📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Women and Minority Founders Still Vastly Underfunded, New Report Finds While there are signs of incremental progress, insights from RateMyInvestor and Diversity VC suggest there's a long way to go in equitable funding.

By Kenny Herzog

entrepreneur daily

PeopleImages | Getty Images

A more balanced community of founders and business owners doesn't manifest itself. A new set of insights from venture-capital review platform RateMyInvestor and nonprofit partnership Diversity VC vividly underscores that reality. The organizations' second "Diversity in U.S. Startups" report, which synthesizes data on U.S. venture-backed startups between 2018-'19, was released earlier today. (The first edition, which drilled down into data from 2013-'17, was released in 2019.) In a nutshell? Most VC backers still disproportionately allocate money to companies launched by white men.

Related: Why the Voices Around Your Boardroom Table Matter

Exponentially more money was raised overall in 2018-'19 versus 2013-'17. And yet, in a press release that bluntly synopsizes its findings, the organizations share that "VC-backed startups are still significantly male (89.3%), white (71.6%), based in Silicon Valley (35.3%) and Ivy-educated (13.7%)."

The relatively encouraging news is that women are more represented on founding teams in the more recent period (10.7%, up from 9.2%), and more Asian and Black innovators are among newly vested founders (up from 17.7% to 25.2% and 1% to 1.7%, respectively). But at a wide glance, the statistics still speak to ingrained biases and myriad other factors preventing entrepreneurialism's most anticipate disruption: parity in participation. (For more on this topic, we recommend Entrepreneur contributor Mary Spio's 2020 story, "A Brief Guide to Letting Black Entrepreneurs Be Entrepreneurs.")

As for the report's methodology, its authors examined, "the top 100 U.S. VC firms by deal activity (which accounted for $68B in funding), the 3,304 companies they invested in and the 7,705 founders at the helm of those companies."

In the release, RateMyInvestor Advisor Aisling Carlson remarked, "The woeful inequity and inequality of opportunity for marginalized groups that persists in the Venture Capital and Startup space is beginning to be addressed, but there is a long way to go." She added that their research "highlights the need for continued collective action to reform the industry."

Kenny Herzog

Entrepreneur Staff

Digital Content Director

Kenny Herzog is currently Digital Content Director at Entrepreneur Media. Previously, he has served as Editor in Chief or Managing Editor for several online and print publications, and contributed his byline to outlets including Rolling Stone, New York Magazine/Vulture, Esquire, The Ringer, Men's Health, TimeOut New York, A.V. Club, Men's Journal, Mic, Mel, Nylon and many more.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business News

'Everyone Is in Complete Shock': A 500-Person Tesla Team Found Out 'in the Middle of the Night' Their Charger Division Was Laid Off

Other car companies that use the technology, such as General Motors and Ford, also weren't expecting the news, according to reports.

Business News

There Are Only 6 Major Cities Left in the U.S. With 'Affordable' Homes Matching Median Incomes — Here's the List

Homeownership is not affordable for the typical household in 44 of the 50 largest cities in the U.S.

Side Hustle

He Started a Salty Backyard Side Hustle That Out-Earned His Full-Time Job and Now Makes Over $1 Million a Year: 'Take the Leap'

In 2011, Kyle Needham turned his passion for oysters into a business that saw consistent monthly revenue "right away."

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

James Clear's Atoms App Promises to Help Break Bad Habits and Create Better Ones — Here's How It Works

The app turns Clear's best-selling book, "Atomic Habits," into something actionable.