Title: Alison Price, Siobhan ODriscoll
1WELCOME
- Alison Price, Siobhan ODriscoll Mandip Sandhu
- Business Start-Up_at_ Leeds Met
2Interactive Workshop
- Graduate entrepreneurs
- exploring background and issues for women
- Aim and approach
- exploring the role of university as a catalyst
within Graduate Start-Up - Towards a university sector response to SFWE.
3Female Graduate Entrepreneurs Discussion Items
- Why target this graduates?
- How to support this group?
- National / regional
- Is it working?
- Barriers / additional needs
- Role of support professionals
- Where next?
4Why Graduate Enterprise? National Drivers
- Changes in HEI sector
- Enterprise in Higher Education 1980s
- Dearing 1997
- Lambert 2003
- UK SEC 99
- Non SEC such as YF Business Start-Up
- National Council for Graduate Entrepreneurship
2004 -
5UK SEC Centres
- Science
- Engineering
- Cambridge MIT link
6Why Graduate Enterprise? National Drivers
- National Gender Profile of Start-ups
- Why female graduates?
- Changing graduate work patterns Current
graduates should expect to have 19 jobs and 7
different careers! - More male graduates start-up (BCC)
7Why Graduate Enterprise? UK profile
- One third want to start-up
- 68 dont believe they have the skills
- 60 feel they wouldnt be taken seriously
- 52 anticipate leaving with 10-20K debt
- 27 celebrity role models but family more
important! - Lower entrepreneurial active than USA
- Source GEM YouGov (Guardian 2004)
8Why Graduate Enterprise?Why in West Yorkshire?
- Over 190,000 students in the region
- 100,000 enrolled on West Yorkshire University
courses - 26,000 graduates per year
9Why Graduate Enterprise?Why _at_ Leeds Met ?
- Leeds Met Regional University
- 52 female 48 male
- 58 part time 42 full time
- 4 already self employed
- 30 from family owned business backgrounds
- Data 2003-2004
10Why Graduate Enterprise?Our response _at_ Leeds Met
- Funded by Yorkshire Forward
- Partnership of 4 West Yorkshire Unis
- To create an innovative and creative environment
within the university which will enable
individuals to contribute to the growth of
sustainable businesses.
11(No Transcript)
12What is Enterprise?
- Enterprise is an inclusive concept
- the context in which subject disciplines can be
explored - challenging environment
- an approach, through skill development, which can
be taken to the exploration and discovery of a
discipline. - skills of being enterprising
- corporate perspective (as intrapreneurship)
- Creation of new ventures, social programmes and
the exploration of new opportunities
13Why Graduate Enterprise?Our response
- In curriculum
- Outside class
- Idea Workshops
- Proven Idea workshops
- Summer School
- Role of Business Link West Yorkshire
14National Overview
15National Activity Summary
- Funding requirements - Post code lottery no
reciprocal arrangements (home / host) - Funding quantification (counts)
- Seasonality of availability (HEIs)
16Where are we?
- Grass roots activity
- Increasing
- Response to SFWE?
17West Yorks Students 03/04
- Entrepreneurial Intentions Survey
- 46 intend to become self employed
- 4 already are
- 59 male
- 46 SME family background
- 39 school experience
18West Yorks Female Graduates
- Slightly lower figures than male respondents
- 39 intend to become self employed
- Attitudes
- Males more risk taking
- Females more hesitant and conservative
- Actions
- Workshops
19Female Entrepreneurs?
- Profile of most entrepreneurial West Yorkshire
Graduate - White, male, undergraduate, aged 19-21
- Parents run a small-medium sized business
- Intending to start-up 6 years from graduation
- Have had enterprise experience at school
- Expects university support
20Female Graduates good news
- Solid repeat of last years findings
- Interest in start-up present in graduates
- Small positive changes
- Of those who intend to start up
- 7 intend to start up within 2 years (2003/4)
- 23 intend to start up within 2 years (2004/5)
- Data Warning 2 institutions (2,500 respondents)
21Female Graduates
- Introducing Mandip Sandhu
22DEBATE QUESTION
- What do female graduate entrepreneurs need to
start up? - Support?
- Additional inputs
- Provision?
- Female only incubators
23Barriers for Female Entrepreneurs (DTi)
- Lack of appropriate support
- Access to finance
- Impact of caring / domestic responsibilities
- Difficulties of transition
- Lack of appropriate role models
- Low levels of self esteem and confidence
24Issues for Aspirant Graduates
- Confidence - throughout start up process
- Finance perceptions / experience gaining
- Skills - investor ready
- Support - lack of role models mentoring generic
offerings
25Conclusions
- Role of HEIs?
- Generic Offerings?
- Womens perceptions of own capabilities Targets /
- Classifications capturing the story?
- Routes for personal and soft skill development
for women? - Personal development planning
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