skip to main content
Amie Tornincasa
Amie Tornincasa
01:23

Amie Tornincasa

Netflix

Los Gatos, CA USA

"A lot of the things I consider ‘accomplishments’ aren’t my credentials or my degrees; they’re those little moments when I felt really insecure and I made it through."

Career Roadmap

Amie's work combines: Business, Technology, and Accomplishing Goals

See more careers and stories that connect to your interests.

Take Roadmap Quiz

Day In The Life

Senior Technical Program Manager

I help deliver technical solutions for business needs.

My Day to Day

I manage the programs and initiatives that we're building, whatever it may be. I'm responsible for developing and deploying emerging technologies (custom, third-party and hybrid software and hardware solutions) for productions in order to achieve the creation of Netflix’s “Studio in the Cloud" and truly modernizing production operations.

Skills & Education

Advice for getting started

There is this huge misconception about what "working in tech" looks like. Even though I do know how to code, what I do now is far removed from it. There are so many different ways to work in tech and succeed. I had to figure out where my niche was. I realized I was good at interfacing with businesses and helping explain the companies business needs to tech teams and vice versa. I wanted to prove that stereotypes about women in tech were untrue and that there are so many opportunities.

Here's the path I took:

  • High School

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Computer Science

    University of California-Santa Cruz

Life & Career Milestones

My path in life took a while to figure out

  • 1.

    Says that when she tells people she works in computer science, they assume she’s a coder working late at night and living off of Mountain Dew.

  • 2.

    On the contrary, she works in a very social role at Netflix, managing teams of coders and acting as a liaison between them and the business managers.

  • 3.

    When she first got out of college and was working as a coder, she felt like her bosses and her teams didn’t know where to put her.

  • 4.

    Because she’s a stubborn person, she refused to be classified as the “dumb girl,” and always worked hard to prove herself.

  • 5.

    Says that her stubbornness sometimes meant she’d spend three times longer on a project or studying for a test, but she was always willing to put in that extra time.

  • 6.

    Wishes that there were more women in her field so that she didn’t feel the need to prove herself every time she starts a new job or new project.

  • 7.

    Says she gets competitive about mental exercises; if she sees someone doing something she wants to be able to do, she makes herself learn how to do it.

  • 8.

    She’s passionate about tech because she believes its capabilities are growing exponentially right now—we’re living in a time where it can make big changes in people’s lives.

Defining Moments

How I responded to discouragement

  • THE NOISE

    Messages from Society in general:

    You work in tech? You must code a lot and work really late nights.

  • How I responded:

    There is this huge misconception about what "working in tech" looks like. Even though I do know how to code, what I do now is far removed from it. There are so many different ways to work in tech and succeed. I had to figure out where my niche was. I realized I was good at interfacing with businesses and helping explain the companies business needs to tech teams and vice versa. I wanted to prove that stereotypes about women in tech were untrue and that there are so many opportunities.

Experiences and challenges that shaped me

Click to expand

  • There are very few females in the tech field, which sometimes made navigating opportunities and being taken seriously a challenge.