A study released recently by the
Women Presidents' Organization -
2014 Business Outlook Survey (sponsored by KeyBank's
Key4Women Program - showed that 33% of women reported using their own money to start their businesses, with less than 1% saying they received venture capital or angel investing.
"The networks that are established by their male counterparts don't always include the opportunity for women to participate," said Dr. Marsha Firestone, founder of the WPO. "I don't say that in terms of being critical of men. That's just the way the networks work."
Other key findings from the study include:
- The economic downturn has loosened its grip on women business owners. Just eight percent of WPO members said they believe economic conditions are the biggest threat to their bottom-line growth, a dramatic drop from last year’s findings, when half of the respondents cited the economic downturn as their biggest worry.
- Women-led businesses grew three times faster than the national average, a growth rate of 25% or more, compared to 5.4% average U.S. business growth.
Learn more:
Women at the top struggle for funding (CNN Money)
No comments:
Post a Comment