May 12 2008
Anderson Entrepreneurs Conference — Is it Harder for Women to Raise Venture Capital?
On Friday, I moderated the Idea Validation panel at UCLA’s Anderson School Entrepreneurs conference. Thanks again to the four panelists – Jimmy Henricks and Patrick Dillon, co-founders of www.collarfree.com; Dr. Vladimir Ban, CEO of PD-LD, Inc.; and David Silver, author of Smart Start-Ups and President of Santa Fe Capital Group – all of whom pulled from their own experiences give helpful advice on how to think about validating a startup business idea.
One discussion item really stuck with me after the panel – whether women entrepreneurs face a tougher road when trying to raise venture capital. A panelist made the observation that women have a tougher time raising capital than do men and in a slightly tongue-in-cheek way, advised women to partner with men if they were to hope to raise funds. Several members of the audience disagreed strongly including an ex-associate from a Sand Hill Road VC and a fund-to-fund expert who made the point that “VC’s want to make money and couldn’t care less what you look like if there is a good ROI to be made.” I tend to agree with the audience but would love to hear what others with personal experience have to say on the point. I know several woman entrepreneurs who have successfully navigated the VC process and don’t recall any hearing about any specific bias against them. But I may be blind to the issue.
The panelist also cited data that supported his point. I do know there are fewer female venture funded entrepreneurs than there are male, but I’ve never seen any data that supports the claim that it’s the VC process that creates the disparity. If anyone has data, I’d love to see it.
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Patrick Dillon
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Stu
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Patrick Dillon
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Steve Raymond
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A. Taylor









