海角大神

More investors get behind women鈥檚 startups in Africa

Women wearing face masks sell food stuffs at a market in Lagos Nigeria, May 4, 2020.

Sunday Alamba/AP

December 7, 2020

When 鈥楾okunboh Ishmael walked through the streets of Lagos, Nigeria鈥檚 commercial capital, there were women doing business everywhere she turned. They tended to stalls frying donuts and grilling skewers of meat. They sat behind sewing machines turning out custom-made designs and wove between cars in Nigeria鈥檚 infamous traffic jams, hawking air freshener and inflatable pool toys to bored commuters.

But inside the crisp, air-conditioned offices where she worked in banking, and later private equity, the story was different. Although Africa has the in the world, there is a funding gap of about $42 billion between men and women entrepreneurs on the continent, according to the . In 2018, for instance, African startups received in venture capital funding. Of this, just 2% went to businesses owned by women.

Ms. Ishmael is part of a growing group of women investors in Africa trying to rewrite that story by deliberately investing in businesses owned by and serving women. In 2016, she co-founded Alitheia IDF within Alitheia Capital, the private equity firm where she is managing director, to focus on exactly that. So far, the fund has raised about $70 million.

Why We Wrote This

A growing group of investors aim to fill the drastic gap between funding for men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 startups. They say it鈥檚 about more than fairness 鈥 it鈥檚 about the bottom line.

There鈥檚 a moral imperative to that work, investors like Ms. Ishmael say, because it brings women into spaces of power, wealth, and decision-making from which they鈥檝e historically been excluded.

But it also just makes good business sense.

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'Tokunboh Ishmael co-founded the Alitheia Identity Fund within Alitheia Capital. The fund has raised $70 million and has backed a number of African businesses that are led by and targeted toward women.
Courtesy of Tokunboh Ishmael

鈥淲e are operating in an area where money was being left on the table and we saw an opportunity,鈥 Ms. Ishmael says. She knew : businesses owned by women grow faster, use money more efficiently, and generate more profit than those owned by men. Diversity, more generally, makes companies more creative and innovative. 鈥淚 want Nigeria to reach its full potential and I want Africa to reach its full potential and they鈥檙e not going to do that if they don鈥檛 fully embrace the potential of women.鈥

Worldwide gap

The problem reaches beyond Africa. In the United States, all-female teams receive about 2% of venture capital funds. In the United Kingdom, the figure hovers around 1%. And the problem is compounded for women of color. In the U.S., Black female founders received just $6 of every $1 million.

The problem, experts say, is that women have been cut off from participation at every level when it comes to venture capital, private equity, and even more traditional forms of lending and investment like bank loans.

鈥淔unding is not a gender-neutral space,鈥 says Sharron McPherson, a longtime investor in African business and lecturer at the University of Cape Town鈥檚 business school. 鈥淲omen investors and women with companies to be invested in are working in spaces that were never made for them. They are swimming upstream, while men float along with the current.鈥

There are many hurdles to women鈥檚 participation, she says. On the smallest scale, only 37% of African women , compared to 48% of men, and that gap is widening, even as access to finance grows. Women are often discouraged from borrowing money, both by lenders and by their own lack of financial education.

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On the scale of startups looking for venture capital funds and established companies seeking private equity dollars, women still struggle to be taken seriously for their ideas because of conscious and unconscious gender biases. One , for instance, showed that a pitch presentation to investors given in a woman鈥檚 voice was less likely to be funded than one given in a man鈥檚 voice 鈥 even when the content was identical.

Another found that women founders were far more likely to be asked 鈥減reventative鈥 questions about their businesses 鈥 that is, questions focused on their potential losses. Men, on the other hand, were asked more 鈥減romotion鈥 questions focusing on the 鈥渦psides and potential gains鈥 of their businesses, a line of questioning that resulted in six times as much funding on average.

Many investors also come out of male-dominated fields like technology, mining, and agriculture, and are more inclined to invest in them than businesses built around products or services targeted at women, like maternal health, menstruation products, or makeup. And much of the networking that leads to those deals still happens in informal settings that women either can鈥檛 attend or aren鈥檛 invited to 鈥 like golf games and after-work drinks.

鈥淭here are invisible barriers to entry for women that men don鈥檛 see or face,鈥 says Nthabiseng Moleko, deputy chairperson of the Commission for Gender Equality in South Africa, and a development economist.

Funding change

That鈥檚 where funds like Ms. Ishmael鈥檚 Alitheia IDF come in 鈥 to direct money deliberately toward companies built around women.

鈥淭his is about finding companies with diversity at the top, but also at the bottom,鈥 she says. For example, in recent years, Alitheia Capital, Alitheia IDF鈥檚 management firm, has backed a number of African businesses that are both led by and targeted toward women. In Ghana, Alitheia funded Innovative Microfinance, a company providing small loans to rural Ghanaians without bank accounts, most of them women who own small businesses like market stalls.

And in Nigeria, Alitheia backed a woman-owned tomato paste company called Tomato Jos. About 30% of the company鈥檚 tomato producers are now women, says founder Mira Mehta, and the company is trying to increase that figure 鈥 in part because they鈥檝e found women are a better bet.

鈥淲e see our women farmers making bigger investments in their communities鈥 with their profits than the men, she says, such as using their money to pay for children鈥檚 schooling and medical care. And when it comes to farming, Ms. Mehta says the women her company works with continually have the best yields.

鈥淭ime and time again,鈥 she says, 鈥渢hey just outperform the men.鈥

Editor鈥檚 note: An earlier version of this story misstated the full name of Alitheia IDF, and its relationship to Alitheia Capital.