In tech, nobody actually builds alone. Behind many successful careers is a video tutorial that clarified a difficult… The post Top 10 social media platforms forIn tech, nobody actually builds alone. Behind many successful careers is a video tutorial that clarified a difficult… The post Top 10 social media platforms for

Top 10 social media platforms for women building in tech in 2026

2026/03/17 18:09
8 min read
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In tech, nobody actually builds alone. Behind many successful careers is a video tutorial that clarified a difficult concept, a community thread that sparked an idea, or a social media post that quietly influenced someone’s next career move.

Social media has quietly become one of the most powerful tools for building a network for women in tech. Not just for sharing opinions or posting updates, but for showing their work, finding their people, and building the community they really want.

The Digital 2025 Global Overview Report by DataReportal found that more than 5 billion people worldwide use social media as of February 2025. This represents over 60% of the global population, with the largest concentration of users falling within the 18–34 age group – the same demographic driving much of the global tech workforce. 

Source: DataReportal

Nigeria also reflects a similar digital shift. DataReportal’s Digital 2026 Nigeria report shows that the country had about 47.8 million social media users as of October 2025, representing roughly 20% of the population, with young people and urban users forming the majority of active participants on these platforms. 

Beyond social media adoption, women themselves are increasingly becoming active participants in the tech ecosystem. Various industry reports estimate that women now make up about 25–35% of the global tech workforce.

However, building publicly comes with its realities. While social media creates space for visibility and influence, it can also expose women to criticism, bias, and scrutiny. Regardless, many women continue to show up, teach, build, and document their journeys online.

The goal of this article is not to promote any social media platform over others but rather to spotlight the top ones that are result-driven enough for any woman in tech who would love to build publicly or with a community.

Drawing from conversations with Nigerian women across the tech ecosystem, here is a curated list of the top 10 social media platforms they say are most valuable for building in public in 2026.

Read also: Tech Trivia with Elizabeth Rotimi, Founder of Techies on LinkedIn

LinkedIn

tech social media pageSource: Ifeoluwa’s LinkedIn page

For women building in tech, LinkedIn is often where visibility turns into opportunity. With more than 1.3 billion members, the platform has evolved far beyond online CVs. Today, it is one of the most effective social platforms for professional growth. 

As a woman in tech, you can use the platform to share insights from your work, document your learning journey, connect with industry leaders, and position yourself as a voice within your field.

Over time, these conversations often lead to mentorship opportunities, collaborations, speaking invitations, and even job offers. 

YouTube

social media oga in techSource: Abolaji’s YouTube page

When it comes to learning technical skills online, YouTube is the No.1 online classroom for that. It is the second-most-visited social platform globally, hosting an estimated 2.7 billion monthly active users.

For women building in tech, YouTube offers two powerful advantages. The first is deep learning with long-form tutorial videos. This breaks down tech skills for beginners, intermediate learners and even experts.

The second is discoverability through YouTube Shorts, where quick explainers and coding tips can reach thousands of viewers in minutes.

Many women developers, product managers, and even social media managers like Abolaji Ajibare leverage YouTube not only to learn but also to teach what they know, turning technical knowledge into influence, community, and sometimes even full-time careers.

WhatsApp

Source: Yahoo News

As of March 2025, WhatsApp had 3 billion monthly active users, up from over 2 billion MAU in March 2020.

The service is one of the most popular mobile messaging apps worldwide and was acquired by social network Facebook for 19 billion U.S. dollars in February 2014. Beyond messaging, it has become an important infrastructure for community management and customer engagement.

Based on a low-cost subscription model, WhatsApp is an alternative to text messaging via SMS, especially for international or group messaging. The mobile messaging app enables users to share text, image and video messages.

For women founders and builders, WhatsApp groups, communities, and broadcast channels make it easy to maintain direct relationships with audiences and users. 

GitHub

Source: GitHub

If social media is where conversations happen, GitHub is where the real work speaks for itself. According to the GitHub Octoverse 2025 report, the platform now hosts over 180 million developers worldwide, making it the largest collaborative coding platform on the internet.

For women building in tech, a GitHub profile is more than a place to store code. It acts as a public portfolio that shows what you have built, contributed to, and improved.

Recruiters, collaborators, and hiring managers often look at GitHub activity to understand how developers solve problems in real time.

Substack

Source: Women in Tech Nigeria

As social feeds become increasingly crowded, many builders are turning to newsletters to connect directly with their audience. Substack newsletters remain one of the most trusted platforms where people stay informed and know about technology trends.

Substack has made publishing newsletters easier than ever. It allows creators to share long-form insights, stories, career tips, tutorials, and technical breakdowns directly with subscribers.

For women in tech, this offers something social media algorithms often do not: ownership of audience and narrative. From engineering explainers to product strategy notes, Substack has become the infrastructure for deep thought leadership in the tech ecosystem.

Instagram

Source: Women in Tech Nigeria

At first glance, Instagram may seem like a lifestyle platform, but it has quietly become a powerful space for visual storytelling in tech.

Globally, Instagram’s gender distribution is 52.5% male and 46.5% female in 2025, which is nearly balanced. It provides an environment where female tech content creators, builders and leaders can build strong personal brands.

Through video reels, stories, pictures, and carousel posts, women in tech now share behind-the-scenes insights into product launches, career journeys, coding tips, and startup life.

Slack

While public platforms help people discover your work, many women in tech say the real conversations often happen in private communities. This is where platforms like Slack come in.

Originally built for gaming and workplace communication, Slack has evolved into one of the most important community-building platforms in tech.

It allows founders, developers, and learners to gather in moderated spaces where questions can be asked freely and ideas can be tested without the pressure of public scrutiny.

For many women in tech, communities on Slack provide psychological safety. Here, people can share challenges, ask beginner questions, collaborate on projects, and support each other’s growth in ways that traditional social media often cannot offer.

Telegram

Source: Dribble

Telegram has grown rapidly in recent years, reaching around 1 billion monthly users globally by 2025. Known for its privacy-focused messaging and powerful broadcast channels, the platform has become popular among tech communities and developer groups.

Unlike many social platforms that rely heavily on algorithms, Telegram allows creators and organisations to communicate directly with their audience through channels and large community groups. 

For women in tech building communities or sharing resources, it offers a way to distribute information, tutorials, and opportunities without the noise of traditional social feeds, even with thousands of people on a group chat.

Pinterest

Source: Pinterest

While Pinterest is often associated with lifestyle inspiration, it has quietly grown into a powerful visual discovery engine for learning and professional inspiration.

According to DataReportal’s Digital 2025 report, Pinterest has a global advertising audience of about 578 million monthly users. This makes it one of the few major social platforms where women dominate the audience.

For women building in tech, Pinterest functions less like a traditional social network and more like a visual search tool for ideas and learning pathways.

Users frequently discover coding roadmaps, UX design resources, tech career guides, mockups or 3D images, productivity systems, and startup inspiration through curated boards and educational infographics. 

TikTok

Source: MissTechy’s TikTok page

TikTok has reshaped how knowledge spreads online. With users spending more than an hour per day on the app on average, it has become one of the most engaging social platforms in the world.

For women building in tech, TikTok’s algorithm creates something rare: visibility without needing a large following. A short video explaining how to break into cybersecurity or how to design a mobile app can reach thousands or even millions of viewers overnight.

The rise of educational content on TikTok has made the platform a powerful entry point for beginners exploring tech careers.

Read also: Instagram suffers global outage, disrupting businesses in Nigeria

The post Top 10 social media platforms for women building in tech in 2026 first appeared on Technext.

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