Apple Magazine

WOMEN BUSINESS OWNERS FIND WAYS TO DEAL WITH GENDER BIAS

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It can be subtle, like failing to make eye contact with a woman business owner but engaging in animated conversati­on with her male coowner. Or more blatant, like asking an owner who’s seeking investor money if she plans to have children.

Many women business owners say they’ve encountere­d gender discrimina­tion from potential investors, customers and employees who don’t grasp the reality that a woman can be a CEO, trial attorney or own a technology company. Many women are taken aback at first and don’t know how to respond to comments or behavior they find insulting, intrusive and demeaning. But over time, they find strategies to deal with bias.

When Amanda Bradford speaks at technology conference­s and forums, discussing coding and algorithms, some men tell her afterward, “this is something I didn’t expect when you opened your mouth.”They assume that because she’s a woman, she’s the marketer, not the inventor of The League, a dating app.

When Bradford sought funding for her San Francisco-based company, “I often felt like I didn’t get the credit for having the technical experience,” she says.

Gender bias persists although the number of women-owned businesses in the U.S. has grown to more than 10 million from 5.4 million in 1997. Susan Duffy, executive director of the Center for Women’s Entreprene­urial Leadership at Babson College, says that while women owners are more visible and accepted than decades ago, “someone still assumes that if you’re the CEO you’re the white guy in the suit or the white guy in the hoodie.”

Potential customers or investors often assume that Gabby Slome and Alex Douzet, two of the co-founders of dog food manufactur­er Ollie, are married. Outsiders can’t seem to get their minds around the fact that Slome, who’s married to someone else, could be running a business without her husband, or without him bankrollin­g her.

“They think, he must have funded me. They don’t understand that I’m doing this independen­tly of him,” says Slome, whose twoyear-old company is based in Manhattan.

Slome has learned to turn an uncomforta­ble moment into a pitch about Douzet and herself.

“I tell them, we met because of shared business interests, and our joint abilities and skill sets make us good business partners,” she says.

Duffy, who oversees Babson’s mentoring programs for women entreprene­urs, says gender discrimina­tion and how to deal with it are frequently discussed at program meetings.

“Have your antenna up so you know it when you see it and have two or three ready-to-go behaviors in your back pocket to manage it in the moment for the best outcome,” Duffy says.

Sally Strebel has noticed that when her male business partner leaves her side at meetings, “other men will approach and ask me a question about my company and then tell me how they are building something better and that I should watch out.” Strebel, co-founder of Pagely, a website hosting company based in Tucson, Arizona, realizes they want to intimidate her.

She’s also been in meetings where she wasn’t given the chance to speak. For a while, she was silent. But as time went on, she realized that she has the right to speak.

“I have more power. I have a voice now. I can actually say, ‘that’s not OK,’” Strebel says.

Noushin Ketabi has noticed that when she and her husband and business partner Rob Terenzi meet with male executives, they speak to him and don’t make eye contact with her. They seem to perceive him as the ultimate decision-maker in their coffee company, Vega.

Ketabi responds by acting as an equal co-owner of the Santa Barbara, California-based firm, speaking knowledgea­bly and authoritat­ively. She also uses humor to try to ease the awkwardnes­s.

Julia Fowler confronted the potential investor who asked if she planned to have children.

“The question itself was extremely inappropri­ate and personal that had nothing to do with the company,” says Fowler, co-founder of Edited, a retail technology company with offices in New York, San Francisco and London.

At first Fowler was taken aback. Then, at a second meeting, she raised the issue.

“I said to the partner who had asked, ‘I want to understand why this is important to you.’ He didn’t have an explanatio­n,” Fowler says.

Fowler’s assertiven­ess wasn’t a problem: Edited got the money.

Michelle Kennedy has found potential investors don’t trust that she knows her product and the market for it. She did market research before seeking investor funding for Peanut, an app that helps mothers connect with one another. But even as recently as 2016, potential investors would say, “I don’t know. I need to speak to my wife or my secretary, my sister, my daughter who will know better” than she does, Kennedy says.

Kennedy encounters less bias lately because she can show revenue and earnings numbers that prove her ability to run a company.

Gender discrimina­tion is often a topic of discussion when Elizabeth Pekin attends conference­s with other women trial attorneys. They ask each other, “what do you say?”

“Everyone is a little shocked when it happens and it’s harder than you think,” says Pekin, cofounder of Momentum Funding, a company that helps people finance litigation costs. “They’ve told me that when they go to court and sit at the bench, the defense attorney ignores them, thinking they’re the paralegal.”

Pekin advises women to market themselves as being qualified simply because they are women.

“Being a woman is something that can be a launching pad,” she says.

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