Assahafa.com
In a digital world obsessed with perfection and visibility, women leaders must resist pressure to conform and instead amplify their authentic selves, experts told a MEDays 2025 forum panel Thursday.
Moderated by Lamia Bazir, International Development Expert and Strategic Advisor, the discussion “Women at the Helm: Leadership, Resilience & Economic Influence” brought together leaders from across sectors to explore how women can harness digital tools and economic leadership to drive growth while staying true to their values.
Maggie Gu, President of the Tomorrow Foundation, traveled from Geneva, Switzerland to participate in the panel.
In an interview with Morocco World News (MWN), Gu said “it’s my pleasure to be in Morocco at MEDays and to stay with my sisters and to explain our stories and bring us together.”
The session assembled women from diverse backgrounds — private sector, government institutions, public sector, and non-governmental organizations — to demonstrate the breadth of female leadership across industries.
“My understanding of female leadership is for women in this AI world to redefine leadership with men together,” Gu explained. She stressed that female leadership carries significance beyond gender equity.
“No nation can unlock their full potential without women,” she said.
The Tomorrow Foundation president said the panel aimed to show audiences “how we do and how we can progress and how we can promote female leadership in professional life and also private life.”
Authenticity over perfection
Digital influencer and entrepreneur Kathy Moeda delivered a powerful message about navigating the digital economy without losing one’s identity.
“Don’t let the digital world shape you. Use it to amplify who you truly are,” she said.
Moeda outlined what she called essential principles for women building influence in digital spaces. “Know your identity before entering the influence game,” she noted.
“When we know who we are, what we stand for and what we will not compromise, we can create content and build a digital presence with purpose.”
She described inner clarity as “the compass that keeps us from getting lost in trends, numbers and comparisons.”
The digital entrepreneur challenged the notion that women must present flawless versions of themselves online.
“The digital world can pressure us to show our best version all the time, but humanization is what builds connection,” Moeda explained. “People relate to vulnerability, consistency, and truth.”
She argued that sharing behind-the-scenes moments, imperfections, and creative processes represents its own form of leadership — one that resonates more deeply than polished perfection.
“Many women feel they must fit into a certain mold to be accepted. I believe the opposite,” Moeda noted.
“Innovation is born where we bring our personality, culture, and unique perspective to the table. Being different is a competitive advantage.”
Impact beyond numbers
While social media metrics matter, Moeda noted that lasting change comes from purposeful work. “Numbers matter, but impact is what lasts,” she said.
“Living in digital space means inspiring, educating, opening doors, and creating opportunities for other women. When our work has intention and purpose, influence becomes natural.”
Both speakers agreed that female leadership represents far more than equity — it serves as a critical engine for economic performance and innovation.
Women bring resilience, strategic vision, and leadership spirit that fundamentally reshape traditional power structures once dominated by men.
Breaking structural barriers
Despite progress in recent years, systemic obstacles continue to block women’s advancement. Gender stereotypes, lack of visibility and recognition, and inadequate public policies create persistent challenges, even as patriarchal norms gradually lose their grip on modern societies.
Across Africa and other regions, governments and organizations have launched training programs and reformed legal frameworks to open doors to leadership positions and encourage female entrepreneurship.
Women’s participation in the private sector, public institutions, and civil society organizations proves crucial for stimulating growth and fostering innovation.
However, these programs still face significant obstacles that slow their implementation and limit their real-world impact.
The sustainability of female leadership requires structural commitments and a fundamental rethinking of corporate policies, experts said.
Unprecedented opportunity in digital age
Moeda concluded with an optimistic view of women’s potential in the digital age. “Being a woman in the digital economy is challenging, but it is also an extraordinary opportunity,” she said.
“We have never had so many tools, so much visibility, and so much capacity to transform our reality. The secret is to keep our values at the center.”
For emerging economies, particularly in Africa, promoting women to economic leadership positions offers a powerful lever for growth. This requires developing more inclusive public policies and incorporating female leadership into companies’ overall strategic vision.
The panel stressed that inclusive and sustainable development cannot happen without the full integration of women in all dimensions of economic life — from corporate boardrooms to digital platforms where new forms of influence and entrepreneurship take shape daily.
Gu added that redefining leadership in the age of artificial intelligence requires collaboration between women and men, creating a more complete vision of what leadership means in the modern world.













