Khaleej Times

Seed crowdfundi­ng expects more women backers in ME

- Waheed Abbas

dubai — Though men led women in seed crowdfundi­ng in the Middle East, but women outperform­ed their male counterpar­ts in achieving the financial goals, says a newly-released study.

A total of 97 campaigns were successful­ly funded in the region in 2015 and 2016, 24 of which were female-led and 73 male-led. And while the number of campaigns funded in the region is still relatively low vis-a-vis more establishe­d territorie­s, however, seed crowdfundi­ng is still relatively new to the region. Average pledge amounts to female-led campaigns are 29 per cent higher than maleled campaigns, compared with a difference of only 5 per cent globally, said PwC and The Crowdfundi­ng Centre report – Women Unbound: Unleashing female entreprene­urial potential.

Seed crowdfundi­ng generated a total financing of $ 3.25 million (with $527,300 going to female led campaigns) in the Middle East for 2015 and 2016, with female-led campaigns in the Middle East generating an estimated 5,320 backers, compared with 4,240 for those that were male-led, it added.

Meanwhile globally, 72 per cent of crowdfunde­rs are male to 28 per cent female, while in the Middle East 83 per cent of crowdfunde­rs are male to 17 per cent female. It was also revealed that women in the Middle East do better than their male counterpar­ts in achieving their finance goals through seed crowdfundi­ng (10 per cent vs 6 per cent respective­ly).

Stuart Scoular, PwC Middle East Financial Services Partner, said: “The findings of pose a strong challenge to existing entreprene­urial and business norms by seriously questionin­g whether there are deeprooted biases that are preventing greater access to funding by female entreprene­urs. This is concerning.”

He added: “The fact that the numbers also ring true for the Middle East is evidence that the region’s start-up ecosystem is one to keep a close eye on. Even though crowdfundi­ng and peer-to-peer lending is still a relative novelty in the region, we expect to see an increase in their adoption as alternativ­e sources of financing as the entreprene­urship landscape of the region matures with much of that growth being led by women.” Emma Campbell, PwC Middle East People, Diversity and Inclusion Leader, said: “The numbers for the Middle East paint a really encouragin­g picture: although still in its infancy, seed crowdfundi­ng is proving to be a powerful tool for budding female entreprene­urs to get financing, with average pledge amounts to female-led campaigns 29 per cent higher than male-led campaigns; globally, that difference is 5 per cent: this stark contrast mirrors the realities of a thriving female-led leadership in the region.”

— waheedabba­s@khaleejtim­es.com

 ?? — Alamy.com ?? Seed crowdfundi­ng generated a total financing of $3.25 million (with $527,300 going to female led campaigns) in the Middle East for 2015 and 2016, with female-led campaigns generating an estimated 5,320 backers, compared with 4,240 for those that were...
— Alamy.com Seed crowdfundi­ng generated a total financing of $3.25 million (with $527,300 going to female led campaigns) in the Middle East for 2015 and 2016, with female-led campaigns generating an estimated 5,320 backers, compared with 4,240 for those that were...

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