We hold this truth to be self-evident: All people are created equal.
- Fact: Female CEOs receive a dismal 2.7% of all venture capital.
- Fact: Only 6% of Fortune 500 companies are run by women.
- Fact: Only 19.9% of board-of-director seats are held by women.
- Fact: Fewer than 50 women have been elected to the Senate in United States history.
- Fact: Women didn’t have the right to vote in the United States until 1920.
Remnants, all, of a nation founded on the premise of all men being created equal (and by conscious exclusion, women being lesser). Remnants backed by data. According to a 2015 Pew Research Center survey, 43 percent of Americans believe that women in executive business positions are held to higher standards than men. The same percentage of respondents believe that people and companies in the United States aren’t prepared to hire women for these top-tier positions.
This situation persists, even in Maine, though only anecdotal evidence is available at this point, despite proof that it’s detrimental to overall business success. Hiring and investing in women has a magnitude of positive impacts for the success of a company. Even though funded less, women-owned startups tend to have higher overall four-year survival rates and increased return on assets, are able to acutely identify needs for the largest growing market base, and lead a new level of innovation.
“Research has shown that more diversity of thought inquiry (in gender and ethnicity) at both the board table and in leadership generates more robust discussion and profitable results,” said Sandra Stone, chair emeritus of Maine Angels. “A win-win.”
Creating a new normal, where all people are considered inherently capable of any job is a matter of us reaching a critical mass. We must work together to change this data, to end this bias, by getting more women into positions of leadership and influence. Until then, the professional culture in the United States will continue to favor men, both in wages and in overall sentiment.
Frankly, we’re still swimming upstream. With a steady undercurrent of ingrained assumptions about gender relating to ability and constitution, it’s difficult to move the needle. Massive unconscious biases still rule the roost in most organizations. Workplace sexual harassment of women by men, in which women are forced into no-win situations by men in positions of power is an ugly underbelly of corporate United States that is bigger today than most want to admit in the post-June Cleaver and post-Title IX eras.
It’s difficult for women, and men who stand for equality, to voice their own ideas and to stand for what’s right when we’re as far from a tipping point as we are today. It is risky to stand outside the powerful majority. There’s tremendous pressure to assimilate for your own survival rather than risking your place in the group by challenging the status quo. So even when women get “in,” it’s hard for them to truly be free to exert their influence and let their capabilities shine.
Small and midsize cities are the most welcoming for aspiring female entrepreneurs so far. In 2017, Maine had one of the highest rates in the country for female entrepreneurship at 7.02%.
Amy Bassett, Maine District Director of the Small Business Association, highlights the improving climate here and the challenges that remain: “Women tend to be natural entrepreneurs, but they face distinct challenges and hurdles. They tend to be non-employers which can be isolating at times. Fortunately, in Maine there is a vibrant ecosystem of resources specifically designed to help women looking to start or grow businesses.”
How can we take 7% and make it 25% here in Maine? How can we lead this movement?
1. Start ‘em early. Teach entrepreneurship and leadership skills to girls in elementary, middle, and high school. Create environments to evoke not only their natural intelligence, but also their courageousness and resilience.
2. Talk about the elephants in the (board)room. Discuss biases openly and change our hiring tactics, promoting tracts, and investing processes. With women in the boardroom and at the investor table, more women have the opportunity to receive funding and advance their careers.
3. Band together. Form strong professional networks and be an advocate for yourself and others. Push to have tough conversations about ethics in the workplace. Speak out continuously on the “little things” that aren’t right and don’t have to be accepted any longer. Pull your tribe along with you. Give support to and mentor those around you.
4. Join the crowd on October 26th for the screening of the film She Started It and a discussion to follow. We’ll be discussing funding, leadership, mentoring, innovative solutions and ways Maine can continue to rally together to change this data. Changing this data means changing the lives of many for the better. It means moving us all closer to a society in which it’s a self-evident truth that all people are created equal.
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