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Female Entrepreneurship in the 21st Century:

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UK best practice initiative for supporting women's entrepreneurship EU commissioned survey ... Home based /portfolio business diminutive ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Female Entrepreneurship in the 21st Century:


1
Female Entrepreneurship in the 21st Century The
Way Forward Conference Tuesday 26th September
2006 Dublin, Ireland Dinah Bennett Durham
Business School UK
2
Why focus on women?
  • Economic imperative
  • - Expanding the involvement of women in
  • entrepreneurship is critical for long-term
    economic
  • growth
  • Under-representation
  • Different Experience
  • - different motivations/ less resources/ longer
  • incubation

3
  • Introduction
  • Womens enterprise development UK context
  • Barriers
  • Women Into the Network (WIN)
  • Lessons

4
Some Facts
  • Participation of Women in Enterprise is
  • significant and rising.
  • Womens Businesses contribute to
  • economic development and job creation
  • No country in the world where women are
  • more entrepreneurially active than men.
  • Globally the participation of men starting
  • businesses usually 50 higher than women

5
  • More women than before are in the labour force
    throughout their reproductive years, though
    obstacles with employment persist.
  • Women experience more unemployment than men and
    for a longer period of time than men.
  • Women remain at the lower end of a segregated
    labour market and continue to be concentrated in
    a few occupations, to hold positions of little or
    no authority and to receive less pay than men.
  • Available statistics are still far from providing
    a strong basis for assessing both quantitative
    and qualitative changes in women's employment.

6
UK Context
  • Womens enterprise increasingly seen as important
  • Growth of womens business ownership
  • The gender dimension to barriers recognised
  • A wide range of initiatives aimed at addressing
    these
  • 2003 Strategic Framework launched

7
Barriers
  • Access to finance
  • Care/domestic responsibilities
  • Lack of knowledge/training in business
  • skills
  • Perceptual barriers of credibility

8
Women and their assets for business
Abilities, skills and experience
Motivation Determination
H
Confidence
S
N
Women
P
F
Idea with a Market
Resources
Plan and Manage
Index H Human Assets N Natural Assets S
Social Assets P Physical Assets F Financial
Assets
9
Confidence and Social Capital
  • Confidence is
  • A complex issue
  • Very personal
  • Not exclusively gender specific
  • A relative concept e.g. business stage
  • Relating confidence and social capital

10
Social Capital a definition
  • OECD networks together with shared norms,
    values and understandings that facilitate
    co-operation within and among groups
  • the personal contacts and social
    networks that generate shared understandings,
    trust and reciprocity within and between social
    groups

11
Nature of Social Capital
  • Bonding - refers to those ties between those
    people in similar situations like family, close
    friends and neighbours
  • Bridging - describes weak or new ties to like
    persons
  • Linking refers to ties to people in dissimilar
    situations- weak ties

12
Social Capital Critical to Business
  • Successful entrepreneurship is about managing
    relationships with a range of stakeholders (Gibb)
  • Knowing who are the critical stakeholders in your
    network and why
  • What are these relationships how are they
    maintained
  • Business Networking a critical vehicle for
    building social capital

13
Role of Networking
  • Know who/how
  • Individual/collective
  • Membership group

14
Women Into the Network
  • When - Started in 1999 in the North East of
    England
  • Why - Low numbers of women in business and
    research showed 700 networks under utilised
  • Who - Potential and existing women in business
    those who support
  • What - Relationship building through networking
    for womens enterprise
  • 2000 women members regionally - 24000 nationally

15
WIN multi layered activities
  • Events from training workshops to lunches
  • Awards annual event
  • Communications and Publications website,
  • newsletters, ezines
  • Role models development promotion
  • Sectoral initiatives
  • Research
  • Signposting
  • Dissemination

16
Theme - Make Networking Explicit
  • Developing understanding about Networks
    networking
  • I hate networking
  • Easy entry points
  • Rehearsal space
  • Women only or mixed ?
  • Conduit for support sector
  • Brokerage getting to know spaces
  • Lobbying for change to existing business networks

17
Mixed Perceptions Expectations
  • The banking research as a case study
  • Expectations
  • Women wanted bank to be more proactive and
    interested in their business. An important
    stakeholder.
  • Men merely saw the bank as a service provider
  • Bankers - access to their networks . but
    mechanisms venues used by banks are often not
    appropriate
  • Training for women to better manage their bank
    managers vice versa

18
Assumptions Impressions
  • Challenges for effective and trust based
  • relationship building
  • Assumptions can close off areas of support.
  • Stereotyping - websites women socially
    excluded
  • Home based /portfolio business diminutive
  • First impressions critical when transaction costs
    of
  • getting to the meeting are high

19
Business support for womenissues for advisers
  • Knowing the customer base catering for diverse
    needs
  • Recognition of needs of part-time businesses
  • Assistance from pre-pre start-up through to
    business growth
  • Accessible services timing/ transport/ care/
    ethnicity
  • Role models

20
Women Into the NetworkA Dynamic Model for
Supporting Womens Enterprise
  • Active support partnership working, public,
    private voluntary
  • First three years over 900 jobs created
  • European wide impact through EQUAL funded
    Accelerating Womens Enterprise (AWE) Programme
  • Founding board member of PROWESS
  • Selected as UK Best Practice Model for Supporting
    Womens Entrepreneurship
  • Awarded Flagship Status by PROWESS National
    Business Support Organisation for three
    consecutive years
  • Spinning out 3 UK Regions, Ireland, Croatia,
    Slovenia and South Africa
  • 2000 members regionally
  • 24,000 members nationally
  • Winner of CBI First Woman Corporate Award 2006

21
Dinah Bennett
  • www.womenintothenetwork.co.uk
  • Dinah.bennett_at_durham.ac.uk
  • 44 (0)191 334 5497
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