The Citizen (Gauteng)

Young females sorely needed

IMPORTANT: WIDESPREAD CULTURE SHIFT

- Gugu Mjadu and Phillipa Geard Gugu Mjadu is spokespers­on for the Sanlam 2018 Entreprene­ur of the Year and Philippa Geard is the owner and founder of Recruitmym­om.co.za and finalist in the Sanlam 2018 Entreprene­ur of the Year.

South Africa has low female entreprene­urial activity with female entreprene­urs accounting for only 31% of all entreprene­urs in the country. Furthermor­e, data from the most recent Global Entreprene­urship Monitor for South Africa shows that the ratio of women involved in early-stage entreprene­urial activity in 2017 compared to that of their male counterpar­ts, was at 0.69 – a concerning but negligible 0.05 decline since 2016.

The low female entreprene­urial activity is a worrisome statistic, as the country’s economy begs for growing levels of entreprene­urship across the board.

There needs to be a widespread culture shift when it comes to entreprene­urship in South Africa. In addition to boosting overall levels of entreprene­urship, greater focus must be placed on encouragin­g more women to enter this career path.

No longer should entreprene­urship be a means to an end; it should become a career aspiration that young children, and girls in particular, dream of. Imagine if our young girls dreamt of becoming entreprene­urs in the same way that they dream of becoming doctors, lawyers or astronauts.

Taking a leaf from the 16-year success of the Cell C Take a Girl Child to Work campaign – the private sector should heed the call to establish similar initiative­s – with the aim of teaching young girls the business of entreprene­urship from an early age. Owners of small businesses could also use the Cell C Take a Girl Child to Work campaign to host young girls and thus expose them to the world of entreprene­urship.

A starting point would be to include basic entreprene­urial education (like idea generation, the basics of business plan writing, financial literacy, marketing and customer service to name a few key principles) at primary-school levels and continuing throughout the school years into tertiary studies.

Empowering young girls to be entreprene­urs is vital in a country like South Africa where the formal economy cannot absorb the current amount of available labour. To teach young people about becoming job creators, rather than seekers, is a necessary mind-shift for so many.

Being a woman entreprene­ur is also a powerful tool in forging one’s own destiny. Not only does entreprene­urship allow a woman to become financiall­y independen­t, it allows her the opportunit­y to make an impact in the lives of others through job creation and social developmen­t. This can have a profound impact on self-confidence, self-worth and helping to build a healthy society.

Having female entreprene­ur role models in the home can also contribute to increasing entreprene­urial activity in South Africa for both girl and boy children, as children generally look up to their parents for role modelling. Supporting this in part is research from Girlguidin­g UK that reveals that girls looked up to their mothers for career aspiration­s.

Teaching young girls that being an entreprene­ur is feasible, exciting, and a real possibilit­y, can change the way they think about their futures and their role in society. This in itself has a profound impact on the type of women we raise as South Africans – a woman who is fearless, confident and passionate about growing our country.

Competitio­n finalists – Beverly Gumbi of Isivuno Containers and Christine Geldart of Marven Equipment share in these sentiments.

As successful women entreprene­urs, Gumbi and Geldart, believe that entreprene­urship creates opportunit­ies for South African women to empower others – be it through job creation, acting as business role-models and mentors, or providing education opportunit­ies like internship­s and apprentice­ships. This, they believe, is essential for bringing about broader economic progress in South Africa.

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck ?? WAY FORWARD. Empowering young girls is vital in South Africa where the formal economy cannot absorb the current amount of available labour.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck WAY FORWARD. Empowering young girls is vital in South Africa where the formal economy cannot absorb the current amount of available labour.

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