As we approach International Women’s Day on March 8th, the overall women in tech landscape in India is shifting from basic digital literacy to high-end AI leadership. As per a recent report called ‘Wired for Impact’ by Kaalari Capital revealed that women currently represent one in five professionals in India’s technology workforce, a figure projected to quadruple by 2027, with over 3.3 lakh women expected to hold AI roles. Moreover, 41% of women technologists now prefer AI/ML as their career track, signalling a major shift in gender representation in deeptech.
Women are steadily strengthening their footprint across next-generation technology roles. They now account for 15% of doctoral candidates in Generative AI and are shaping enterprise applications through prompt engineering, while also making up one in four MCA cybersecurity students focused on AI-led threat detection. Participation is even stronger in AI-driven data analytics and business intelligence, where women represent nearly 30–35%, turning complex data into predictive insights.
At the same time, as 2026 sharpens the focus on Responsible AI, they are increasingly at the forefront of ethical AI and governance, addressing bias, privacy, and inclusivity to ensure AI systems are fair, secure, and future-ready.
To support these roles and ensure long-term career growth, here are the top five skills to acquire:
- Prompt Engineering & Design: Moving beyond simple queries to architecting ‘Prompt Chains’. This is the baseline skill for any role integrated with Large Language Models (LLMs).
- Data Storytelling & Visualization: AI can crunch the numbers, but the ability to interpret patterns and communicate them to stakeholders remains a high-value human skill. Within NIIT’s analytics pathways, a specialized track on AI-assisted Data Storytelling can combine tools like Power BI/Tableau with GenAI-driven narrative generation.
- No-Code AI Automation: Learning to build workflows using tools that connect AI platforms (like integrating a chatbot with CRM) without needing deep coding knowledge.
- AI Ethics & Compliance: Understanding data privacy laws and ethical frameworks. As India implements stricter AI regulations, experts who can audit models for bias will be in high demand. NIIT’s cybersecurity and risk programs can expand to include AI Governance, Bias Auditing, and Responsible AI Frameworks, aligned with evolving Indian regulatory norms.
- Human-AI Collaboration (Augmented Intelligence): The ability to design workflows where AI handles the routine, and humans handle the “edge cases” and final decision-making.
