Overcoming Investing Bias: Part One
Dec 13, 2020
Shellye Archambeau Contributor
ForbesWomen
I am one of tech’s first Black female CEOs, a Board Director & Author.
“Should private equity, venture capital and other investors invest in underrepresented
minorities and women simply because it’s the right thing to do?”
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It’s an appropriate question. The funding gap for women and multicultural
entrepreneurs is very real and remains huge when compared with men and white
founders.
It’s asked frequently. And it’s asked with increased frequency, largely due to the
impact of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement. The specific query: Has the
recent raised awareness generated by BLM changed the investment habits of the
PE and VC sectors?
And it isn’t adequately addressed with a one-word answer. There obviously are
those in both the “yes” and “no” camps. It isn’t that simple, however.
The Challenge
The reality is stark.
The U.S. population is 13 percent Black, but just four percent of the venture capital
industry is Black, according to 2018 data from the National Venture Capital Association.
Two years earlier? The number was three percent.
Only one percent of venture capital investments were committed to Black founders in
2018. And, only one percent of VC-backed founders are Black, with less than two
percent Latinx. And there’s this: 82 percent of fund commitments were to all-male
teams, with 12 percent to mixed teams and six percent to all-female teams. Finally,
more than 75 percent of all funding rounds went to all-white founding teams.
It should surprise to no one, then, that the number of Black decision-makers in venture
capital in 2018 dropped to one percent — representing just seven Black people at the
102 largest venture capital firms (at least $250 million under management) in the
country, according to an annual survey by the Information, a technology-news outlet.
“The lack of access to capital is the single highest driver for business failure, and Black
founders are less likely to gain it,” says Melissa Bradley, Georgetown McDonough
School of Business Professor. “Access to capital is limited not because of demand, but
due to pattern recognition by investors, different social capital based on educational and
social choices (e.g. golf clubs), and a limited number of sponsors ... who can vouch and
validate the entrepreneurs.”
But the reality of venture capital and private equity investing is this: investors can’t
simply modify their investment thesis and start investing only because of how someone
looks or what their background is. Investors’ fiscal responsibility is to adhere to their
thesis and be prudent. It has to be about the idea, the opportunity and the team’s
experience.
In doing so, however, investors clearly need to be more aware of how their evaluation,
experience and criteria are biased. They just are. Full stop. Partner/decision-maker
demographics, dollars invested and the evaluation process demonstrate this each and
every day.
Changing the Process
Investors simply must broaden the pool of where their investment dollars can flow.
It’s tricky, though. Simply targeting more investments for underserved communities may
appear to be a start, but it isn’t the needed fix. And here’s why — talent, good ideas and
competence are evenly distributed among race, gender and geography.
“We should be well beyond this idea of separate but equal,” saysMonique Woodard, a
venture capitalist who created early stage investor Cake Ventures. “But in venture it
seems as if we are moving right back there. Black entrepreneurs don’t need a separate
water fountain. You have to fix the systemic issues in your funds that keep Black
founders out and keep you from delivering better returns.”
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According to research by Kauffman Fellows and the Kauffman Foundation,
diverse founding and executive teams generate higher median realized multiples
on acquisitions and IPOs than all-white founding and executive teams (3.3 to 2.5
and 3.3 to 2.0, respectively).
And, a study by First Round Capital found that its investments in companies with
at least one female founder performed 63 percent better than its investments with
all-male founding teams.
So, broadening the pool to include more women and people of color makes sound
business sense.
For their part, investors largely haven’t noticed.
“Over the last decade, U.S. venture capital investments quadrupled, the number of
businesses started by women grew to 40 percent, and we’ve seen growth in the number
of entrepreneurs of color,” write Ilene H. Lang and Reggie Van Lee in the Harvard
Business Review. “However, the percentage of venture capital dollars going to womenfounded companies has barely budged since 2012, and the numbers are even worse for
Black and Latinx founders.”
The reason, they add, is “well-documented”: gender and racial stereotyping,
unconscious bias, systemic economic barriers, and Silicon Valley’s preference for serial
entrepreneurs.
Going Forward
It’s a fool’s errand to believe quick fixes – especially those focused simply on “changing
percentages” – can permanently and adequately remedy a systemic problem. Instead,
solutions need to be better thought out, better targeted and implemented more
consistently across the industry. This will broaden the pool and ensure all opportunities
are evaluated with the same criteria.
A productive starting point is deal sourcing.
“Venture capital is driven by relationships and many investments are sourced via
personal referrals, usually through one’s direct networks,” Kimmy Paluch, founder and
managing partner of venture coaching and services firm Beta Boom, writes in
StartupNation. “Given the homogenous and elite nature of most partners and investors
in firms, this yields a proclivity to investing in homogeneous and elite groups.”
Going forward, then, the VC/PE industries need to address the following:
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Expand your networks. Opportunities are driven by networks. Commitments are
influenced by networks. Barriers are constructed by narrow networks.
Fix: Proactively and intentionally expand your networks to groups that include
more people of color and women.
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Increase size of prospect tent. VC/PE firms shouldn’t increase commitments to
Black, Hispanic and women entrepreneurs just because they are Black, Hispanic
and/or women. But they shouldn’t leave them out in the cold either.
Fix: The attractiveness of underrepresented founders can only be supported if
they are included in the evaluation process. VC/PE firms must create internal
protocols to broaden the pitches they hear and evaluate.
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Change the discussion paradigm. Studies show VCs ask more preventative
questions highlighting potential losses and risk when meeting with female
founders. The same happens with underrepresented minorities. When the
conversation focuses on negative areas, investors walk away with a negative gut
feeling and can’t “get excited” about the deal.
Fix: VC/PE firms need to be aware of this trap and consciously change their
approach.
Of course, these steps are only a start: There are steps founders can take to improve
their funding odds as well. We’ll address those in Part Two.
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