Female
Founders - Setting an example for corporates
by Jonathan Marks
March 8th is International Womens Day. And, as usual, mainstream media decide to do an annual item on the role of women in society, especially business. It looks like the corporates in developed countries haven't yet got the memo, because the trends in many parts of Western Europe are the reverse of the growth economies in South-East Asia.
One of the best monitors of the situation is the annual Grant
Thornton International Business Report, which surveys around 6,600 business
leaders in 44 countries
This year they report that while more women are advancing
into senior management roles globally than at any time in the last 3 years,
progress is very slow in the G7 group of developed economies.
The data reveals that globally, 24 % of senior management
roles are now filled by women, up from 21 % in 2012. However, the G7 economies
cite just 21 % of senior roles occupied by women, compared to 28 % in the BRIC
economies and 32 % in South East Asia. Eastern Europe fares better than the
West. Women hold 48% of executive positions in Poland and over 40% in the
Baltic States.
Wake up signal
for Dutch corporates
The United States ranks in the bottom eight performing countries
for women in senior management at 20 %: the United Kingdom at 19 %.
The Netherlands bumps along the bottom with 11% (down significantly
from 18% last year) and only just ahead of Japan at 7 %. While
Dutch women are active in industry, they ‘often deliberately opt for a
part-time job which makes it difficult to reach the top,’ according to Grant
Thornton partner Karin van Wijngaarden.
Interestingly, these economies are also experiencing low levels
of growth with GDP in Japan (1.9 %), the United Kingdom (-0.1 %) and the United
States (2.2 %) modest in 2012.
In comparison, China ranks as the top country for women in
senior management at 51 %, while GDP growth for 2013 there is projected to be
between 7-8 %. The top 10 performing countries include the growth economies of
Latvia, Vietnam, Thailand and Philippines.
So what has
this got to do with European start-ups?
Start-ups driven by women founders are making better
progress than all male teams. That's my conclusion from working with accelerator
programs in both Western Europe (Startupbootcamp)
and Sub-Saharan Africa . I'm particularly impressed with VC4Africa and their colleagues building Afrilabs). In fact, I observe that an
accelerator program that doesn't get the gender balance right is probably going
to fail fast. And note that I'm talking about women in leadership roles,
driving the team.
So why could this be so? Eleanor Watson, one of the alumni from Startupbootcamp Amsterdam 2012, has a clear vision. She is CEO of Poikos, developers of extremely clever 3D body measurement technology.
"It is difficult to provide advice or insight
with regards to gender without risking stereotypes. But in my experience of
leading the tech startup Poikos, I see that female founders manage to make limited
resources go much further. Female CEOs have a strength in locating pockets of
money or opportunities and leveraging them far more effectively. They are
quicker to spot value in services and people and they are more careful than men
in avoiding waste.
I also believe that female CEOs have an opportunity
to capitalise on their skills in empathy.
Women are definitely better than men at taking
other people’s perspectives, feeling their pain and experiencing compassion for
them. Although it is not clear if women’s empathy is the result of nature or
nurture, in practice women are a stabilizing factor in the often heated and tense
situations that arise when companies get accelerated. Working in a startup is tough. There will be many un-glamorous and
dreary moments. I believe that female CEOs are better able to intuitively
understand the morale of the team and to help release tension when times are
tough.
If such skills resonate with any CEO, they ought to
play to their strengths, since wasted money and imploding teams are both startup-killing
factors that can otherwise be avoided.
Female CEOs definitely have it tougher, because
they will be judged on appearance much more harshly than a male. Ironically, this
bites both ways, since being considered unattractive means being ignored, and
being particularly attractive often means that one's technical aptitude is not
taken seriously.
Women also are also judged for being too
'strident', being 'arrogant', or for 'accomplishing too much' in ways which men
rarely have to deal with. Steve Jobs and Larry Ellison get respect for being extraordinarily
obnoxious. This is extremely difficult for females without severe judgment passed
upon them, especially in the media. So life for a woman CEO can often seem to
be finding a delicate balance between 'not too bold and not too meek'.
Recent research shows that startup teams which are diverse
show a strongly indicated likelihood of high performance. Diversity includes
cultural factors, age, etc, but a strong correlations with success is having a
mixed gender team. I conclude that this is due to a balancing of strengths and
perspectives, leading to overall better management decisions being executed
within the company."
So what needs
to be done change the gender balance, especially to encourage women to head
their own tech startup? I note on the blog by Neelie Kroes, Vice-President of the European Commission, an active
call for action.
I’ve seen great ideas launched
like the simple but incredibly effective Academy
Cube, to tell people what jobs they’re eligible for – and what they
could become eligible for with the right training. Now I’m on the lookout for
similar bright ideas and innovations that can support getting more women into
ICT. I know there are many worthy initiatives out there. From the great Rails Girls initiative by Finnish Digital Champion
Linda Liukas; to the “Lean In Foundation”
set up by Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg. But I’m
open to novel ideas for effective solutions, and I want to know
what you think.
People keep telling me
about how Europe is risk averse, especially in the midst of such a devastating
recession. But the way to tackle the problem is to create communities of excellence,
shooting for the moon rather than hoping "to roll out the nation". And we need to hurry, because South-East Asia
has already discovered that the future is female.
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