pinkification
n. The attempt to make something that is traditionally masculine more interesting or appealing to women by associating it with stereotypically feminine traits or ideas.
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Examples
2014
Yet, examples of tech's pinkification persist. In February, at a Harvard event designed to get women interested in computer science, sponsor Goldman Sachs handed out cosmetic mirrors and nail files.
—Kristen V. Brown, “How not to attract women to coding: Make tech pink,” The San Francisco Chronicle, July 06, 2014
2010
Even the market has latched on to the 'pinkification' of several products to make them more appealing to girls as young as six and to women in their 20s and 30s — from Barbie dolls to cellphones to laptops to accessories, just name it.
—Haimanti Mukherjee, “Why colour pink is stereotyping,” Wonder Woman, March 02, 2010
2008 (earliest)
As a chick who's incredibly into both gaming and tech stuff, one of my biggest pet peeves EVER is the pinkification of girl stuff. Want to make me automatically hate something? Make it a shade of dusted coral.
—Elaine Chow, “Entrench Gender Norms While Breaking Them With Pink Guitar Hero Controllers,” Gizmodo, November 07, 2008
Notes
Pink Ladies is a UK hired car service by women for women…. Female drivers in easily identifiable pink vehicles phone passengers upon arrival and wait until passengers are inside their destinations before driving off….My only hesitation is the stereotypical "pinkification" of the service.
—Peter Davidson, “Pink Ladies,” Thinking by Peter Davidson, March 15, 2006