Influential Women Logo
  • Podcasts
  • How She Did It
  • Who We Are
  • Be Inspired
  • Resources
    Coaches Join our Circuit
  • Connect
  • Contact
Login Sign Up

Women in Aerospace & Tech: Career Advice to Succeed in Male-Dominated Industries

Ten powerful lessons for women breaking into aerospace, defense, and technology—from an immigrant CEO who built her own path.

May Guevara, BS, MBA
May Guevara, BS, MBA
Founder & CEO
Guevara Group LLC
Women in Aerospace & Tech: Career Advice to Succeed in Male-Dominated Industries

I was recently asked, “What advice would you give to young women entering this industry?”

When young women ask me how to step into aerospace, defense, or technology, I always smile. Not because it’s easy—but because I know firsthand how powerful it is when a woman decides she belongs in a room built to keep her out.

Stepping into competitive fields like aerospace, defense, engineering, or technology can be intimidating—especially for young women, women of color, and first-generation professionals who don’t often see themselves represented in boardrooms or engineering labs. I know this reality deeply because I lived it.

My career wasn’t handed to me. I didn’t come from privilege or generational connections. I built it with grit, late nights, discipline, and a quiet confidence that grew over time. From engineering roles to leading Operations, Quality, Safety, Mission Assurance, and Compliance across regulated industries—and now as a woman CEO building an AI-powered compliance platform—I learned hard-won lessons that I want to pass on to the next generation of female leaders.

Here is my best advice for women entering male-dominated industries, rooted in lived experience, not theory.

1. Don’t wait to feel “ready”—step in anyway.

In this industry, confidence often follows action, not the other way around. Women frequently feel they must be 100% prepared before raising their hand. In engineering, aerospace, or quality, that hesitation can cost you opportunities. Confidence rarely comes first—it grows after you take action, not from perfection.

You belong in STEM, in aerospace engineering, in defense technology, and in any room you decide to walk into—even if you’re the youngest or the only woman there. You belong the moment you decide you do. You grow the moment you take the first step.

2. Lead with evidence, not emotion—without losing your humanity.

Aerospace and defense are data-driven worlds. Quality, compliance, and safety demand precision. But don’t let that discipline harden you.

Women often feel the need to be “twice as strong” to be taken seriously. The truth?

Leaders who succeed long-term bring something more: empathy, humility, and emotional intelligence.

You can lead with facts and empathy.

You can be decisive and compassionate.

You can be human and highly technical.

This blend is a superpower for women in aerospace, defense, and technology leadership.

3. Build a reputation that speaks before you enter the room.

In high-stakes industries like aerospace, aviation, and defense manufacturing, your credibility is everything.

People will remember:

  • Your follow-through
  • Your integrity
  • Your professionalism
  • Your attention to detail
  • The quality of your work

Over time, your reputation becomes your strongest leverage.

Your work ethic becomes your shield.

Your integrity becomes your signature.

Your consistency becomes your power.

You don’t need to be the loudest voice in the room—just the most reliable.

In every job I held and every program I led, people remembered me for three things:

  1. I did the work thoroughly and with integrity.
  2. I never gave up. (Try taking me down—I will come back stronger every time.)
  3. I treated people with respect and compassion.

This reputation opened doors long before I became a CEO.

4. Advocate for yourself—even when your voice shakes.

Self-advocacy is one of the biggest areas where women in STEM hesitate. We are conditioned to “not rock the boat.” But in this industry, silence can cost you opportunities, promotions, and recognition.

But first, you must have a proven record of results. You can’t advocate with emptiness.

You must learn to:

  • Ask for the promotion and the raise.
  • Ask for the opportunity.
  • Ask for the training.
  • Ask for the seat at the table.

And if they won’t give it to you?

Build your own table. I did.

Your career won’t accelerate through silence. Closed mouths don’t get fed—especially in male-dominated industries.

5. Protect your boundaries—your career longevity depends on it.

As women, especially mothers, we’re often expected to be everything to everyone, carrying invisible loads at work and at home.

Setting boundaries early is not arrogance—it’s leadership and self-respect.

Your time is valuable.

Your energy is finite.

Your peace is non-negotiable.

You can be a high performer without burning out.

You can be dedicated without losing yourself.

You can chase your dreams without sacrificing your well-being.

You can be a leader without being available 24/7.

6. Seek mentors—but trust your own inner compass.

Mentorship matters, especially for women in engineering, quality, compliance, and aerospace leadership. But mentors aren’t everything.

Your intuition, resilience, and lived experience will guide you more accurately than any textbook ever will.

I didn’t always have mentors who understood my path or ambitions. But I learned to take wisdom from many places and filter it through my own intuition.

Mentors can guide you.

Only you can decide who you’re becoming.

7. Don’t shrink your ambition to make others comfortable.

Some people will be intimidated by your drive, discipline, and vision—especially in male-dominated industries.

That is not your problem.

Do not dim your ambition.

Do not minimize your dreams.

Do not lower your standards.

This world needs more female CEOs, women founders, minority women leaders, and women in tech and AI shaping the future.

Aim big anyway.

Dream boldly anyway.

Expand unapologetically anyway.

Give yourself permission to outgrow environments that can’t hold your potential.

You owe it to the next generation of young women watching you—the ones who will walk through doors you kicked open.

8. Let your purpose be bigger than your fear.

Starting my own firm—Guevara Group LLC—was not easy. Building an AI next-gen agentic compliance platform from scratch was not easy. Balancing entrepreneurship with marriage and motherhood was not easy.

Fear will always whisper:

“You’re not ready.”

“You’re not qualified enough.”

“You might fail.”

But every step was fueled by purpose:

  • To create a better future for my children
  • To support my family back home
  • To bring integrity and innovation to an industry that impacts national security
  • To show women—especially immigrant daughters—that they can lead too

Courage isn’t the absence of fear. It’s choosing to move anyway.

Whether you're stepping into aerospace quality management, leading complex audits, entering defense contracting, or building your own AI compliance startup—choose purpose over fear every time.

9. Remember: your story is your superpower, not your limitation.

As women—especially immigrant women, minority women, or first-generation professionals—we often feel we need to hide our story to “fit” into elite spaces.

Where you come from is not your disadvantage.

It’s your edge.

Your background, your culture, your struggles, your resilience, your lived experience—

All of it makes you a stronger leader in aerospace, defense, and tech.

You don’t have to fit the mold.

You can create a new one.

10. And lastly—remember why you started.

In aerospace, defense, and tech, the pressure can be intense. The standards are high. The expectations are heavy. The journey can feel lonely.

But always return to your “why.”

Remember the girl who dreamed beyond her circumstances.

Honor her. Let her lead you forward.

The industry needs more women like you.

More principled leaders.

More innovators who care about people.

More voices that create change, not just follow it.

And if you ever question whether you belong here, let me tell you now:

Yes, you do. And the industry is brighter because you chose to step in.

Featured Influential Women

Fantasia Jacko
Fantasia Jacko
Volunteer Manager - Through AmeriCorps
Ontario, CA 91762
Wendi G Wanoreck
Wendi G Wanoreck
Financial Counselor
Fort Worth, TX 76244
LaSandra Herron
LaSandra Herron
Senior Project Coordinator
Calumet City, IL 60409

Join other Influential Women making an IMPACT

Contact Us
+1 (877) 241-5970
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Influential Women Magazine