Israel's high-tech gender pay gap narrows drastically

Chedva Kleinhandler
Chedva Kleinhandler

Jobinfo survey shows salary gap to narrow from 32% to 6.5% though only 1 in 5 high-tech workers are female.

In Israel 2015, only one in five high-tech employees are female the sad statistic with which Jobinfo concluded the year in high-tech. Another painful topic broached by the survey pay. According to Jobinfo’s study, the average salary for men recruited in 2015 to a high-tech position was NIS 21,300 per month, while the average monthly salary for women stood at NIS 19,988.

It is a modest consolation: the pay gap significantly shrunk to 6.5% from last year’s 32%.

However, there was much left to improve. The reasons that Israel in 2015 has an employment gap in one of its most popular sectors includes the conscious choice to avoid the field, a propensity to ask for lower compensation, and the preference of employers (male and female) for male candidates in traditional roles.

Chedva Kleinhandler is currently in the home stretch before the launch of her startup, Lean-On, which she founded to bridge these very gaps. Her motto: “Being a woman in the workplace, even in 2015, is simply too hard.”

Her mobile app connects between women faced with an obstacle, challenge, or question and the relevant mentors to help in real time.

“It is not a social network, it’s mentoring on demand,” explained Kleinhandler. “The user writes what situation she faces and then she can enter a chat with an available mentor. The questions can be sorted by industry, location, and other variables.”

Kleinhandler is an entrepreneur from a surprising background, being a haredi woman living in Bnei Brak. “I have been an entrepreneur from a young age, and I collected mentors along the way; in recent years, thanks to my experience, I suddenly became the mentor. Last May, I founded the startup following talks with Nadav Raviv, who was my client back when I was in social media and content marketing. He said it was interesting there was a need, but no one opted to solve it using technology. Later, we became partners.”

Initially, Kleinhandler and Raviv held a survey, distributed online, to examine the demand for the product. “We chose 30 questions which touch on workplace dilemmas, on the people women consult, and their level of comfort with technology. We thought only a few women would volunteer and participate, but we were amazed when within 8 days more than 500 women from 56 countries responded. We had answers from Japan, Norway, Brazil, South Korea, and even Saudi Arabia.”

Kleinhandler emphasizes she was not only focusing on a haredi audience but was open to everyone. When asked how entrepreneurship integrates with her haredi sector, she answered simply: “There is no reason it should not integrate.” She was more surprised at the inequality in the secular world. “When I was exposed to the secular scene, I couldn’t understand how women are not all feminists. I thought ‘non-feminism’ only existed within the bounds of Bnei Brak.”

Lean-On Kleinhandler, Raviv, Gal Maoz, and Daina Reed currently operates out of the WNM hub in the Tel Aviv port. “We are in the testing phase, just starting to look for investors, and we’ll soon try pilot and launch in New York,” she said.

Last week, the Lean-On team tried an eccentric move to raise awareness of their product. “We sent Max Chan Zuckerberg, Mark and Priscilla Zuckerberg’s new daughter, a gift and a letter. In the package, the Zuckerbeg family will find a pair of knitted shoes in the color of our logo and a letter in which we tell how excited we were by her father’s choice to donate 99% of his Facebook stock for charity. We told him that is what we were trying to do every day. And we appreciated his decision to do so with a company and not a foundation we also had to decide whether to open a non-profit or startup, and we chose to join the wave of social startups.

“We also wrote: ‘While we all believe in advancing the human potential, we believe we must first promote the female potential, which will not only promote equality but also encourage and nourish our potential.”

Published by Globes [online], Israel business news - www.globes-online.com - on December 29, 2015

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2015

Chedva Kleinhandler
Chedva Kleinhandler
Tel Aviv Stock Exchange credit: Shutterstock TASE tumbles in Wall Street's wake

Dual-listed stocks have again been hard hit, but the banks are also down sharply.

Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu credit: Avi Ohayon Netanyahu due in Washington to discuss tariffs

According to news website Axios, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will be the first leader to meet President Trump after the latter's announcement of sweeping import tariffs.

Yoni Assia CEO eToro Credit: PR eToro defers IPO amid market turmoil

The online trading platform had planned to begin meetings with investors this week.

Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich credit: Shlomi Yosef Smotrich meets wrong man in Washington

Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich tried to persuade Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent to soften the tariff blow on Israel - only Bessent isn't responsible for the matter.

Unframe founders credit: Yossi Yarom Israeli AI enterprise platform co Unframe raises $50m

Unframe’s turnkey AI solutions enable companies to solve any enterprise AI use case at scale with fully functional, customized AI solutions for businesses in a matter of hours, rather than months.

Combatica credit: Combatica Combatica launches next-gen VR AI training platform

The Israeli company's virtual reality platform includes 50 AI generated scenarios, seven maps and even situations for operating night vision.

Shekel credit: Shutterstock Vladirina 32 Shekel volatility after US tariffs announcement

The shekel is weakening sharply against the euro, which is gaining following the unveiling of Donald Trump's tariffs plan.

Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich credit: Noam Moskovitz Knesset Spokesperson Treasury assesses potential damage to Israel's US exports

Israel will be charged a higher tariff on its exports to the US - its biggest export customer - than Turkey and the UAE.

Iranian flag credit: Shutterstock Why inflation haunts Iran

With a month-on-month increase of 3.3% and an annual rate of 37.1%, inflation reflects the struggles of millions of Iranians.

APM merges with lawyers from Doron, Tikotzky Kantor, Gutman credit: Eyal Merilos APM merges with 12 lawyers from Doron, Tikotzky Kantor, Gutman

With the addition of these 12 lawyers, Amit Pollak Matalon & Co. will now have 135 lawyers.

US President Donald Trump credit: Reuters Sipa USA Israel on list as Trump unveils tariffs

Relatively low reciprocal tariffs will be imposed on Israeli goods sold in the US.

Deflated unicorn credit: Shutterstock Big Tech 50 reports more huge falls in startup valuations

Israeli R&D partnership Big Tech 50 reports that an investment of $2 million in Orcam made in 2021, shrank to just $31,000 at the end of 2024.

NextFerm technologies based on yeast credit: NextFerm Food-tech co NextFerm suspends operations

The company, which produces food ingredients in yeast without genetic engineering, cannot pay its debts and is seeking a buyer.

Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich credit: Shlomi Yosef OECD sees recovery in growth but high inflation

The OECD Israel Economic Survey 2025 recommends that the Israeli government take several restraining measures, in order to exit the economic storm created by the war.

Dano Ben-Hur credit: Dror Sithakol Statisticians contradict BoI on housing finance deals

The Central Bureau of Statistics insists the impact of 20/80 buy now pay later financing deals on the real estate market and housing prices is minimal.

Governor of the Bank of Israel Amir Yaron  credit: Government Press Office Debt fears top Bank of Israel's concerns

Most unusually, Governor of the Bank of Israel Amir Yaron's press conference last week did not focus on inflation and the impending interest rate decision.

Twitter Facebook Linkedin RSS Newsletters גלובס Israel Business Conference 2018