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Diaspora's Career Challenges

Diaspora's Career Challenges

By: Sweta Regmi | Award-winning Career Strategist | Speaker | CEO @ Teachndo
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About this listen

Diaspora’s Career Challenges shares real career struggles of immigrant & diaspora professionals in Canada. Hosted by award-winning career strategist Sweta Regmi, founder of Teachndo, featured on national news and 100+ media outlets, including CBC, CNBC, WSJ, Globe & Mail, Daily Mail, Forbes, FOX 26. Topics: workplace bias, code-switching, EDI, identity, and career advice for newcomers. Perfect for first-generation immigrants, second-gen Canadians, Policy Makers & Diversity Consultants. 🎤 Sweta Regmi | Speaker Contact 🔗 teachndo.com/speaker 🎁 Free Job Search Tools: teachndo.com/resourcesSweta Regmi | Award-winning Career Strategist | Speaker | CEO @ Teachndo Career Success Economics
Episodes
  • PIP a Trap? Signs You’re Being "Managed Out" & How to Document It
    Jan 22 2026

    Is a Performance Improvement Plan (PIP) actually about "improvement," "coaching," or is it just a paper trail for your exit?

    In this explosive episode of Diaspora’s Career Challenge, we pull back the corporate curtain on the workplace's most "Open Secret." With a failure rate of over 90%, the PIP has become the primary weapon for "Quiet Layoffs," "Quiet Firing" allowing companies to fire high-salaried talent and "outsiders" without paying severance.

    Host Sweta Regmi shares a raw, first-hand account of being on both sides of the desk. From the manager pressured to "document" employees out of a job, to the high-performer who was gaslit in a small-town branch—standing for 8 hours in heels without a chair, while being told she was "learning too slowly."

    What we’re calling out in this episode:

    • The 90% Failure Rate: Why HR uses the PIP as a legal shield, not a coaching tool.
    • Corporate Gaslighting: Recognizing the signs of being "managed out" (denied training, gossip, and moving goalposts).
    • Toxic Culture: Dealing with the "Mean Girl" "Happy hour" cliques, and "Smoking Circle" politics that target high-performers.
    • The Power of the Burned Bridge: Why I chose to slap my resignation on the desk and walk away to protect my mental health after 20 years of high performance.

    Your Tactical Survival Guide:

    If you are being served a PIP, do not just sign it. We provide the HR-Approved Scripts inside the podcast you need to document the "Resource Gaps" and protect your side of the story.

    "A PIP should be a bridge to a better you, but today, it’s a plank you’re forced to walk. Your worth belongs to you—not to a company that won't even give you a chair to sit in."

    If you are looking for an authentic keynote speaker in Canada or globally who speaks on career development, workplace diversity, AI biases, and the immigrant journey, book Sweta Regmi for your next event.

    Book Sweta Regmi, Founder & CEO, Teachndo as a keynote speaker: https://www.teachndo.com/speaker

    Download Free career resources: https://www.teachndo.com/resources


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    26 mins
  • LinkedIn Gender Bias, AI Patterns, and What Visibility Really Means
    Nov 27 2025

    Have you ever wondered why some voices travel farther online while others stay buried at the bottom of the feed? The more I study career systems and digital platforms, the more I realise the field is not equal. Not in hiring and not even on social media. And now there is data showing it.

    Recent studies on algorithmic bias found that posts from women receive far less visibility than posts from men. The World Economic Forum reported that women get up to 30 percent less reach on professional platforms. A study by Cornell University found that online algorithms consistently amplify white coded language more than language patterns linked to people of colour. They shape who gets seen, who gets heard and who gets picked for opportunities.

    And now LinkedIn is part of the conversation. BBC and The Guardian have reported that some women who changed their gender setting to male saw higher post views. Others rewrote their content using male coded language and saw impressions rise. While women of colour who did the same saw impressions go down. So the system is not only reacting to gender. It is reacting to intersectionality.

    This trend made me test something myself. I took my real bio, the actual story I tell about my work and my lived experience, and I asked ChatGPT to rewrite it in three versions. White female coded, POC women coded and South Asian women coded. I kept the same structure and asked the model to explain every change.

    Across these versions, the model also explained the deeper patterns behind each rewrite. It said white women can lead with story and still be seen as credible. POC women need a mix of credentials and strategy to be read as leaders. South Asian women need stronger authority signals, data, expertise and performance proof. Warmth from South Asian women is often misread as passivity. Warmth from white women is often read as leadership confidence.

    These are patterns the model learned from global data. And these patterns are being picked up by platforms like LinkedIn whether we like it or not. This is proxy bias.

    DATA USE AND VISIBILITY

    This brings me to something that has been on my mind. What happens when we declare who we are on platforms. When we choose our gender, our identity, our demographic or even our pronouns. How is our data being used. They say it is for insights and research, but who really knows what is happening behind the scenes. Who gets visibility. Who gets pushed down. And how does someone get to the top of a search list.


    AI IN HIRING

    And it does not stop at social media. In one of my earlier episodes I talked about AI interview tools . One way video interviews. Automated scoring systems. Tools that judge your verbal communication, your accent, your pacing and even your pauses. Who are these tools coded for. Who fits the template of confidence. Who gets misread. These questions matter because these systems now screen tens of thousands of candidates before a human ever sees them.


    THE BIG PROBLEM

    So when governments invest over one billion dollars into AI and quantum computing, as the Canadian budget just announced, we have to ask a simple question. Who is auditing these algorithms. Who is checking the patterns. Who is holding these tools accountable when they quietly punish underrepresented communities.


    If you are looking for an authentic keynote speaker in Canada or globally who speaks on career development, workplace diversity, AI biases, and the immigrant journey, book Sweta Regmi for your next event.


    Book Sweta Regmi, Founder & CEO, Teachndo as a keynote speaker: https://www.teachndo.com/speaker


    Download Free career resources: https://www.teachndo.com/resources



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    24 mins
  • Breaking Barriers: Diaspora Voices in Keynote Spaces
    Sep 25 2025

    In this episode of Diaspora Career Challenges, keynote speaker and career strategist Sweta Regmi shares her journey from being overlooked to becoming a recognized voice on career development and representation.


    Invited as a keynote speaker for a government Career Development Day, Sweta reflects on what it means to be seen, valued, and trusted to speak about workplace culture, diversity, and the immigrant career journey. She explores why representation matters, how diaspora voices can break barriers, and why amplifying underrepresented perspectives is essential for true inclusion.


    Sweta also dives into the challenges many speakers face, especially women of color and professionals from immigrant and diaspora backgrounds. Despite being underrepresented on global stages, she explains how it is possible to get booked as a keynote speaker without elite networks, PR teams, or marketing budgets—by creating content, building thought leadership, and speaking up about issues that matter.


    Key themes in this episode:

    • The power of representation in keynote speaking

    • Career challenges faced by immigrants and diaspora professionals

    • Why women, POC, and diaspora voices are underrepresented as speakers

    • How to amplify your voice and get invited to the stage

    • Practical strategies to be seen, heard, and booked as a keynote speaker


    If you are looking for an authentic keynote speaker in Canada or globally who speaks on career development, workplace diversity, representation, and the immigrant journey, book Sweta Regmi for your next event.


    Book Sweta Regmi, Founder & CEO, Teachndo as a keynote speaker: https://www.teachndo.com/speaker


    Download Free career resources: https://www.teachndo.com/resources

    Show More Show Less
    13 mins
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