EVENT: Cicero hosts roundtable with Labour: Women in Tech and Darren Jones MP

by Roddy Thompson

20 March 2024

WATCH: Samantha Niblett, Founder of Labour: Women in Tech talk about her organisation.

This week, H/Advisors Cicero, in partnership with Labour: Women in Tech, was delighted to welcome Darren Jones MP, Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, to a roundtable discussion on how best to champion female entrepreneurs and boost investment in the UK science and technology sectors.

Darren explained how a Labour government would be a strong ally to the tech sector and specifically to women in tech, adding that female leaders are an untapped resource in the UK economy. Citing Rachel Reeves’ claim during her Mais Lecture that harnessing female entrepreneurship could add £200bn to UK GDP, Darren emphasised that partnership between government and tech companies is vital.

Women’s careers in tech and investment in female entrepreneurship

The roundtable centred around the challenges that the next government will have to face in this area – particularly the lack of investment in female-founded companies, which receive less than 2% of venture capital funding. The discussions shed light on how investment programmes are often inadequate in both addressing the knowledge gap that precludes women from a career in tech, as well as in identifying the firms and individuals that most deserve and would most benefit from funding.

The discussion also looked at whether the lack of women in positions to make investment decisions has an impact in the lack of investment in female-founded companies, despite the appetite among institutional investors and impressive track records of returns. Potential solutions put forward included a B-Corp style seal of approval that companies can apply for to show their commitment to invest in women. Labour’s proposals to empower the British Business Bank (BBB) with a broader remit to expand access to capital, as well as its planned reforms to reform the Apprenticeship Levy into a Skills Levy, were highlighted as promising steps forward.

Participants emphasised the need for vocal backing from government for funding and skills programmes to increase visibility of the significant work that women in tech are making to the sector and the broader economy. Such initiatives must be sufficiently well-funded to avoid over-mentoring and deliver tangible benefits to recipients.

3 areas for developing women’s advancement in the tech sector

Three key areas were identified as important for advancing the position of women in tech:

  • beginning with capital;
  • then the connections which open the door to that capital;
  • and lastly the contracts that help to match buying organisations with female-founded companies.

Darren Jones welcomed the points raised throughout the roundtable, which comes at an important time with Labour working on the delivery of three separate products that will seek to tackle the issues under discussion: the election manifesto, delivery notes (which can delve deeper into the policy detail), and Labour’s longer-term vision for government.

H/Advisors Cicero would like thank Samantha Niblett, CEO of Labour: Women in Tech. Find out more about Labour: Women in Tech’s work here: https://labourwomenintech.org/


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