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The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's potential £250bn female-led investment boost - and how to unlock it

Education, isolation and a lack of confidence are preventing investment in female-led businesses that could mean a £250bn º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economic boost. Here, a host of entrepreneurs, investment experts and businesspeople join NatWest CEO Alison Rose to discuss the issue - and how we will overcome it.

Lou Cordwell, Alison Rose and Becky Baker were among the guests at the NatWest/Fund Her North roundtable

Investment in female-led businesses could lead to a potential £250bn boost for our economy, but holding us back are barriers including education, isolation and a lack of confidence.

That was the challenge discussed at a virtual roundtable event attended by Alison Rose, CEO of NatWest, which took place last week to address the problem - and uncover the solutions - with a host of entrepreneurs, investment experts and businesspeople from across Greater Manchester.

Hosted by Heather Waters, regional enterprise manager, Manchester, at NatWest, the roundtable was held in partnership with Fund Her North, a volunteer collective of over 28 women with a combined investment power of over £450m.

Joining the NatWest representatives on the panel were Lou Cordwell, chair of the Greater Manchester Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) and founder and chair of design firm MagneticNorth; Chi-Chi Ekweozor - founder and CEO of audience interaction firm Assenty Ltd; Jess Jackson, head of investment at GC Angels and co-founder of Fund Her North; and her fellow co-founder Helen Oldham, who is also founder of North Invest.

Completing the panel lineup was Peter Flavel, CEO of Coutts; alongside entrepreneurs Becky Baker, founder of community app for dog owners K9; and Grace Vella, founder and CEO of female football brand Miss Kick.

Ms Rose launched the event by detailing a stark finding from her very own Rose Review published in 2019 into female entrepreneurship, which shed light on the barriers faced by women starting and growing businesses.

Asked why investment in female-led businesses is so important, she said: “It's a very simple question.