Gadgets

The portion of VC-backed startups founded by women stays stubbornly stagnant


It was a tumultuous year for the technology industry, with sexual harassmentpay gaps and under-representation of women often dominating the headlines. The technology industry’s belief that its mission is to change the world has steeply contrasted with its discriminatory treatment of women.

And while sexism was not born in Silicon Valley, sexual harassment is proving to be toxic for business, as experienced by UberSoFiBinary Capital and others. As part of our larger Q4 and 2017 coverage, let’s see how the venture industry invested in women last year.

Female founders by first funding year

As part of Crunchbase’s continuing study of female founders, we count 54,702 global companies with founders that had an initial funding between 2009 to 2017. Of these global companies, 8,821 (16 percent) have at least one female founder.

From 2009 to 2012, the percent of venture-funded companies with women founders increased by nearly 8 percent. However, the percentage of women-founded venture-backed companies globally has plateaued at approximately 17 percent since 2012. And as we come to the end of 2017, six years on, that percent has not shifted.

The absolute number of companies (along with the total number of startups) with a female founder grew more than eightfold, from 186 in 2009 to 1,588 in 2016. This number went down to to 1,047 in 2017 as fewer startups were funded during the year. As more startups are added to Crunchbase in 2018 with initial funding accredited to 2017, we expect the 2017 absolute count of startups with a female founder to go up; however, it may not reach the absolute numbers recorded in 2016.

Seed-stage funding in female-led startups

Seed amounts in female-only founded startups since 2012 hovered between four and five percent of all seed dollars, with 2017 representing six percent with $277 million invested. Female-and-male co-founded teams hovered between 11 and 13 percent. Male-only founded teams raised between 85 and 83 percent of all seed invested dollars, dipping to 83 percent in 2017.

Venture funding in female-led startups

Venture amounts in female-only founded startups since 2012 have remained at three percent of all venture dollars, representing $3.8 billion in 2017. Female-and-male co-founded teams hovered between seven and eight percent, rising to 10 percent in 2017. Male-only founded teams raised between 86 and 90 percent of all venture invested dollars, dipping to 86 percent in 2017.

Women aren’t being funded equally

How much funding female founders raise is a critical number for the industry. We reported earlier in 2017 that, at the seed stage, women-only teams raise on average $82 for every $100 a male-founded team raises. For early-stage venture, women fared worse, with an average $77 for every $100 a male-founded team raised since 2010.

Women in Venture report

For our “Women in Venture” report, the number of female partners at the top 100 venture firms went up by one percent over the last 18 months, from seven to eight percent. At best, this increase in women VCs is glacial progress. This represented 64 female partners out of 752 partners at the top 100 firms.

2017 has not been a watershed year when it comes to the amount of funding female founders raise. However, it has been a year in which the celebration of frat-boy culture in tech is hopefully on its way out.

Featured Image: Li-Anne Dias

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