The Algorithms We Feed: Why Latinas Canât Afford to Stay âCalladitaâ in the AI Age
Happy International Womenâs Day!
Those of you who have followed my journey for a while know the phrase that echoed through my childhood in West Texas: "Calladita te ves mĂĄs bonita." (You look prettier when youâre quiet.)
Itâs a story Iâve shared before because itâs the root of so much of what we have to unlearn. It was a message to shrink, to stay in the background, and to let others lead the conversation. I spent decades unlearning that silence.
However, as we navigate the AI revolution, Iâm seeing those same messages resurface. This time, they arenât coming from our family; theyâre coming from the code.
New research from LLYC (March 2026) is alarming: AI labels young women as "fragile" in 56% of cases and is 6 times more likely to tell young women to seek external validation compared to men. It redirects women 75% more toward health and social sciences while guiding men toward engineering and problem-solving.
AI learned from us. It is reflecting back the biases we fed it.
These patterns echo the dichos many of us grew up hearing:
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"La mujer en casa y el hombre en la plaza." (Woman at home, man in the public square.)
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"Mujer que sabe latĂn, ni encuentra marido ni tiene buen fin." (A woman who knows Latin has neither husband nor good ending.)
Generations of cultural conditioning taught us to stay small. Now, that silence is being coded into the algorithms that decide who gets hired, who gets promoted, and who gets heard.
As we celebrate International Womenâs Day and Womenâs History Month, we have to face a hard truth:
We are training AI on decades of gender bias and calling it progress.
If we stay quiet now, we aren't just losing a seat at the table; weâre losing the ability to build the table itself.
"Estamos amplificando lo que nunca corregimos." (Weâre amplifying what we never corrected.)
The formula for this new era is clear: AI fluency + Cultural Authority = The Power to Rewrite the Code.

THIS WEEKâS INSIGHTS:
I often talk about how the "playing field" is shifting. In the AI-driven economy, the gender gap isn't just about who uses the tools. Itâs about who is being displaced by them and who is building them. If we aren't looking at the data, we're flying blind.
1. The Automation Target is Gendered. Data from the International Labour Organization shows that 29% of female-dominated occupations are exposed to AI automation, compared to just 16% of male-dominated jobs. Because women have historically been concentrated in administrative and support functions, we are on the front lines of displacement. Building AI fluency isnât a "nice-to-have "; it is a survival strategy.
2. The "Permission" Gap. Research shows women are building AI fluency more slowly than their male peers. It isn't a lack of capability; itâs a lack of permission. Between "office housework" and caregiving responsibilities, women often have less time to "play" with new tech. We have to move from asking for permission to claiming our time to experiment.
3. The $3.2 Trillion Opportunity. The Latino community would be the 5th largest economy in the world if it were a standalone nation. Biased AI acts as a cap on this economic engine. When we empower Latinas with AI, we aren't just closing a gap; we are fueling a global powerhouse.
TRENDS
When I look at where the market is moving, I see a clear shift toward "authority tools." We are moving past the "wow" factor of AI and into the "how it works for us" phase.
Poderosa Precision is the New Leadership Style. Women are beginning to use AI to bridge the "authority gap." By using AI to audit their own language, transforming hedging into authority, women are using the tool as a megaphone for the expertise they already possess.
The Rise of the "AI Audit" in HR. Forward-thinking organizations are no longer just rolling out AI. They are auditing the rollout for gender impact. They are looking at who is being "automated out" versus who is being "upskilled up."
AI as the "Invisible Labor" Documenter. One of the biggest hurdles for womenâs promotion is "invisible labor," which is the glue work, the "housekeeping" work that women inherently bear the burden of that keeps teams running but isn't on a resume. A growing trend is using GenAI to track, categorize, and translate that labor into the high-impact language required for performance reviews.
3 MYTHS TO REFRAME
I hear these myths constantly when I'm speaking or coaching. They are the "digital versions" of the dichos that held us back. We need to dismantle them to clear the path for our growth.
Myth #1: "AI is objective because itâs math."
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Why we believe it: We tend to trust data over intuition. Because AI feels like a "calculator" for words, we assume the answers it gives are neutral and fair.
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Reframe: AI is a mirror, not a crystal ball. If the historical data is biased, the output will be biased. We must treat AI outputs as a "first draft" that requires our human judgment and cultural context to correct.
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Try This: Intentionally "stress-test" an AI response. Ask it to write a leadership bio, then ask: "Would you have used different adjectives if I were a man?" Notice the difference.
Myth #2: "I don't have time to learn AI with my current workload."
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Why we believe it: Women often carry the "double burden" of work and home. Learning a new tech feels like one more item on an already overflowing to-do list.
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Reframe: You don't have time not to. The cost of waiting compounds. AI fluency is the "elevator" that moves you past the routine tasks being automated so you can focus on the strategic work that leads to leadership.
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Try This: Use AI for exactly one task that you hate doing this week. Just one. Reclaim those 20 minutes for yourself.
Myth #3: "I need to be a coder or an engineer to influence AI."
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Why we believe it: The early conversation around AI was dominated by developers. Weâve been led to believe that if you can't build the engine, you don't get to decide where the car is going.
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Reframe: Coders aren't the only ones training AI. Every time you use AI, fact-check it, and correct its bias, you are training it. When you use your human discernment to call out a stereotype or a "Calladita" output, you are providing the critical human feedback that makes the model smarter. We don't just need more builders; we need more "Jefa-level" auditors.
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Try This: Donât just ignore a biased response. Use the "thumbs down" button and tell the tool: "This response assumes a male lead; rewrite this to be gender-neutral." That simple act of Poderosa Precision is you literally rewriting the algorithm's future.
TOOLS
We all know Claude and ChatGPT, but Jefa-Level Logic means finding the niche tools that give you an advantage in the real world. These are the specialized assistants that help you move with Poderosa Precision in the areas where women have historically been underestimated. Here are a few that I personally use to keep my edge:
1. Yoodli
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The Vibe: A private, objective communications coach in your pocket.
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How I use it: Before a high-stakes meeting or negotiation, I record my opening remarks. Yoodli catches my Calladita habits, such as filler words or "up-talking," before I step into the room. Itâs how I practice saying my value until it sounds like second nature.
2. Granola.so
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The Vibe: The tool that ends "office housework" by taking your meeting notes for you.
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How I use it: I take messy, raw, bulleted notes during a call and let Granolaâs AI identify the key decisions and action items. This allows me to stay fully present and lead the conversation rather than being stuck in the "facilitator" role.
3. Speechify
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The Vibe: Converting the worldâs research into your own private podcast feed.
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How I use it: As an auditory learner, I struggle to find time to sit and read 40-page research papers. I use Speechify to listen to critical articles while Iâm working out, cooking, or doing things around the house. Itâs how I get through complex content faster and stay ahead of the curve while honoring the way I learn best.

