
Image based on combining bid data and lightbulb images by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay
Careers do not have to be decided on from day one. You can end up in a good place in a roundabout way. That is what happened to Sadiqah Musa, and now she is helping make the paths easier for others to follow.
Sadiqah went to university at QMUL expecting to become an environmental scientist. Her first job was as a geophysicist analysing seismic data. It was a job she thought she loved and would do forever. Unfortunately, she wasn’t happy, not least about the lack of job security. It was all about data though which was a part she did still enjoy, and the computer science job of Data Analyst was now a sought-after role. She retrained and started on a whole new exciting career. She currently works at the Guardian Newspapers where she met Devina Nembhard … who was the first Black woman she had ever worked with throughout her career.
Together they decided that was just wrong, but also set out to change it. They created “Black in Data” to support people of colour in the industry, mentoring them, training them in the computer science skills they might be short of: like programming and databases; helping them thrive. More than that they also confront industry to try and take down the barriers that block diversity in the first place.
Paul Curzon, Queen Mary University of London
More on …
- Black in Data [EXTERNAL]
- Sadiqah and Devina’s organisation aiming to promote equality of opportunity and representation within the data industry.
- An interview with Sadiqah for the QMUL alumni newsletter. [EXTERNAL]
- Black History, Present and Future
Related Magazines …
EPSRC supports this blog through research grant EP/W033615/1.

