The Scotsman

Digital community to help UK women smash glass ceiling

● Course features business leaders such as Cath Kidston and Nicola Mendelsohn

- By HANNAH BURLEY hannah.burley@jpress.co.uk

A new digital academy designed to help women succeed in business is inviting entreprene­urs and executives across Scotland to sign up for its ten-week programme, in a fresh attempt to address the gender imbalance in the business community.

The Allbright Academy, run by the Allbright organisati­on, is an online course and community aiming to help businesswo­men “smash corporate glass ceilings” and build “work sisterhood­s”.

The free ten-week digital programme, beginning in November, is being delivered by high-profile UK female business leaders, such as designer Cath Kidston, Facebook vice-president Nicola Mendelsohn, and Cosmopolit­an editor Farrah Storr.

More than 3,000 people have already signed up to the academy, which is open to women across the UK and is supported by regional voluntary ambassador­s who coordinate regular in-person meetings, including in Edinburgh and Glasgow, which enable local women to connect.

Fashion designer and startup founder Elaine Mckenzie will coordinate meet-ups for enrolled participan­ts in the Scottish capital, which begin next week at Harvey Nichols’ St Andrew Square store. Glasgow events will be held at Malmaison, with the first taking place on 30 October.

In a recent survey commission­ed by Allbright, 9 per cent of women in Scotland said they wanted to start their own business or be self-employed within a year, with a further 11 per cent undecided about taking an entreprene­urial leap.

Allbright, set up by serial entreprene­ur Debbie Wosskow and former Hearst UK chief executive, Anna Jones, takes its name from former US Secretary of State, Madeline Albright, who famously said: “There’s a special place in hell for women who don’t help other women.”

Wosskow, who last year sold her company Love Home Swap for $53m (£40m), said: “We know that lack of confidence, especially in the 25 to 35 age group, is one of the reasons that women who want to start a business don’t. Allbright is on a mission to change this.

“The Allbright Academy will be a lifeline for many budding entreprene­urs and business women and in particular, the ‘Doing It For Yourself’ section is something that would have helped me enormously if it was available when I set up my first business.”

Jones, the first female chief executive at Hearst UK in 100 years, added: “Our vision is for the Allbright Academy to upskill many thousands of women across the UK, whether women in business or entreprene­urs.

“The ‘Smashing The Glass Ceiling’ section will give corporate women the skills, tools, confidence and connection­s to super-charge their careers.”

Allbright also runs monthly pitch events for female founders across the country to connect with potential investors and is the organisati­on behind the Foundher networking event and festival that took place in Glasgow in July.

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