Startups With This Type of Founder Make 151% More in RevenueFor VC investors, following the money and pursuing more diversity among founders are one in the same.

ByMelanie Fellay

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

In 2020, the share of venture funding going to female founders shrank toa mere 2.3%. In a world where having access to capital can make or break your company, that means only two women for every 98 men get that opportunity. I am one of those two women.

This month, my company, Spekit,announced our $12 million Series A round of fundingto disrupt the way that employees learn in the workplace. It's an accomplishment we could only dream of three years ago, as we brainstormed product ideas on elevator rides and lunch breaks. The road to Series A was for us, as it is for all women, paved with obstacles. I didn't attend an Ivy League school. I wasn't a serial entrepreneur. And, above all else, my co-founder and I are female.

Statistically, the cards were stacked against us and will continue to be as our company scales. You've heard the statistics, but allow me to share a few: When all-female teams actually get the opportunity to pitch, venture capitalists (VCs) spend30% less timeon the fundraising ask,50% more timeon the traction section and24% more timeon the product slides. Essentially, we're scrutinized harder and longer, and in the end, we raise30% lessthan male founding teams on average.

But the challenges we've had to overcome also provide a platform to influence change. Reading the headlines of incredible female founders like Whitney Wolfe Herd, theyoungest female CEO ever to IPO, reminds me that this funding is an opportunity to shift the landscape.

Together, we can shape a business world that replaces bias with inclusivity, convention with opportunity and assumptions with logic. The first step to building this new future is addressing several key areas.

Related:BMBL: 4 Reasons to Buy Bumble After its Recent IPO

Building an iconic company requires capital

Forbes's latest list of100 Most Innovative Leadersranged from Jeff Bezos to Marc Benioff. A better title might have been "100 Most Innovative Men" given there was exactly one woman on the list of 100 leaders who made the cut. For their rankings, Forbes looked at CEOs and graded them based on media reputation for innovation, social connections and capital, a track record for value creation and investor expectations for value creation.

My favorite response came from TIME Magazine's Anand Giridharadas, editor-at-large,who wrote on Twitter, "there are twice as many men named Stanley as there are women of any name. And there are only two Stanleys."

The logic behind the Forbes selection process was flawed,which they ultimately admitted. The entire episode exposed the wide-ranging nature of bias that impedes women from raising funding or being nominated to helm the world's most iconic companies.

Less than 1% of startupsthat receive seed rounds will reach the unicorn status of a $1 billion valuation. Combine this with the 2.3% of females receiving venture funding, and you'll see female founders have a better chance of winning the lottery than making the "Most Innovative Leaders" list.

VCs can and must play an instrumental role in moving this needle. Instead of investing in someone who looks like those 99 men on the Forbes list, find the female founders who simply need the capital to get there.

Related:Why Women Entrepreneurs Are the Future Of the Startup

Using key performance metrics to fuel investments

Looking only at the investment returns of female-founded companies,First Round Capitalfound the female founders they invested in performed 63% better than the all-male founding teams. Another study fromBoston Consulting Group显示每一美元的投资提高了,铁male-run startups generated 151% more in revenue than male-run startups. We're not talking about a few percentage points here. This equates to hundreds of millions in higher returns on a VC investment.

There's no argument that diversity plays a key role in these metrics. AHarvard Business Reviewstudy is one among many outlining the statistically significant relationship between diversity and innovation. A survey of more than 1700 companies across the globe revealed companies with higher-than-average diversity had 19% higher innovation revenues.

I can't think of a clearer incentive for VCs to reevaluate investment practices. With women representing over40 percentof all entrepreneurs in this country, the pipeline is clearly there. It's simply a matter of finding it.

Related:她被告知“不”100次。现在31岁Female Runs a $1 Billion Business.

Implementing diversity-first practices

No, the answer isn't for VCs to run out and start investing in every female-founded company. It's about shifting these long-standing patterns, outdated customs and biases holding back progress.

Mallun Yen, founder and partner ofOperator Collective, was intimately familiar with these statistics when she chose to invest in my company. Her fund is 90% female and 40% people of color. In partnership with Leyla Seka, former Salesforce VP who ledSalesforce's equal pay initiative, the fund was founded "because [they] believe the power in venture capital is concentrated among a homogenous group that doesn't represent where [their] industry is now or where it's going."

Related:Improving Diversity in the Technology Bubble

Fortunately, there are a few simple ways any VC can better represent where our industry is now and where it's going:

  • Adopt a data-driven pitch process.Research by theHarvard Business Reviewrevealed bias in how women are questioned in the pitch process compared to male counterparts and even showed how pitches with male voices far outperformed those with female voices. By adopting a strictly data-driven pitch process, funds can remove bias from the equation and focus on the quality of the opportunity.
  • Implement sourcing guidelines.Require your team to source at least one female-founded company for every two male-founded companies. This will force your team to step outside its comfort zone and get creative with the opportunities it brings to the table.
  • Set benchmarks.Make portfolio diversity a clearly defined initiative in your fund and set benchmarks for achievement.

These three small changes can have a major impact on shifting the status quo and giving female founders everywhere the opportunity to be on the next Forbes 100 Most Innovative Leaders list.

Wavy Line
Melanie Fellay

Entrepreneur Leadership Network Contributor

CEO & Cofounder at Spekit

Melanie (Mel) Fellay is the CEO and co-founder of Spekit, a just-in-time platform that is changing the way we learn at work by delivering training, right when and where it’s needed, in the flow of work.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Making a Change

Get a Lifetime of Tailored Piano Instruction From This $150 AI App

Perhaps the best part: Learn to play on your own time.

Business News

Doctor's Office Receptionist Arrested for Allegedly Stealing $44,000 From Patients in Square Payment Scam

According to police, the receptionist stole from over 75 patients.

Cryptocurrency / Blockchain

I Want To Buy My Groceries With Crypto — So What's Stopping Me?

There are several ways to make crypto's future less daunting to reach.

Growing a Business

Everyone Wants Meaningful Work. But What Does That Look Like, Really?

More people than ever are searching for work that has meaning. But nobody can agree on how to find it, provide it, or even define it. So we set out to try.

Business News

Gap Poaches Top Mattel Exec as Its New CEO in a Bid to Boost Declining Sales

Richard Dickson was hired for his expertise in brand transformation.

Cryptocurrency / Blockchain

Is Cryptocurrency the Future of Real Estate Transactions? Here's What You Should Know.

Discussing cryptocurrency's influence on the real estate industry and what the future may look like.