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The Funding Gap in Start-up Investing | Temie Giwa-Tubosun | TED



“It is time to close the funding gap for Black female-led start-ups the world over,” says entrepreneur Temie Giwa-Tubosun, whose company LifeBank delivers life-saving medical supplies to remote areas in Africa. Today, LifeBank operates successfully across the continent, but Giwa-Tubosun knows that barriers to funding prevent many other brilliant business ideas from blossoming. She highlights examples of impactful women-led ventures around the world — and challenges investors to help more of them thrive.

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22 Comments

  1. Most true entrepreneurs start out in garages and basements with thousands of hours of failures before success.
    Prototypes and patents get you to the investment level, not pandering and appeasement.

  2. | We must consider some of the most unlikely environments, and domains, when we are looking for startups, entrepreneurs and leaders to invest in. There are many women who, as entrepreneurs, are building and solving some of the most amazing and seemingly intractable problems. They also need investments in their startup companies |

    Here is my summary for this TED Talk.

  3. This went really well when people gave their money to the BLM leader that was also a women right? Lol that lady has several mansions now with her and I quote “white guilt money”.

  4. Jeff Bezos endured 60 failed meetings before he got the money to fund Amazon. This is nothing to do with gender or skin color or race. Stop with the appeasement and pandering requests.

  5. Most people in the world nowadays give women the highest position in the corporate where the company is going through tough times & is most likely to fail, and when it does, the woman who is given the highest authority is belittled by everyone around her. That’s the problem. Things like these promote stereotypes against women saying that, “women don’t know how to lead people in the company” & that “women are incompetent”. This is also known as the ‘Glass Cliff phenomenon’. Too disastrous, I must say, everyone should give themselves a chance to do something which would contribute to the world. It’s 2022 & the society still has the archaic beliefs of the 18th century. Everyone is highly educated in the modern world, but still, most of the people are busy trash-talking the 49% of the population of the world. And half of these people are minority, they trick the majority into believing that they are always correct. These 10% of the people are ruining the world & making the majority agree with facts based on no-evidence. ‘Collective Illusion’ is the correct term for it. There’s still time for change, imagine, if you see robots trash-talking in the future, won’t you take any action? Would you even like the robot?

  6. The market is based on demand and supply. Investors invest into concepts and not people. Investors invest into a company because they trust the company and they believe in it.. Not because of the skin color of the CEO. If there is one thing investors hate its uncertainty.
    But hey it's easy making demands when it's not your money.

  7. It's really easy to start businesses when there's literally no businesses to compete with lol. In Ghana you could literally set up a desk and put some sandals on it, and you're a business owners lol

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