Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Women Entrepreneur
Women Entrepreneur
DEFINITION
Women Entrepreneurs may be defined as the women or a group of women who initiate, organize and operate a business enterprise. Government of India has defined women entrepreneurs as an enterprise owned and controlled by a women having a minimum financial interest of 51% of the capital and giving at least 51% of employment generated in the enterprise to women.
CATEGORIES OF WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS Women in organized & unorganized sector Women in traditional & modern industries Women in urban & rural areas Women in large scale and small scale industries. Single women and joint venture.
SUPPORTIVE MEASURES FOR WOMEN S ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP Direct & indirect financial support Yojana schemes and programme Technological training and awards Federations and associations
TECHNOLOGICAL TRAINING AND AWARDS Stree Shakti Package by SBI Various training programmes by Entrepreneurship Development Institute of India Trade Related Entrepreneurship Assistance and Development (TREAD) National Institute of Small Business Extension Training (NSIBET) Women s University of Mumbai
No of Units Registered 9618 7980 5487 4791 4339 3872 3822 2967 14576 57,452
No. of Women Entrepreneurs 2930 3180 2135 1618 1394 1538 1026 842 4185 18,848
Percentage 30.36 39.84 38.91 33.77 32.12 39.72 26.84 28.38 28.71 32.82
Total
SOME EXAMPLES
Mahila Grih Udyog 7 ladies started in 1959: Lizzat Pappad Lakme Simon Tata Herbal Heritage Ms. Shahnaz Hussain Balaji films Ekta Kapoor
Naina Lal Kidwai, Investment Banker Fortune magazine listed her as one of the world s most powerful business women in 2003. India Inc recognises her as one of its most powerful investment bankers. But Naina Lal Kidwai, HSBC s deputy CEO, can t be reduced to simple woman-banker equations; her professional vision transcends gender
Shahnaz Husain, Herbal Beauty Queen She s the "Estee Lauder of India", with even famous department stores like Galleries Lafayette in Paris, Harrods and Selfridges in London and Bloomingdales in New York stocking her cosmetics, creams and lotions.
Lalita Gupte, Banker She has created a formidable global presence of what was once a native development finance institution. Account-holders can now bank at ICICI branches in UK, the Far East, West Asia and Canada. With ICICI since 1971, Gupte was the first woman to be inducted on the board in 1984.
Indra Krishnamurthy Nooyi, chairman and executive officer of PepsiCo, was according to Forbes magazine's 2006 poll, the fourth most powerful woman in the world. She was also named the #1 Most Powerful Woman in Business in 2006 by Fortune magazine. She got her bachelor's degree from Madras Christian College in 1974, entered the Business Diploma programme at the Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta, and later moved to the US to attend the Yale School of Management. Nooyi serves on the board of directors of several organizations, including Motorola, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the International Rescue Committee, and the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.