2019
DOI: 10.3386/w26449
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Networking Frictions in Venture Capital, and the Gender Gap in Entrepreneurship

Abstract: Exploiting random variation in the number of venture capitalist (VC) judges assigned to panels at Harvard Business School's New Venture Competition (NVC) between 2000 and 2015, we find that exposure to more VC judges increases male participants' chances of founding a VC-backed startup after HBS much more than this exposure increases female participants' chances. A survey suggests this is in part because male participants more often proactively reach out to VC judges after the NVC. Our results suggest that netw… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In a somewhat related vein,Gompers and Wang (2017) find that most venture capital firms are male-dominated, although the hiring of female partners increases when male partners have daughters instead of boys as their own children. Finally,Howell and Nanda (2019) find that male entrepreneurs have a higher propensity to network with potential investors.…”
mentioning
confidence: 83%
“…In a somewhat related vein,Gompers and Wang (2017) find that most venture capital firms are male-dominated, although the hiring of female partners increases when male partners have daughters instead of boys as their own children. Finally,Howell and Nanda (2019) find that male entrepreneurs have a higher propensity to network with potential investors.…”
mentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Fintechs are somewhat more likely to lend to Asian‐ and Hispanic‐owned firms relative to small‐ and medium‐sized banks. Motivated by evidence that women, like minorities, face challenges in accessing financing and career opportunities (Ewens and Townsend (2020), Egan, Matvos, and Seru (2022), Howell and Nanda (2022)), we also consider gender. While the disparities are smaller, the general patterns are similar: The share of loans to female‐owned firms is largest for fintech lenders and smallest for small and medium‐sized banks.…”
Section: Automation and Lending To Minority‐owned Businessesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other words, female investors, who founders already disregard, receive an even further discount (compared to their male counterparts) when they carry professional licenses. Moreover, as over 90% of VC investors are men (Gompers and Wang, 2017;Howell and Nanda 2019), the addition of female investors to our research design is likely to introduce another potential factor to our identification. This gender-related analysis results in a joint hypothesis: we are no longer merely testing the notion of accounting certification and gender difference and the differential impact of certification for different genders.…”
Section: Robustness -Gender Effect?mentioning
confidence: 99%