In October 2025, New York-based AI startup Metal shared a team photograph that illustrated a stark gender disparity: among over a dozen members, only one was a woman, Shuangxu Han, the company’s founding product marketing lead. This visual representation echoes a report by the World Economic Forum, which noted that women constituted just 22% of artificial intelligence professionals in 2025, with this figure declining further in leadership roles.
Han’s experience highlights a broader trend in the AI sector, where an emerging group of women is redefining leadership, particularly in high-stakes areas like financial services. These women are not merely participants; they are actively crafting their roles by leveraging cross-cultural fluency, relationship-driven strategies, and commercial instincts that are becoming increasingly vital in the industry.
Metal specializes in developing an institutional intelligence platform tailored for private equity firms and was selected for the Y Combinator accelerator in 2023. The company successfully raised $7.5 million in seed funding from investors such as Base10. Joining in July 2025, Han was tasked with establishing the entire go-to-market function from scratch, encompassing brand positioning, content strategy, demand generation, and sales enablement.
In a mere six months, under her leadership, Metal tripled its client base, securing contracts with prominent firms like Clearlake Capital, which oversees assets worth tens of billions of dollars.
“The tech industry is used to measuring value by how ‘hardcore’ someone is,” Han stated. “But when you’re selling AI to institutions that manage trillions of dollars, the hardest part isn’t building the product. It’s earning the trust of people who have every reason to be skeptical. The skills that matter most at that stage, such as deep listening, relationship building, and translating technical complexity into business language, are exactly the ones that tend to be undervalued. And they happen to be strengths that many women bring to the table.”
As a Chinese-born woman navigating the American tech landscape, Han confronts what she describes as a dual invisible barrier: gender and culture. Silicon Valley’s startup ecosystem typically champions a specific archetype of leadership characterized by high visibility and provocative tactics. Founders are often expected to cultivate personal brands on social media and dominate the conference circuit.
“I’m not going to pretend to be the kind of leader who commands a room with a TED Talk voice,” Han remarked. “But what I’ve found is that in financial services, a sector where trust is everything, clients don’t care who’s the loudest. They care about who understands their business and delivers results consistently. Quiet leadership, in the right context, is not a weakness. It’s a competitive advantage.”
Han also emphasizes an underappreciated structural advantage that women with cross-cultural backgrounds bring to global technology firms. “We operate natively across two languages, two sets of business norms, and two markets,” she explained. “That kind of translation ability, not just linguistic but cultural and strategic, becomes increasingly valuable as AI companies scale globally. It’s a form of pattern recognition that’s hard to hire for because people don’t even know to look for it.”
Despite being the only woman on Metal‘s team, Han is driven to ensure this scenario does not persist. Beyond her official responsibilities, she actively engages with local women-in-AI communities and facilitates panels for young professional women striving to navigate their career paths, fostering mentorship and open dialogue in an industry where such resources remain limited. “AI is rewriting the rules for every industry,” she asserted. “The more diverse the people writing those rules, the better the outcomes for everyone. We cannot afford to be absent from that process.”
As AI companies transition from research environments to boardrooms, the industry’s commercialization challenges are exposing a talent gap that technical hiring alone cannot bridge. Han’s trajectory suggests that the professionals best positioned to connect AI innovation with institutional acceptance may be those the sector has historically overlooked.
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