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The Women Stimulating The UK Economy

What are the women who are investing into innovative British SMEs ?

As outlined in the British Business Bank’s Equity Tracker report of 2018, the proportion of equity in the UK going to companies with at least one female founder has declined to 18% from 20% in 2017. Companies with female founders were only five per cent of total deals and only two per cent of total investment value. With such media coverage regarding women in business and tech, it still highlights the gargantuan challenge for female-founded businesses to access sufficient investment to scale up.

Women, great workers no matter where they are
Women, great workers no matter where they are

We know that female founders are more likely to get funded at seed stage with 24% of all seed stage deals being in companies with at least one female founder. This however does reveal the challenges that women founders have in accessing growth stage capital. The magnitude of the task to get women their fair proportion of equity is vast. There is a significant need for the efforts of womenin equity deals to be recognised and the provision for further encouragement must be heralded. There is a clear appetite among women investors to back women founders or co-founders with a majority (54%), of those who invested in women-founded businesses having invested in at least one company founded by women, with nearly 20% having invested in three to ten women founders. Women are therefore essential in spearheading dynamism in the SME arena and steps towards greater parity need to be accomplished.

In light of this, the UK Business Angels Association have decided to profile the top eight female investors into innovative British businesses in the hope of continuing their endeavoured approach to encouraging greater female activity within investment deals. As further recognition of the fantastic investment supported by these female business leaders, the UK Business Angels Association have decided to nominate each of these eight investment leaders for the category of Best Woman-led Investment in Innovation at their annual awards ceremony.

The eight nominees are as follows;

Amanda Dyjeconski’s investment Big Couch

Amanda works with you to design your brand customer experience. That’s the customer effort, emotional connection and outcome, at every touch point on their journey. Amanda’s solution is tailor-made for your brand with support to implement the new brand vision.

Big Couch was co-founded by Maria Tanjala and Irina Albita in 2014, they have established a reputation as a fintech startup in the film industry, working on an innovative co-finance model which has been helping film producers fund their films in the UK, Europe and NY since 2015.

Arlene Adam’s investment in Storyshare

Arlene is a strategic and dynamic Chair and Non-Exec focused on high growth SaaS businesses. 25 years of experience in the technology market including roles as Chair, Non Exec, Founder, CEO and Sales Director. Arlene has operated in start-up mode through to managing a $1 billion product business.

StoryShare is a SaaS Mobile Employee Experience Platform. Delivering great digital communication & learning experiences that radically increase employee engagement.

Bryony Moore’s investment in Elifinity

Bryony offers a wealth of experience in the arena of business development and management consultancy, offering expertise advice for institutions such as Brunel University in London, preforming in roles such as a non-exec advisor to the Chair Business School.

Elifinity is an app designed to help anyone who struggles with money management but specifically students, young people starting out in life and those refused a loan or credit.

Elizabeth Gooch MBE’s investment in Nivo

Elizabeth founded eg solutions, a tech firm that emerged into the technology market with a worth close to $3bn and their software was benchmarked by analysts as the industry standard. Elizabeth already has a significant number of accolades to her name, winning The Telegraph’s Most Disruptive Entrepreneurs, Finance Monthly CEO Award, PCR’s Top 50 Women in Technology, West Midlands Women of the Year Outstanding Contribution to Technology Award, Awarded MBE in Queens Birthday Honours list 2012.

Nivo have combined bank standard identity verification with secure instant messaging. Nivo’s network offers the convenience of an interface like WhatsApp but where both sides of a conversation can trust the other is who they say they are. Users can use the latest technologies to identify customers, and you can share information, images and files effortlessly.

Fiona Dent’s investment in Tracknomics

Fiona is a strategic, high-energy, creative and engaging board director with over 20 years of experience of leading innovation and transformation. One of Fiona’s greatest assets is her ability to be successful operating across both high-growth and heavily-disrupted sectors.

Trackonomics is a leading enterprise-level aggregation and automation platform for performance marketers. The company builds tools that allow businesses to extract the maximum value from affiliate marketing, by giving them data, insight and control. Working with many Fortune500 media publishing companies, Trackonomics is trusted as the only platform capable of providing the automation required by publishers in order to achieve scale – efficiently.

Joo Hee Lee and Vin Murria’s investment in Taina Technology

Joo is a multi-asset multi-factor investment solutions strategist and quantitative portfolio manager with a long trackrecord. Noted for the creation and management of systematic asset allocation strategies for large institutionalinvestors incl. pension funds and sovereign wealth funds

Vin Murria’s career has included a combination of venture capital, private equity and CEO/operational experience, centred around twenty years of M&A activity in the software sector. Her recent past includes 7 years as Chief Executive Officer of Advanced Computer Software plc, which she founded in 2008. Advanced is a consolidator in the healthcare and business solutions sector which, in March 2015 was acquired by Vista Private Equity for £765m (circa $1.2Bn).

Taina Technology is a RegTech start up with a mission to help financial institutions automate their regulatory compliance and deliver superior customer experience.

Liz McKenzie’s investment in Tended

Liz is typified by her strategic thinking, penchant for open questioning, cultivating a learning culture style developed through first-hand experience at Toyota. Liz is also described as a change agent, transforming both organisationally and through infrastructure towards a common vision, delivering both income growth and cost contraction.

Tended creates simple-to-use, intelligent and low-cost personal safety wearables and safety monitoring systems. Using an innovative combination of machine learning and wearable technology, Tended’s devices detect accidents as soon as they happen and send out an alert containing crucial information to the wearer’s emergency contacts or the emergency services. Requesting aid when the user needs it most, Tended’s devices help to offer assurance, independence and peace of mind, whatever activity is being undertaken.

Stephanie Allen’s investment in CityFalcon

By trade, Stephanie is a Trader & Managing Director at a West End-based hedge fund, and have previously worked in fixed income, equity and private equity markets. Outside of the office, I am an active early-to-late stage investor in small businesses across a broad range of industries – and acts both as an investor and mentor to the companies she is involved in.

CityFalcon provides personalised financial news by leveraging artificial intelligence, push notifications, and voice technologies. Their users access crowdsourced, real-time news and tweets for their portfolios from over 200 online publications and Twitter.

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