Women and Equalities Minister : Speech at The Telegraph's
Women Mean Business event on Wednesday 31
October.
Good morning.
This is a really important event.
Not just because if we get the right environment and the right
support we can have 1.1 billion more women entrepreneurs and £95
billion added to the UK economy by 2025.
Not just because the #metoo movement is more than just a
statement of shared experience that is shouting for inclusion,
but today is important for another reason too.
You are going to be hearing from some big names and some amazing
business leaders today, but it is also important to think about
those leaders that you won’t hear from today and will never hear
from.
Like some of you, I spent some of my childhood in a single parent
family. And I can tell you, you are seeing just as much physical
leadership in the heart of British households as you will in any
wealthy cooperation.
Don’t tell working women who are left to juggle the bread winning
and the childcare about logistics and procurement.
Don’t tell these people about hard work. They are often working
two or three jobs whilst keeping businesses going. We often talk
about entrepreneurship as if it is always a choice but these
people don’t do it because they’d like to be on the front of
Forbes magazine or Fortune. They do it because they can’t.
They can’t find employers who understand flexible hours or the
unique problem faced by juggling priorities with debts, they just
do it themselves.
They reinvent the world one day at a time, and they do it
quietly.
Financially fragile, women with multiple caring responsibilities,
women whose partners careers have been the priority.
It was once said necessity was the mother of invention but it’s
actually the other way around.
These entrepreneurial mothers are the invention of necessity, and
I want them to thrive.
These people are resilient, resourceful and remarkable leaders
and I wish our great business schools would spend more time
studying them.
You don’t hear much about them because getting on social media or
joining a political organisation when you are working 18 hours a
day is tough.
You don’t have time to listen, or talk, or network, or come to
events like this.
You only have time do what needs to be done. Remember Ginger
Rogers saying that she did everything Fred Astaire did but she
did it backwards and in heels?
Well these days it is more likely to be with no back up and in
debt.
And for too long women have endured being at best patronised and
at worst being casually insulted by a generation of men that
elevated confidence to entitlement.
And so, as we call for change today and we focus on the barriers
on attitudes to change and more women taking decisions in venture
capital, we should also think about the conditions for success.
Did you know that the fastest growing group of entrepreneurs in
the US are black women, running about 2.4 million businesses
across the country?
And guess which group has the least access to capital?
Yeah, you guessed it.
And there are roughly the same percentage of women, working in,
and taking decisions in venture capital in the UK as in the US -
very few.
So what’s the difference, why in some parts of the United States
are women entrepreneurs thriving, despite this?
Access to capital is one part, but its more so about skills,
about confidence, and it’s about networks and support.
So when you listen to the amazing speakers you are going to hear
today, from Mumsnet founder Justine Roberts, who built her
business around her personal view that she recognised others had
too.
And Mary Portas who credits her success to collaborative
colleagues and networks.
And when you hear what has made a difference, such as Innovate
UK’s Women in Innovation campaign, which resulted in a 70%
increase in registrations for funding in female applicants.
Let us think how we can take that and translate that for the
women who aren’t here today.
I am very pleased that the Treasury has announced that Alison
Rose, Chief Executive Officer for RBS Private Banking, will be
leading an independent review into the particular barriers faced
by women entrepreneurs, and the keys to their success.
We need to do more of this and learn from other nations liked the
United States.
So thank you Jo and The Telegraph for providing a platform, for
us to do this.
And thank you for being here today.
Not just for yourselves, and your own businesses and your own
ambitions but thousands of other women too.
Thank you.
Have a great day.