Inc.

“Ready to Burn It Down”: Founders Talk Sexism, Money, and Politics

Starting any fast-growing business is difficult. Starting one while female, as the flood of headlines about #MeToo and VC funding shortfalls illustrates, can seem nearly impossible.

“I was told I was too female, too old, even too blond: ‘You do not look like a CEO,’ ” says Jules Pieri, co-founder and CEO of the Grommet. Yet Pieri, who started her product launch platform in 2008 and last year sold a majority stake to Ace Hardware, is one of countless women to ignore naysayers, forge on—and find success.

Inc. and Fast Company, our sister publication, asked women who have started all kinds of businesses just how they do it. The 279 respondents to our first State of Women and Entrepreneurship survey have seen it all: internal doubts, external harassment, subtle bias, and blatant discrimination. But

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Inc.

Inc.26 min read
How They Stay On Top
Karen Robinovitz & Sara Schiller Stirring Up Hope in Unexpected Places Co-founders of the Sloomoo Institute TWO things helped Karen Robinovitz, 52 (near right), and Sara Schiller, 53, overcome the most devastating periods in their lives: friends and
Inc.2 min read
Family Office
The most stressful part of Pistola founder Grace Na's day isn't what you'd expect for the founder of a denim company with 40 employees and a factory right in Los Angeles. It's placing a lunch order for her head of tech and pattern and her head financ
Inc.3 min readSmall Business & Entrepreneurs
Screen Play
Joe Thomas and his co-founders were two weeks away from running out of money for their software startup when, in 2016, they launched a new product and went all in on prerecorded videos as a workplace communication tool. That product generated thousan

Related Books & Audiobooks