The narrative is familiar: Revolutionary technology arrives, promising to liberate women from domestic drudgery and professional constraints. The electric oven would free housewives from coal-burning stoves. The washing machine would eliminate laundry day. The microwave would make meal preparation effortless. Yet as historian Ruth Schwartz Cowan argued in her landmark book, More Work for Mother, these innovations didn’t reduce women’s workload. They simply shifted expectations, creating new standards of cleanliness and convenience that often meant more work, not less.
So when we speak of AI as the solution to professional and personal burdens, skepticism is warranted. After all, technology has repeatedly promised liberation while delivering new forms of constraint. The question isn’t whether AI will change professional and personal work; it’s whether this change will finally favor women’s autonomy rather than merely reorganizing their obligations.
Recent data Duckbill collected alongside Harris Poll reveals that 47% of women avoid asking for help to prevent burdening others. This hesitation reflects not just conditioning around self-sacrifice, but hard-won wisdom about technological promises that rarely materialize as advertised.
SELF-LIMITATION ISN’T ALL ON US
The reluctance to seek assistance isn’t a character flaw; it’s a rational behavior within systems that have historically penalized women for taking up space. When 31% of women aged 18-34 procrastinate on booking their own medical appointments, and 76% report that even in their free time it feels like there is something they should be doing, we’re witnessing the manifestation of decades of messaging that female needs are inherently secondary.
This isn’t about women “doing it wrong.” It’s about women making calculated decisions within structures that weren’t designed for their success.
AI PROVIDES AN ALGORITHMIC ADVANTAGE
What makes AI uniquely positioned to address this dynamic is its fundamental departure from human-built social contracts. There’s no emotional labor required, no reciprocal obligation, no concern about imposing on someone’s bandwidth. There’s no judgment. The technology can exist to purely augment human capability, making it perhaps the first truly guilt-free form of assistance available at scale.
Consider the surgeon who uses AI to optimize her schedule, allowing her to focus on life-saving procedures, rather than administrative minutiae. What if that surgeon also used AI to handle her insurance claim after a kitchen flood, researching coverage details, coordinating with adjusters, and handling repairs? Or the venture capitalist who has AI analyze market trends and simultaneously asks for it to research the best schools for her daughter, approaching both with the same fidelity and precision.
These are examples of resource allocation that refuses to compartmentalize professional efficiency and personal fulfillment. Unlike previous technologies that further entrenched women in prescribed roles, AI has the potential to follow women across all domains of life.
So, how do we fix this?
1. Redefine productivity as self-care
When 78% of young women report they are simply “trying to get through the day,” we’re looking at a crisis of sustainable solutions. AI offers an alternative: What if getting things done could be both excellent and guilt-free?
This shift requires a fundamental reframing for women. Instead of asking “Am I capable of doing this myself?” the question becomes “Is this the highest and best use of my capabilities and time?” Suddenly, outsourcing restaurant research or flight refunds isn’t lazy, it’s strategic.
And when tasks are streamlined and coordination becomes effortless, the mental bandwidth that was once consumed by logistics is freed up for vision, creativity, and genuine rest. Unlike previous technologies that created new forms of performance pressure, AI’s most radical feature could be its indifference to human social hierarchies and gendered expectations.
2. Shape the algorithm to work for us
For AI to truly serve women’s needs rather than simply digitizing existing biases, women must be active participants in shaping these tools. Women are adopting AI at rates 25% less than their male counterparts. That adoption gap isn’t just a missed opportunity for individual efficiency; it’s a systemic risk that AI development will continue to prioritize male perspectives and use cases.
Every time a woman trains an AI assistant on her specific work, teaches it to understand her communication style, or provides feedback on its suggestions, she’s contributing to a more inclusive technological future.
This is not just about representation—it’s about functionality. We cannot afford to let this technology develop without us, only to discover later that it replicates the same systems that have historically constrained us.
WOMEN DESERVE SUPPORT WITHOUT LIMITS
In a culture that has long demanded women take on more tasks to become more, AI represents something revolutionary: technology that encourages taking up space by alleviating pressures. It’s permission to ask for what you need without apology, to optimize for you rather than survival, to treat your time and energy as genuinely valuable resources.
The women who understand this aren’t just early adopters of technology, they’re pioneers of a new paradigm where support isn’t scarce, help isn’t shameful, and free time is not a luxury, but a human right. In embracing AI, they’re not just changing how shit gets done, they’re modeling what it looks like when women are able to be as big as their ambitions demand.
Meghan Joyce is cofounder and CEO of Duckbill.
The final deadline for Fast Company’s World Changing Ideas Awards is Friday, December 12, at 11:59 p.m. PT. Apply today.
