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PRIVACY
Opinion

More needs to be done to address the gender balance amongst entrepreneurs - Dylan Jones-Evans

We need to break down the barriers that prevent more women from starting their own businesses

(Image: Shared Content Unit)

This week, I have had the honour and privilege to chair the judging panel for the 2019 Wales Start-Up Awards which celebrates the achievements of those Welsh entrepreneurs with businesses that are less than three years old.

All those interviewed demonstrated, yet again, the talent, drive and ambition that we have amongst our enterprise community in Wales but it was also noteworthy that half of the finalists were either run by women (or had women as part of the founding team) in sectors as diverse as creative, digital, financial and professional services, manufacturing and retail.

Some may find it strange that I am highlighting this fact but research actually shows that instead of parity, only one in three of entrepreneurs in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ are female and that fewer women in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ choose to become entrepreneurs as compared to similar economies e.g. only 6% of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ women run their businesses as compared to 15% in Canada. Worse still, this situation seems unlikely to improve with only 8.6% of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ women planning to start a business in the next three years as compared to 14.3% of men.

So how do we get more women to consider an entrepreneurial career and how can this be supported by key stakeholders in the enterprise ecosystem? That was one of the primary aims of a recent report written by Alison Rose, CEO of commercial and private banking at NatWest.

“The Review of Female Entrepreneurship” has examined some of the key barriers that currently stop women from achieving their entrepreneurial aspirations and, more importantly, how to create an environment to unlock the massive potential they have to boost the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy. As a result, three significant opportunities were identified to help more women succeed as entrepreneurs.

The first was to increase funding direct towards female entrepreneurs, as this was the primary concerns of women who were starting and growing their businesses. Not only do women launch businesses with 53% less funding than men but as they seek to develop high growth firms, are faced by the challenge of having only 1% of all venture capital going to firms founded by all-female teams.

The second issue was related to greater family care support for female entrepreneurs, with women twice as likely as men to mention family responsibilities as a barrier to starting a business. In fact, flexibility around family care is the primary reason to start a business for women with children and it is worth noting that female entrepreneurs may also be caring for adult family members with special needs, or ageing parents and relatives.

Finally, entrepreneurship needs to be made more accessible to women through better mentoring and networking so that the barriers are reduced for those wishing to start a business.