Dame Stephanie Shirley CH to speak in Cambridge at Business of Software Conference

An astonishing entrepreneur, Dame Stephanie Shirley founded a women-only remote working software company in 1962. After her company was acquired, it was valued at $3bn and 70 of her staff became millionaires. Business of Software Conference Europe is proud to welcome Dame Stephanie to speak in Cambridge this April.

In 1939 Dame Stephanie Shirley came to England aged six as an unaccompanied child refugee on the Kindertransport.

In 1962, she started Freelance Programmers, pioneering new work practices, especially in hi-tech. Her company was one of the first organisations to fall foul of the Sex Discrimination Act in 1975 – up until that point, she had only employed women. She worked on software projects including Concorde’s black box flight recorder and built the company into a global business which she took into co-ownership at no cost to anyone but her. After her company was acquired, it was valued at some $3bn and 70 of her staff became millionaires.

Dame Stephanie has served on the boards of Tandem Computers, the Atomic Energy Authority and was the first ever NED of the John Lewis Partnership. An ardent philanthropist, she was appointed a Companion of Honour in 2017 – for “nationally important service as entrepreneur and philanthropist”.

Business of Software Conference Europe is proud to welcome Dame Stephanie Shirley CH to speak in Cambridge this April. She will be speaking about her story and the lessons she learned building a high tech business 30 years before the invention of the internet in her talk 'New Ways of Working - 50 Years Ahead Of Their Time'.

You can learn more about Dame Stephanie Shirley CH here.

Save your place to hear her speak at Business of Software Conference Europe on 11-12 April at Churchill College here.



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