[This is the first in a series of posts exploring the personal stories of real women in technology. Back in April I wrote a bit about my own history, and about the problems, systemic and idiosyncratic, plaguing women who chose a career in most sectors of the tech world. Writing it was surprisingly cathartic, and the response to it was powerful enough to make me want to push it further. Every woman in tech overcame at the very least statistical odds to be here; this blog series aims to find out why, and what they found along the way. I’m so thrilled that we get to kick off with Sadie Van Buren, whom many of you already know as a dynamic voice in the SharePoint community, and as the author of the ingenious SharePoint Maturity Model. If reading Sadie’s story inspires any of you to tell yours, please feel free to email me.]
My name is Sadie Van Buren and I’m a Senior Software Engineer at Blue Metal Architects in Watertown, MA. I’m a Microsoft SharePoint consultant and have been working with that product since late 2002. Over the past nine years I’ve participated in about 50 implementations of the product and have acted as project manager, business analyst, developer, and solution architect.
1) Can you take us back to your “eureka!” moment—a particular instance or event that got you interested in technology?
I’m not sure there was a specific moment. One of my brothers gave me a new Commodore Vic-20 when I was a kid, and it may have been a disappointment to him that I mainly used it to play Q-bert. Continue reading Stories from the WIT Trenches: Sadie Van Buren