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Bridging the gender data gap: Why representation in AI is a business imperative

According to the UK government, 1 in 6 UK organizations have already implemented AI tools, but bias from unrepresentative data risks perpetuating discrimination and regulatory penalties. The London School of Economics found that large language models like Google's Gemma may introduce gender bias into care decisions. Experts stress that data integrity—through integration, governance, enrichment, and observability—is critical to mitigating bias and ensuring AI outputs are fair and accurate.

iG
iGEN Editorial
June 12, 2026
Bridging the gender data gap: Why representation in AI is a business imperative

The promise of AI to speed up tasks, streamline workflows and facilitate real-time decision-making is compelling, but the outputs AI generates are often taken at face value, with the integrity of their data overlooked. According to the UK government, 1 in 6 UK organizations have already implemented AI tools. Yet bias in AI systems, particularly gender bias, is one of the most prominent AI-related issues facing organizations today. As Precisely AI Labs notes, AI is a product of the data that fuels it — if there is a lack of representation in the data powering an AI model, then it is highly likely to start producing biased outputs that risk perpetuating discrimination.

Biased data shapes biased decisions

Bias in AI occurs when the technology unfairly portrays or makes inaccurate assumptions about people because its training data is inaccurate, incomplete or unreliable. For example, if a machine has been trained on data that carries bias, this may affect – even unconsciously – how AI automates tasks in a way that systemically disadvantages certain groups.

Gender bias, in particular, has emerged as a growing concern across industries within their AI initiatives. The London School of Economics (LSE) found that large language models (LLMs) like Google's Gemma – used by over 50 percent of local authorities in the UK to support social workers – may be introducing gender bias into care decisions. LSE's analysis revealed that terms associated with significant health concerns, such as “disabled”, “unable”, and “complex”, appeared more often in descriptions of men than women. This could have prevented women from receiving equal care provisions.

Similar patterns have been found within hiring data. Nature reports that LLMs systematically portray women in professional roles – particularly in high-powered positions – as younger and less experienced than men. This portrayal risks disadvantaging women in their careers, from hiring decisions to how they are perceived in the workplace.

The consequences of gender bias in AI

With the rise of agentic AI, addressing gender biased data is becoming even more crucial. Unlike LLMs, which generate text-based outputs in response to prompts, AI agents act autonomously within user-defined parameters, introducing the risk of biased actions being executed without human oversight, which could have social, ethical and business implications across industries.

Furthermore, gender bias does not only affect women: AI models operating on unrepresentative data could lead to flawed market insights, poor decision-making, and financial losses for organizations on a wider scale. Evidence of gender bias in AI initiatives also introduces regulatory consequences. While the UK has adopted a cross-sector framework approach to AI regulation, which includes principles of fairness and transparency, the EU AI Act takes these requirements further. This Act requires data sets to be representative, and for bias to be actively mitigated, with non-compliance enforcing penalties of up to £30.5m.

The role of data management in AI bias

Examining how data is managed plays a critical role in whether organizations can identify and address bias. Organizations that neglect data integrity pillars including data governance, integration, enrichment and geospatial insights, risk both bias in their AI initiatives and potentially being non-compliant. Mitigating AI bias begins with reevaluating this foundation.

Poor data management and fragmented IT infrastructure play a significant role in producing bias, as if data is siloed and not easily accessible, AI is limited to only a fraction of information available. This can prevent it from realizing all context, and lead to ineffective gender-biased assumptions because of a lack of full context and enrichment. These assumptions can be worsened with data that is not enriched with third-party sources. For example, if the data AI is trained on refers to historical data which disproportionately excludes or disadvantages women, the model may replicate these outdated patterns in decision-making.

Proactively ensuring data integrity to reduce gender bias

To address these issues, AI initiatives must be powered by high-integrity data to produce meaningful and representative outputs. This requires breaking down silos, enforcing rigorous governance, and enriching training data with curated, AI-ready attributes and spatial insights. When data is siloed across platforms, it is challenging to create an accurate view of all the information, which can potentially lead to ineffective recommendations and gender bias. By integrating data across cloud and hybrid environments and ensuring it is complete, the potential for biased outputs will be reduced.

Governance is also crucial. According to the source, 71 percent of organizations that have governance programs in place report high trust in their data, compared to just 50 percent without these programs. The difference is stark:

Data governance program Percentage reporting high data trust
In place 71%
Not in place 50%

Effective governance frameworks should embed fairness and transparency at every stage to ensure quality, value, and reliability, consequently reducing the prospect of bias. Beyond integration, governance and enrichment, organizations must also prioritize robust data quality and observability practices. Ensuring data completeness, accuracy and consistency is essential to avoid underrepresentation or skewed gender distributions that can silently introduce bias into AI models. However, data quality is not a one-time exercise. By implementing data observability capabilities, organizations can continuously monitor incoming data for anomalies, including shifts or drift in gender representation over time. This allows teams to proactively detect and address emerging imbalances before they propagate into AI outputs.

AI must also be supported by a contextualized and trustworthy foundation, including enriched first-party data combined with curated third-party sources – such as demographic profiles, precise address data, and environmental risk indicators. This enables a broader understanding of how AI is undertaking decision-making, as well as providing context to ensure that insights are not hallucinations or relying on biased assumptions. Furthermore, transparency is crucial for monitoring AI usage and ensuring compliance. Organizations must demonstrate exactly what data their AI initiatives are being fueled by, so that they can proactively detect, and address quality issues faster and with less difficulty.


Sources: TechRadar – Main Feed

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