Are Successful Women Entrepreneurs Different From Men?
In this blog, originally featured in Forbes.com, Natalie Sisson, a Kiwi entrepreneur and Founder of WomanzWorld, comments on some interesting results on what motivates women entrepreneurs.
I’m always fascinated to learn more about what makes an entrepreneur tick. Why we do what we do. Whether we’re genetically primed to be an entrepreneur.
I’m also interested in learning the traits and characteristics we women share with men, and also how women entrepreneurs differ. So you can imagine I was pretty excited to discover this 2010 report funded by Kauffman Foundation and written by J. McGrath Cohoon, Vivek Wadhwa, Lesa Mitchell.
‘The Anatomy of an Entrepreneur: Are Successful Women Entrepreneurs Different From Men?’ is a 16 page report on 549 founders of high tech companies of which 41 were women. As you probably know only 3% of founders of high tech companies in the US are women and in this study it was actually at 7%.
What are the key findings?
It seems that prior experience looms larger in women’s own estimation of their chances for success than it does for men. Women also rated their professional and business networks more highly than men did as important contributors to that success.
In addition to wanting a balanced life, it seems that women want fair treatment and improved compensation, and that these desires motivated them to move from management to entrepreneurship – I concur.
Top Factors Motivating Women to Become Entrepreneurs
Overall, women who choose to become entrepreneurs are motivated primarily by five financial and psychological factors, specifically:
1. The desire to build wealth
2. The wish to capitalize on business ideas they had
3. The appeal of startup culture
4. A long-standing desire to own their own company
5. Working for someone else did not appeal to them
The Importance of Human Capital
On average, both men and women rated their prior industry and work experience as a very important factor in determining their startups’ success. Both sexes rated experience highest, with lessons learned from previous successes and failures rated slightly less important.
In fact there were significant differences in the results between men and women. Women believe it’s crucial to have had prior success. The authors and myself are not sure whether that’s because they are less confident to start a business without prior experience, or that they believe a track record is particularly valuable under these conditions because it demonstrates their competence.
The Importance of Social Capital
Social capital is defined as ‘the benefits derived from an individual’s personal and professional networks’ which is an essential resource to the successful running of a business.
Consistent with their finding that co-founder encouragement is more important to women than men, they also found that women especially benefit from other types of social support and encouragement. Both sexes rated their professional and business networks as very important to the success of their most recent startups, but women emphasized it more.
Financial Capital Sources
The majority of the successful entrepreneurs in this study had founded their current company with money from personal savings.
I was surprised to see, as were the authors, that even though it’s long been believed that women entrepreneurs have less access to capital than men, they found no differences in the types of funding sources tapped by male and female entrepreneurs.
The one exception was that women were almost twice as likely to secure their main funding from business partners.
Read the rest of the article here.
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