

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Hyia!

I have already mentioned how "nice" it is to be a trans girl in a small legacy software company, so unless anybody wants that I will not go into detail.

but I would love to hear others experiences or advice <3, positive or negative, what kind of company do you work at?, how is your experience?

infodumps welcome!

Lots of love <3, Xea

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I'm NB but I've been on hormones for almost 2 years and have definitely changed a lot while working for my current company. I've been with the company from when it was a 15 person startup to being a 200 person entrenched behemoth, and it's pretty much been a great experience all the way. Granted, almost no-one uses my pronouns(Maybe 2 or 3 people in the company), however they are listed in my Slack profile, I have only ever verbally told my team them a single time, and I haven't pushed since then. The more important thing to me is that I'm seen as a human being, which I feel like I am. My co-workers for sure think I'm weird(for many reasons), but they also accept me and appreciate my weirdness, even celebrating it in some cases.

I think it's as good as can be expected. Just the fact that the company loosely encourages employees to list pronouns in their Slack profile is a big win for me.

[–] anothercatgirl@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

this place has a backwards IT and coding policy where everything's proprietary and we're not allowed to use any programs from the internet.

[–] arisunz@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

how.... are you even supposed to work like that? oof

I don't even.... idk. I tried to beg IT for mercy on the phone but they said tough luck, it's company policy.

[–] xDqt@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 1 year ago

Was at a multi-tenant private cloud company. Networking, building servers, terraform, in house tooling pipelines, reverse engineering applications for performance profiling, sql profiling, security.. I had enough death threats from those who might just get away with it - I left.. Now well not much, few things here and there. Looking for work. I sell random things

[–] helianthus@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 1 year ago

When I came out, I worked at a medium size company, kind of late stage startup-ish. I was shocked how accepting it was. The only transphobia I encountered was unfortunately from the head of HR, who made changing my name in the system really difficult. Everyone on my team was really good about my name and pronouns and it wasn't a big deal. Outside the team, some people misgendered me but I didn't really care enough to correct them since I didn't have to work closely with them.

Now I work for a consultancy that has a reputation for promoting diversity, and it's been really great. I'm transfem nonbinary but present very feminine, and my coworkers mostly treat me like a woman which is what I want, when I do get misgendered at work it's usually she/her which is fun since I'm used to people assuming he/him. There are also many other out trans and queer people in the company which is great. Lots of my cis coworkers put their pronouns in their zoom names, email signatures, etc...

There are lots of accepting tech companies out there, just have to avoid tech-bro culture like early startups, and avoid giant enterprise companies where everyone is over 50

[–] balls_expert@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I tried a startup, a small legacy software comp like yours, a 5000+ people corporation, and a shitty dev shop and an international regulatory body

  • Startup is hit or miss
  • 5000+ corp has diversity policies that protect you but outside of those they won't care
  • Shitty dev shop will be full of transphobes but they'll never show it to your face
  • Smol old software company will do everything to preserve the good vibes of the office, if they hire you it should go smoothly
  • Big international gov has eastern european/greek/balkans/portuguese devs and they come with their religious beliefs and not super cutting edge beliefs about gender. They'll have diversity policies but way less progressive than a private company - the bare uncriticizeable minimum, to cause the least amount of waves. Safe, no risk, and safe again.