We want to inspire, support and connect tech enabled women entrepreneurs and those just thinking of walking down this path with the tools and network they need to succeed
Bindu (not her real name) recalls that few years back, she would often be overlooked in meetings with her business counterparts while her junior male employees would be asked questions. Few years forward, today she heads international businesses across several countries with several million SGD in VC funding.
Joelle (not her real name) recounts that has been asked for a meeting with a VC only to find out that he wants to go out for a date. She is still working on her start-=up and raising another round of funding.
And of course, there are the questions: Where are your children when you stay late at work? What do your husband/parents/children think about you running a business? What about combining work and motherhood?
Have you ever thought what it really looks life in everyday life of a tech entrepreneur?
The reality is, and statistics proves it: Economically, we will all lose if women are not professionally active. As a region, East Asia and the Pacific reportedly lose between US$42 billion to US$47 billion annually due to women’s limited access to employment opportunities based on the 2016 Global Gender Gap Report by the World Economic Forum.
Businesses see an advantage to keep women in the workforce. A study of over 800 retail and hospitality companies by Gallup found that, “retail units that are diverse and engaged have a 46 per cent higher increase in comparable revenue.” Research confirms that diverse companies perform better. A McKinsey report concluded already in 2015 that companies in the top quartile for gender diversity were 15 per cent more likely to have returns above the industry medians.
This is true also for startups. Women entrepreneurs report higher average annual sales, at US $9.1 million versus male entrepreneurs at US$8.4million based on BNP Paribas Global Entrepreneurialism Report. Babson College, in a reference on the topic of women-led startups, reports that businesses with a female executive team are more likely to have higher valuations at both first (more than 64 per cent higher) and last funding (more than 49 per cent) higher than those led by men.
Women themselves recognize the need and power that comes with a seat at the table. And there is one table that offers particularly rewarding opportunity for the future: The Table of Tech and Digital Entrepreneurship.
Also Read: 4 reasons to hire women in your startup
In today’s age of unicorns, technology-driven companies offer niche precision at a global scale. It can open markets regardless of its physical location. Technology itself, as a tool, is gender neutral. It offers opportunities. Women drive already an estimated 70-80 per cent of consumer spending with their purchasing power and influence. Women in Singapore do not shy away from online usage. Women and men use Facebook almost equally in the age group of 15 to 55 years old: 48.3 per cent of women and 51.7 per cent of men.
Yet, recent studies are alarming on the prospects of women globally, unless more gender parity is achieved. If current gender gap ratios persist from now until 2020, says the World Economic Forum, there will be “nearly one new STEM job per four jobs lost for men, but only one new STEM job per 20 jobs lost for women” because of disruptive labor changes.
We need to include women at the centre of the future digital economy to allow our businesses to perform better. What is stopping us from getting there?
At the 20 thousand feet view, we can see the destination. The goal is clear: More women succeeding in the digital space. But when one gets closer to the ground, where reality is daily, change feels slow. Putting one foot in front of the other – change feels harder. The terrain is rough. While the wave of change is seemingly racing across the world, on the ground, it feels like we’re wading through water.
To reach a destination, we need not just personal stamina and teamwork, but also practical essentials like maps, tools, and survival kits. Maps tell us when we need to change course, which route is most efficient, and when we need to chart a new path.
There are the cultural unspoken practices of gender roles, societal expectations of motherhood that creep into our decision making, and the concerns that pop into every woman’s mind: How do I maintain my career velocity as life’s realities hit? Is the barrier one of talent shortage? Or is it a lack of support infrastructure like affordable childcare? There is a reason why Bain & Company found in its 2014 survey that women start off with the same amount of motivation to reach top management as men, but within the first two years, that motivation drops from than 60 per cent while men’s remain the same.
Which are the hurdles that if solved, make the path that much easier to walk? Which are the tunnels that we need to blast to cross to the other side? Progress made in places like Iceland and Scandinavia provide some insight into our hurdles, but are there hurdles specific to women in tech in Asia? To Southeast Asia? To Singapore, even? What maps, tools, and survival kits do female technology entrepreneurs need here in Singapore? What do we need to do as a society to help this group race to the pinnacle?
Also Read: Why women and tech are a rocking combination
These are the questions Female Founders want to answer. We want to inspire, support and connect tech enabled women entrepreneurs and those just thinking of walking down this path with the tools and network they need to succeed.
Our vision is to make tech entrepreneurship accessible to any woman who has the right tech or digital idea
And we want our support to be fact-based. We can conjecture based on hearsay or experiences in the Singaporean context.
If you are or used to be a female entrepreneur who works in a technology-driven business, this is a call-to-action for you: Be part of the wave of change and help clear the fog on the ground by contributing to the Female Founders Entrepreneurs Survey.
To build the right tools, policies, infrastructures, we need to know what we’re tackling. Completing this survey will help focus our programmes, tools, and direction for action.
Change makers aren’t just the bold ones. Anyone can be a change maker. As you charge forward on your entrepreneurial path, relay what you see and what you experience back to base camp. Help your fellow marchers. And together, we will scale Mount Everest.
The fever of women empowerment is rising and the temperature is always hottest before a fever breaks.
The time for women entrepreneurs is now. Let’s make their dream a reality. Together.
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The views expressed here are of the author’s, and e27 may not necessarily subscribe to them. e27 invites members from Asia’s tech industry and startup community to share their honest opinions and expert knowledge with our readers. If you are interested in sharing your point of view, submit your post here.
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