15 female-focused VC opportunities (UK)

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Customisable business insurance
28 September 2021
5 minute read

Venture capital (VC) for women: the female focus

Just 18% of UK women planned to start a business in 2021, compared to 29% of men, with financial concerns the number one problem. This is according to a Female Entrepreneurship Index created by Tide.

While the figures are slightly higher than those of previous years, these numbers are reminiscent of those found in the 2019 Alison Rose Review of Female Entrepreneurship (The Rose Review), which found that a lower number of women wanted to start a business compared to men.

In response, the government committed to a new Investing in Female Entrepreneurs Code, designed to support the advancement of female entrepreneurship in the UK by improving access to tools, resources and finance. Businesses can sign the code and help the government and the industry understand the barriers by providing data, taking responsibility and creating a benchmark.

It was an intentional step forward, but what can female entrepreneurs do right now, to access funding more effectively?

Startup funding is still the #1 barrier

The Rose Review’s detailed research identified three major opportunities to support female entrepreneurs in the UK:

  1. Increasing the funding directed towards them;
  2. Greater family care support; and,
  3. Making entrepreneurship more accessible for women and increasing support locally, through relatable and accessible mentors and networks.

Despite the pandemic somewhat hindering the expected headway in these areas, progress has been made, which can be seen in the Investing in Women Code Annual Progress report 2021.

While the progress report reinforced that women are still underrepresented in receiving venture capital and angel finance, it highlights improvements for women in bank financing and approved loan amounts.

It also stated that signatories of the Code 'provide a greater proportion of finance to female-led businesses than the market'. This sbows proactivity among the signatories, which will no doubt continue.

Women need to see it

Investment teams make the dream a reality for entrepreneurs, whether it’s starting up or scaling. But with such a glaring gap in female representation on those teams, a trickle-down effect is that women launch businesses with 53% less capital than men.

The Review highlights the real need for an increase in funding directed towards female entrepreneurs. Access and awareness are a primary issue, preventing scale up at every stage of the journey and penalising female-led and all-female teams. In fact, only 1% of all venture funding goes to businesses founded by all-female teams.

VCs for women – we need ‘access and awareness’

The British Business Bank’s UK VC & Female Founders report, commissioned by the government in 2017, found that for every £1 of VC investment, all-female founder teams get less than 1p. This is made more stark when you realise that all-male founder teams get 89p, and the final 10p goes to mixed gender teams.

So there’s the Code to adopt, recommendations to make real and data to change, but what can women in the UK do right now about bucking the trend and finding funding? There are good resources for the taking, but as the Rose Review points out, this is useless unless access is open and women are aware of it.

Here’s our list of 15 UK VC and funding initiatives with a female focus, or networks specifically designed to raise awareness of VC designed for women. From a newsletter to a global fund, the right one may be the turn-key for a game-changing investment in your business.

15 female-focused UK venture funds (and funding networks)

1. Angel Academe

Founded in 2014, Angel Acadame invests in tech companies with at least one woman on the founding team. It’s an award-winning angel network, and 80% of its 400 investors are women.

2. Angel Investment Network

Angel Investment has a curated list of businesses led by one or more female founders on the UK Angel Investment Network. It’s part of their wider goal to join the dots for a community interested in funding and supporting women-led businesses.

3. Astia

This is an expert community with a shared goal – to level the playing field for female entrepreneurs by providing access to capital. Astia is powered by a global network of over 5,000 investors, and sponsored by Google for Startups, J.P. Morgan, and the Three Guineas Fund, based on Virginia Woolf’s original manifesto.

4. BBG Ventures

An early stage fund, BBG Ventures is focused on consumer tech startups with a female founder. Their portfolio includes membership-based women’s club The Wing and Zola, the innovative wedding registry platform.

5. The British Business Bank

The British Business Bank, in collaboration with Diversity VC and BVCA, have published a pioneering study, examining the current state of play for VC and female founders in the UK. The report ends with an action plan, challenging firms on issues of diversity and inclusion. Watch out for new female-focused funding options from the bank, as a result.

6. Cartier Women’s Initiative

This is an annual international programme with an ambitious, specific set of criteria. It’s open to women-run and women-owned businesses who have a strong and sustainable social and/or environmental impact. Cartier’s initiative has raised $3 million since 2006 for female entrepreneurs.

7. Catalyst at Large

Suzanne Beigel founded Catalyst at Large to put a ‘gender lens’ on investing. It’s not in itself a fund, but an organisation doing great, gender-focused work across investment, philanthropy, international development and entrepreneurship.

8. Diversity VC

This is a non-profit partnership, focused on promoting diversity in VC. Diversity VC helps investment firms hire from diverse backgrounds, aiming to broaden out the industry and provide a healthier, more representative web of global VC opportunities.

9. Female Founders Fund

Another early stage fund, investing in exceptional female talent. The Female Founders Fund has invested in a wide range of ventures, from Peanut – a local connection app for mothers – to Billie, the female-first shave and body brand.

10. Femstreet

A weekly newsletter set up by Sarah Nöckel, VC investor at Dawn Capital, the largest VC fund dedicated to B2B software and fintech startups across Europe. Femstreet focuses on news on women in tech and VC.

11. Girl Geeks with Transmit Start-Ups

For instant signposting, head to STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics industry) leading support network Girl Geeks. They’ve partnered with Transmit Start-Ups to help women prepare for pitching and access finance.

12. Global Fund for Women

This is a global fund, championing the human rights of girls and women. It shines a spotlight on critical issues, building investment interest and appetite. Founded in 1986, the Global Fund for Women has raised hundreds of millions for female enterprise across the globe.

13. Global Invest Her

Another global fund, helping prepare female founders for their funding journey, and fast-track their success. Global Invest Her are aiming to get one million female founders funded by 2030.

14. Jane VC

Hit their website and the mission is clear to see. Jane VC invest in visionary, female-led startups. With a laser focus on access, they’ve invested in a broad portfolio, including Vault, a UK misconduct-reporting platform and Hatch Apps, a Washington-based platform known as the Wordpress for mobile apps.

15. Voulez Capital

Last but not least, Voulez Capital is Europe’s first VC fund for female founders. They provide seed and Series A capital to high-growth female-founded businesses and have invested in Femedic, the women’s health information platform and Evrelab, drivers of transparency around toiletry product information.

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