Women in IP Law give tips for taking the lead

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Women in IP Law give tips for taking the lead

Women in IP 168

A panel during the Women in IP Law breakfast at the AIPLA annual meeting discussed best practices for retaining women

Women in IP 300

A panel during the Women in IP Law breakfast yesterday morning discussed best practices for retaining women. Progress has been made but a big difference exists between firms that include women as a junior part of a team and firms that put women into leadership roles.

Barbara McCurdy of Finnegan noted that attitudes toward involving women have changed: "Back in the day, the thought was we need to get more women to play golf!"

Evelyn Chen of Ericsson revealed her company has an employee target of 30% women, although this is tough in a company with so many engineers. "A lot of our groups are about 20%," she reported. "It's about making sure women are included. The culture is definitely one of the driving forces behind it." She noted management is very good at noticing if there are no women in a particular meeting, for example.

Eloise Maki of 3M said: "One of the best practices I wanted to highlight is top leadership really embracing diversity and an inclusive culture."

McCurdy noted that this dynamic can play out at law firms as well. "There needs to truly be a commitment to seeing people of all diversities. Keeping that one woman on a pitch as a junior member is not enough. We need to get women into leadership roles, and it is difficult."

Celine Crowson of Hogan Lovells echoed this theme. "The challenge for individuals choosing counsel is you tend to see many diverse teams these days, but women often tend to be in a junior role or be the secondary leader. Pick a team where the woman is actually the lead."

Crowson also noted some positive signs from the judiciary, with judges such as Judge Alsup in the Northern District of California who is encouraging when women associates argue a particular point in a case.

It was also announced at the breakfast that next May will mark 10 years of Global Women in IP dinners. There are now about 70 events around the world, on almost every continent.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Leaders at the newly merged firm Jones Maxwell Smith & Davis reveal their plan to take on bigger firms while attracting more clients and talent
Charles Achkar, who will bring a team of two with him, said he was excited about joining ‘one of the few strong IP boutiques’
Andy Lee, head of IP at Brandsmiths and winner of the Soft IP Practitioner of the Year award, tells us why 2024 was a seminal year and why clients value brave advice
The deal to acquire MIP's parent company is expected to complete by the end of May 2025
Jinwon Chun discusses the need for vigilance, his love for iced coffee, and preparing for INTA
Karl Barnfather’s new patent practice will focus on protecting and enforcing tech innovations in the electronics, AI, and software industries
Partner Ranjini Acharya explains how her Federal Circuit debut resulted in her convincing the court to rule that machine learning technology was not patent-eligible
Paul Hastings and Smart & Biggar also won multiple awards, while Baker McKenzie picked up a significant prize
Burford Capital study finds that in-house lawyers have become more likely to monetise patents, but that their IP portfolios are still underutilised
Robert Reading and Faidon Zisis at Clarivate unpick some of the data surrounding music-related trademarks
Gift this article