I often joke that I work in invisibility, because when enterprise architecture works well no one notices. But behind the scenes, I’m aligning technology with business strategy, shaping digital transformation, and designing future-proof enterprise solutions across domains like AI, SAP, cybersecurity, and data platforms.
A big part of my job is translating between tech and business, guiding governance processes, and mentoring others to grow into strategic thinkers. Yes, there are diagrams, but there’s also a lot of decision- making, cross-functional collaboration, and asking difficult questions that don’t have easy answers.
Curiosity. And a bit of stubbornness.
I grew up in a rural environment with limited resources, but unlimited questions. I didn’t want to just use systems. I wanted to understand how they worked. Technology felt like the key to building something meaningful. I started with code, moved into system design, and eventually found my passion in architecture. Now, I get to influence how entire organizations evolve, and I wouldn’t trade that for anything.
Yes, and not because women aren’t capable or interested. It’s often about visibility, access, and support.
Too many talented women drop out of the tech pipeline early, not because they can’t code or lead, but because they don’t see people like themselves in leadership roles. That’s a structural and cultural issue we need to fix.
Unfortunately, yes. Though the tide is turning, the stereotype of the “tech guy in a hoodie” still lingers especially in areas like system architecture and backend engineering.
But here’s the truth: architecture isn’t about gender. It’s about clarity of thought, strategic insight, and the ability to see connections others miss. And those qualities? They don’t belong to any one gender.
Representation, relevance, and role models.
We need to show that technology isn’t just about algorithms, it’s about solving real-world problems, improving people’s lives, and building systems that run the modern world. There are creativity, collaboration, and purpose here and we need to talk about that more. And most importantly: don’t wait for women to find tech. Invite them in.
Yes, both visible and invisible.
There are structural issues, like lack of access to early education or female mentors. But also, cultural barriers: unconscious bias, rigid workplace norms, or simply being the only woman in the room (again). And when you’re constantly underestimated, imposter syndrome starts to whisper. We need intentional change from companies, leaders, and peers to make tech truly inclusive.
Nadzeya Stalbouskaya is a Technology Architect at IAG Transform, where she bridges business strategy and digital transformation through enterprise architecture. With over a decade of experience in technology leadership, systems integration, and enterprise-scale innovation, she shaped future- ready solutions across SAP, AI, cloud platforms, and cybersecurity.
A TOGAF®-certified Enterprise Architect and Honorary Member of the ICMG Enterprise Strategy & Architecture Advisory Group, Nadzeya actively contributes to the global EA community as part of the Association of Enterprise Architects (AEA). She is passionate about demystifying architecture, building frameworks that work in the real world, and mentoring the next generation of tech leaders.
Currently, she’s designing a course to make architecture accessible to non-technical professionals from HR and finance to procurement and operations championing the idea that architectural thinking should be a common business language, not an exclusive skillset.
Her approach? Strategy. Architecture. Elegance of approach.