Gender Bias in Entrepreneurial Funding

"Each successful women-led business isn’t just a win for that founder – it helps pave the way for others."

In a nutshell

Women entrepreneurs face stricter investor scrutiny and receive less funding than men, but new research shows these biases can shift, offering hope for change in the startup ecosystem.

In a Bigger Nutshell

In the high-stakes world of startup funding, investors like to think they’re betting on the best ideas. But what if the best ideas aren’t even making it past the first round, not because they lack potential, but because of who’s pitching them? The truth is that women founders receive a fraction of the venture capital men do, despite running equally strong businesses. A recent study on startup pitching events, known as roadshows, sheds light on why: investors apply double standards, unconsciously holding women to stricter expectations.

The study, which tested investor reactions to startup pitches in China and the United States, found that women-led businesses consistently received less funding than their male-led counterparts, even when the pitches and business fundamentals were similar. Investors simply set the bar higher for women, demanding more proof of competence while giving men the benefit of the doubt. This isn’t just about roadshows though – it’s a symptom of a deeper bias woven into the startup ecosystem.

Research has long shown that women entrepreneurs face a different kind of scrutiny from investors. Men are asked about how they will grow and succeed, while women are more often grilled on risk and failure. Men are more likely to be perceived as “visionary entrepreneurs,” even if they lack direct experience, while women are expected to demonstrate flawless competence before securing investment. Investors unconsciously assume that women-led businesses are less scalable and that women choose “less ambitious” industries – even when their ventures are just as promising as men’s. The list of well-documented biases goes on.

Publication Date: December 23, 2024

Authors: Qian Zhang & Sirui Chen

Institutions: Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, China; Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, China

Study Type: Experimental Study

Sample Size: 669 financial practitioners across three experiments (China: 220 + 211; U.S.: 238)

Research Focus: Investigating how gender bias affects startup funding decisions in roadshows (startup pitching events), examining the role of investors’ double standards and how past investment experiences shape bias.

Research Methodology: Three controlled experiments using real-world startup pitching materials from accelerators in China and the U.S. The study manipulated entrepreneur gender and past investment scenarios to measure funding outcomes and investor bias.

Main Findings: Women entrepreneurs receive less funding due to investor-driven gender bias, with stricter competency standards applied to them than to men. However, past exposure to successful women-led startups reduces this bias, showing that investor perceptions can shift over time.

Citation: Zhang, Q., & Chen, S. (2024). “Double standards in roadshows: The impact of investors’ dynamic gender-based bias on the financing performance of women entrepreneurs.” International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research. Link

This new study adds another layer to this understanding: when investors have previously seen successful women-led businesses, their biases soften. In other words, exposure to high-performing women entrepreneurs can shift perceptions, making it less likely that future female founders will face the same degree of scepticism.

This “cohort effect” suggests that gender bias in funding isn’t set in stone – it evolves based on experience. That’s a crucial insight for founders, investors, and accelerator programmes alike. It means that increasing visibility for successful women-led startups doesn’t just help those individual businesses; it chips away at the broader bias in the ecosystem.

So what can be done? First, accelerators and investors need to acknowledge that bias isn’t just about outright discrimination – it’s often unconscious, embedded in the decision-making process. Standardising evaluation criteria, ensuring investors receive training on bias, and actively backing more women-led businesses can all help. For women entrepreneurs, this study reinforces the importance of strategic investor selection. Backers who have successfully funded women-led businesses before may be more open to doing so again, making investor history a key factor in fundraising strategy.

More broadly, this research highlights a collective responsibility. Each successful women-led business isn’t just a win for that founder – it helps pave the way for others. As more women secure funding and thrive, the biases holding them back can begin to shift, creating a more level playing field in the long run and making sure that the best ideas, no matter who pitches them, get the chance to succeed.

Learn how investor conditions shape startup outcomes in our Research Recap on when funding comes with strings attached.

More Research Recaps:

Entrepreneurship Nobel Prize – creative destruction and long-run growth (illustration)

Why Entrepreneurship Just Won the Nobel Prize

This year’s Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences was awarded for explaining how innovation-driven entrepreneurship turns stagnation into long-term economic growth. By placing creative destruction at ...
Research Recap – entrepreneurial opportunity identification (illustration)

The Skill of Seeing What Others Miss

Being able to spot entrepreneurial opportunities isn’t just luck or instinct — it’s a skill that can (and should) be taught, with the right mix ...

The Actual Skills You Need for Sustainable Entrepreneurship

Introductory entrepreneurship courses can unintentionally increase overconfidence, particularly in male students, while female students tend to show more realistic self-assessments. This gap suggests a need ...
Students learning entrepreneurship skills to improve employability

Employability and Entrepreneurship Education

Entrepreneurship education doesn’t just prepare students to start businesses — it also makes them more employable by teaching adaptability, problem-solving, and resilience.
Research recap – AI in entrepreneurship education (unexpected use)

An Unexpected Way To Use AI in Entrepreneurship Education

To help students grasp entrepreneurial mindsets in a more engaging, memorable way, AI-generated comics were used in a large undergrad course – with mixed but enlightening ...
Research recap – reality of becoming an entrepreneur (illustration)

The Bumpy Reality
of Becoming an Entrepreneur

Students’ entrepreneurial identity and intent don’t develop in neat upward curves. Even with the support of enterprise education, the process is messy, emotional, and riddled ...
Entrepreneurship education effectiveness – research illustration

When does Entrepreneurship Education Actually Work?

Making entrepreneurship education compulsory doesn’t guarantee it will stick. Too early, and students tune out. Too late, and they’ve moved on. Taught poorly, and it’s ...
Entrepreneurial resilience in entrepreneurship education

Resilience Is Not
What We Think It Is

Resilience is not a direct outcome of entrepreneurship education. It emerges when education builds the psychological resources that shape how students respond to challenges.
Illustration of the entrepreneurial learning curve and psychological capital

What Students Need to Survive
the Entrepreneurial Learning Curve

Entrepreneurial learning works best when students have the inner resources to stay steady through uncertainty, hopeful through setbacks, and confident enough to try again.
Workshop participants practising collaborative improvisation during a session on entrepreneurial decision-making under uncertainty

Stop Asking Entrepreneurs
What They Think

When we ask entrepreneurs how they think, we usually get stories – not evidence. This study replaces self-reports with real-world decision tests that reveal what ...