TRY IT THIS WEEK (Micro-Actions)
These are designed to take you from "knowing" to "doing." Share these with the women in your circle!
1. Flip the Dicho. Think of one message you grew up with that told you to stay small. Use an AI tool to help you write a "Power Statement" that flips that narrative for your LinkedIn profile.
2. Audit Your Input. The next time you use an AI tool, look closely at the output. Does it sound "fragile"? Does it assume a gender? Practice Poderosa Precision by prompting the AI to correct its own bias.
3. The 15-Minute Playdate. Block 15 minutes this Friday to "play" with a new tool like Yoodli or Claude. Use this time to rehearse the win by practicing high-stakes conversations where you decline office housework or ask for a raise. Practice until the authority becomes muscle memory. Reclaim the "permission" to learn.
Bonus Try This: JEFA-LEVEL LOGIC
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Jefa-Level Logic: This is my personal framework, which applies Poderosa Precision to your career. Itâs about moving with the mindset of a leader and the technical accuracy of an expert.
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Document the "Invisible": Use AI to document your invisible labor and translate it into Poderosa Precision language that resonates in performance conversations.
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Command the Tone: Transform hedging into authority. Use AI to audit your communications until authoritative speech becomes muscle memory.
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Rehearse the Win: Use AI to role-play high-stakes conversations. Examples include asking for a raise, declining "office housework," or pushing back when interrupted. This is Jefa-Level Logic in action.
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Whatâs one "dicho" or message youâre ready to flip this week?
Closing Thought
The dichos that held us back were learned. The algorithms amplifying them were trained. Both can be rewritten.
My mother gave me the license to dream, but the cultural nuances my familia embraced also taught me, unintentionally, to stay small.
I spent decades unlearning Calladita.
Now I use AI to make sure my voice actually lands. We have a narrow window to shape AIâs impact before these biases become permanent features of the digital landscape.
Don't wait for permission to lead.
Estamos amplificando lo que nunca corregimos. (Weâre amplifying what we never corrected.)
Let's start correcting it today.

Before You Go...
I've spent years at the forefront of people transformation, studying the frameworks, building the workflows, and attending numerous AI programs for leaders.
But the same thing frustrated me every single time: none of them were built for the unique realities of women in the workplace.
So, my co-founder, Nikki Barua, and I built the room that didn't exist.
On March 20th, we are hosting a free 1-hour live masterclass designed exclusively for women who are choosing to lead the transformation.
Future-Proof Yourself: The AI Reinvention Masterclass for Women in Leadership
In 60 minutes, here's what we will cover:
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The Mindset Shift: How to transform the anxiety of keeping up with AI into a focused, strategic advantage.
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The Diagnostic: How to decode your personal FlipFactorâą score so you know exactly where your AI readiness stands today.
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The Value Equation: Why your past credentials are no longer enough to signal value, and what you must add to the equation right now.
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The Friction: The hidden reinvention blockers unique to high-achieving women and how to bypass them fast.
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The Blueprint: A 30-day path forward so you leave with total clarity and a plan you can execute immediately.
If you are ready to go from AI-anxious to confidently agentic, this is your moment. Register now and invite a woman who needs to be in this room.
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