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The Women Who Built the Future of UGC

Writer's picture: Emily RectorEmily Rector

Black and white photos of four women, smiling or posed. Text reads: The Women Who Built the Future of UGC. #InternationalWomensDay.

User-generated content isn’t just a marketing strategy—it’s a movement that has reshaped industries, redefined storytelling, and given a platform to voices that demand to be heard. At its core, UGC is about authenticity, access, and the power of real people sharing real experiences. And from the very beginning, women have been at the forefront of this evolution.


Across journalism, design, technology, and digital innovation, pioneering women have paved the way for the way we create, consume, and share content today. Their contributions laid the groundwork for today’s creator-driven media landscape—where anyone can become a storyteller, thought leader, or industry voice.


This International Women’s Day, we’re celebrating the trailblazing women who transformed the way information is shared, shaping the foundations of UGC as we know it today.


Ida B. Wells: The Original Investigative Journalist

Long before independent media and social platforms enabled individuals to break news in real time, Ida B. Wells was leading the charge for truth-driven storytelling.


In the late 19th century, Wells used her own publishing platforms to expose injustices, particularly through her investigative reporting on racial violence and civil rights. At a time when mainstream media largely ignored these stories, she harnessed the power of independent journalism to bring attention to critical issues, proving that individuals—not just institutions—could shape public discourse.


Her legacy lives on in today’s digital-first journalism, where real voices, firsthand accounts, and decentralized media play a pivotal role in uncovering truth. The principles she championed—authenticity, courage, and the power of individual storytelling—are the same principles that make user-generated content such a force in today’s media landscape.


Nellie Bly: Immersive Storytelling Before Social Media

Decades before social media made firsthand storytelling the norm, Nellie Bly redefined what it meant to report a story.


Bly’s groundbreaking work in investigative journalism included going undercover at a mental asylum to expose inhumane conditions and setting a world record for circumnavigating the globe—all documented through immersive, real-time narratives. Her approach to storytelling wasn’t about relaying secondhand information—it was about being in the moment, experiencing events firsthand, and sharing them directly with the world.


Her legacy is seen today in the rise of user-generated content, where audiences crave real, unfiltered perspectives. Whether it’s a professional sharing behind-the-scenes insights on LinkedIn or an industry expert documenting their conference experience in real time, the power of immersive, firsthand storytelling is stronger than ever.


Susan Kare: The Designer Who Made Digital Communication Intuitive


The digital world thrives on visuals, and Susan Kare helped create the foundation for how we interact with digital content today.


As one of the pioneering designers behind Apple’s early graphical user interfaces, Kare’s work made computing more accessible and intuitive. Her iconic designs—many of which are still recognizable today—transformed the way people engaged with digital platforms, laying the groundwork for the visual communication that dominates modern UGC.


From emojis to UI design, the ability to create and share content seamlessly is built on usability and accessibility. Kare’s work not only influenced early computing but continues to shape the way we engage with digital media today.


Radia Perlman: The Engineer Who Made Digital Connectivity Possible


UGC thrives on connectivity—and without Radia Perlman’s contributions to networking, today’s digital sharing economy wouldn’t exist.


As the inventor of the Spanning Tree Protocol (STP), Perlman revolutionized network reliability, enabling seamless data transfer across interconnected systems. Her innovations made the internet more scalable, paving the way for the interconnected world we rely on today.


Every time a piece of user-generated content is uploaded, shared, or streamed, it happens on the digital infrastructure Perlman helped shape. Her work is a reminder that UGC isn’t just about content—it’s about the systems that make it possible for ideas to travel, voices to be heard, and stories to be shared.


The Women Shaping the Future of UGC Today


The impact of these pioneers is still felt in every video testimonial, every LinkedIn thought leadership post, every user-generated industry insight. They built the foundation for a world where content isn’t controlled by gatekeepers but driven by real people with real perspectives.


At MarketScale, the incredible women on our team lead, create, and innovate every day, shaping the future of UGC and B2B media. They are strategists, designers, video editors, and industry experts who continue to push boundaries and drive the next evolution of digital storytelling.


As we celebrate International Women’s Day, we recognize the women who paved the way but also those who continue to redefine what’s possible in media, B2B and technology.


Here’s to the women who create, lead, and inspire—past, present, and future.

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