USA TODAY US Edition

Minkoff hoping to help women in biz

Designer launches Female Founder Collective.

- Rhonda Abrams Rhonda Abrams is the author of “SixWeek Start Up” just released in its fourth edition. Connect with Rhonda on Facebook and Twitter: @RhondaAbra­ms. Register for Rhonda’s free business tips newsletter at www.PlanningSh­op.com.

What if you wanted an easy way to help women business owners succeed? If when you went to buy something or hire someone, you could select a woman-owned business? Well, if designer/ entreprene­ur Rebecca Minkoff has her way, you’ll soon have a way to quickly identify women-owned businesses – a “female founder” symbol to look for whenever you shop or hire.

“First and foremost, we want a symbol that can be recognized on packaging, or websites, or storefront­s,” said Minkoff. “We want to galvanize a community to buy from and support each other… We can educate the consumer in the (same) way that she’s been educated to turn over and see (if a product) is non-GMO or organic.”

Since March is Women’s History Month, now’s a good time to see how women entreprene­urs – and many corporate partners – are pulling together to help women entreprene­urs succeed.

Last September, Minkoff – co-founder and creative director of the popular fashion design company that bears her name – launched the Female Founder Collective.

One of the main goals of the collective is to increase women-owned businesses’ share of sales revenue.

To do that, they launched a symbol – a seal – that women-owned businesses can use to identify themselves.

“Women are more likely to support female-owned companies if they only know how,” said Minkoff.

But the Female Founder Collective is designed to be more than a symbol. Minkoff and other collective founders aim for it to be a platform and a movement for female business leaders to connect and support each other, socially, legally and economical­ly. “There are between 1100 and 2000 female-owned businesses starting every day,” said Minkoff, “and I think those women face unique challenges that they’ve never faced before.”

“The goal is to have a directory of all these (women-owned) brands,” said Minkoff. “It will be a b2c (business to consumer) directory, and a b2b (business to business) portal for these companies to continue to help one another.”

The collective was launched in September 2018 and it already has more than 3,000 women members. “When you see a ground swell of this kind of activity it reflects a need that is not being met,” said Minkoff.

“I have 11 million businesses to reach,” said Minkoff. “I would love all them to turn lights on this seal so it’s recognizab­le and we change our shopping habits… If we’re all shopping from females, that wealth trickles up.”

Does the idea of identifyin­g businesses by gender, ethnic or religious groups bother Minkoff?

“It’s been filtered the opposite way for a really long time. So if the pendulum has to swing a little bit to get things more equalized, I’m okay with that. Men can have their own symbol.”

Minkoff has entered into a partnershi­p with Visa, which has recently launched the “She’s Next” campaign to help empower and educate female business owners.

On March 6 – Internatio­nal Women’s Day – the Collective and Visa’s She’s Next will host a day of workshops in New York City for hundreds of women entreprene­urs to help give them tools and training to help them significan­tly

One of the main goals of the collective is to increase womenowned businesses’ share of sales revenue.

scale their companies.

A recent Visa study on the State of Female Entreprene­urship indicated that 73 percent of women entreprene­urs reported having difficulty securing the funding they needed to start their businesses, so Visa and Chase will co-host a workshop on lending to help women get the loans and capital they need.

“Starting and growing a business can be both incredibly rewarding and daunting,” said Suzan Kereere, Visa’s global head of merchant sales & acquiring, who is heading up Visa’s She’s Next campaign.

“There is never enough time or enough resources, but when we work together to support each other, amazing things can happen.”

If you’re a woman business owner who wants to join the Collective, go to the Female Founders Collective website and fill out the applicatio­n.

Your company must be majorityow­ned by women.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FOR NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ?? Arianna Huffington, left, and Rebecca Minkoff
GETTY IMAGES FOR NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Arianna Huffington, left, and Rebecca Minkoff
 ?? BRYAN BEDDER/GETTY IMAGES FOR NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ?? Arianna Huffington, left, and Rebecca Minkoff attend a screening of National Geographic’s “Valley Of The Boom” at Huffington’s New York home.
BRYAN BEDDER/GETTY IMAGES FOR NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Arianna Huffington, left, and Rebecca Minkoff attend a screening of National Geographic’s “Valley Of The Boom” at Huffington’s New York home.
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