Belinda Parmar


Belinda Parmar, , is a British entrepreneur, campaigner and activist.
Parmar is the founder and CEO of "The Empathy Business", formerly known as "Lady Geek", a consultancy business that "embeds empathy into companies" and has published an annual "Global Empathy Index" which claims a causal relationship between empathy and commercial performance. Parmar now runs the campaign The Truth About Tech, claiming that technology is having a negative impact on mental health, despite having previously been described as "the high priestess of tech empowerment".
Parmar led the Little Miss Geek campaign, supported by forty MPs, which aimed to inspire women to follow careers oriented towards technology.

Campaigning

Her campaign The Truth About Tech provides support for parents, including workshops. As part of this campaign, Parmar has stated that "we no longer control technology: it controls us", "we have become slaves to technology" and talks about the dangers of "junk technology", comparing the effects of too much technology to the ill-effects of junk food. She aims to "hold to account the tech giants who are profiting from our over-engagement".
Parmar's previous campaigning mission, through Lady Geek, was "to end the stereotyping and patronising of women within the technology" and the “pink it & shrink it” approach of selling to women.

Honours and awards

Parmar was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the 2014 Birthday Honours for services to women in technology.
In 2014 Parmar was included in the World Economic Forum's List of Young Global Leaders and was named one of Business Insider Australia's "100 Most Influential Tech Women on Twitter". In October 2014 she was placed in Fortune's "55 most influential women on Twitter". In June 2015 Parmar was named by The Guardian one of the "One of the UK's leading campaigners to get more women into tech". In 2017 she was included in The Cranfield Female FTSE Board Report '100 Women to Watch 2017'. Parmar is listed in the Computer Weekly Most Influential Women in Tech 2018.

Media

Parmar caused controversy in her Guardian column by claiming that her language degree had been a "waste of time", calling for more girls to challenge the presumption that there are 'girls subjects' and 'boys subjects' by taking up coding and pursuing degrees in the technology sector. This was followed up with a video debate between Parmar and Adrian Searle, questioning the value of arts degrees and the wider financial return of a degree as a whole.