Support for your startup enterprise
The ϳԹ offers support for women entrepreneurs and start-ups through toolkits from the project funded by the European Regional Development Fund from 2019 -2023. The toolkit covers topics such as:
- Social Media for Business
- Personal Effectiveness
- Time Management
- Managing Money and Risk
- Branding
- Marketing
If you’re a woman running, or thinking of running your own business, listen to our , and if you’re based in the Solent area think of joining our networking events through our Female Entrepreneurs Network.
Accelerating Women's Enterprise podcast
Hear from entrepreneurs including business owners, leaders, researchers and mentors who have been involved in the Accelerating Women’s Enterprise (AWE) Project and meet the women behind their enterprises.
Support for women: based on experience, backed by research
The support provided by the AWE programme is backed by new research. We looked into how issues of location and socio-economic status interact with gender in the context of business start-up and development.
Click on individual report listings below to gain access to the full document:
- Baseline Report 1: – The perspective of disadvantaged female entrepreneurs and stakeholders in the entrepreneurial ecosystem
- Report 2: – Evolution of the entrepreneurial ecosystem for disadvantaged female entrepreneurs
- Report 3: – The perspective of the External Committee (EC) volunteer members who are representatives of organisations in the formal entrepreneurial ecosystem
Our forthcoming reports:
- Report 4: Life at the Intersectional - Intersectional case studies of women entrepreneurs
- Report 5: The Impact of the AWE Programme on Women Entrepreneurs in France and England
- Report 6: Gendered Financial Challenges for Disadvantaged Women Entrepreneurs: Insights from France and England
Our Impact
The AWE project has provided:
- over 50 hours of new learning content to help women entrepreneurs start a business
- trained 750 women entrepreneurs
- recruited and trained more than 200 mentors
- helped over 100 women start businesses
Check out some of the women who benefited from AWE
"I just felt connected with the AWE, they could understand how I felt. I was beaming throughout the first day of the Business Builder course, it was great to be with other women who were experiencing similar issues. Everyone has been so kind and supportive." - Ceri Winfield
Ceri Winfield
Ceri Winfield is the founder of Disable the Label, a non-profit business set up to support and empower parents with disabled children, as they navigate their child’s life.
Her experience in working with disabled children, as a rehabilitation therapist, showed Ceri just how little support there is for families. In an effort to combat this, she founded Disable the Label, recently developing an app, allowing her to give free support to more than just the 15 families she was working with directly.
"The app includes a directory full of information on businesses and charities that provide services or products for children with disabilities. It also includes a podcast where we talk to different people about relevant subjects, professionals and parents talking about their experiences."
Setting up a business was not straightforward; Ceri needed funding to develop and launch the app. After finding little success in crowdfunding, Ceri’s next move was to persuade the companies involved to pay to be included in the directory but she faced difficulties in convincing them to sign up.
Despite having Dyslexia, the biggest challenge Ceri faces is running her business by herself while still working a day job.
"I’m doing everything from social media, funding applications, building the app, contacting the businesses, making and editing the podcasts, Zoom calls with all the professionals and businesses."
Ceri joined the AWE about a year ago, after creating her business. She noticed how much more confidence men seem to have in business, her own self confidence was a barrier to taking her business further.
"I just felt connected with the AWE, they could understand how I felt. I was beaming throughout the first day of the Business Builder course, it was great to be with other women who were experiencing similar issues. Everyone has been so kind and supportive."
Ceri found the Business Builder course highly informative, making strong connections, not only limited to those within the AWE. Networking with people in similar situations and sharing information with each other. The course has helped improve her self-confidence; especially when making business pitches, as this was one of her greatest weaknesses. She received 1 to 1 advice about crowdfunding, giving Ceri the confidence to try this avenue again in future.
"It opened my eyes to what it could look like, rather than how it went when I tried."
Ceri also realised that she had some valuable skills to share with others:
"I connected with another girl, on the course, and helped her to start her podcast. In return, she helped me with giving pitches which is so scary for me. It was a really supportive mix!"
Another great thing she took from the course was being matched with a mentor. Having someone to speak to made Ceri feel less isolated. Being able to receive ongoing support from a like-minded person.
"My mentor is great, she gets me 100%!"
The Disable the Label app has now launched. She is considering changing the business to a CIC – in order to apply for more funding and to build a parent portal section on the app, where parents can access more specific information. Ceri has been advertising her business in newspapers and on the radio and is currently working towards her first corporate sponsorship.
Read lessJodie Hughes
Jodie Hughes is the founder of Endometriosis South Coast, a non-profit organisation providing support and information to all those suffering from Endometriosis.
Being a businesswoman wasn’t originally on the cards for Jodie. She wanted to be a chef. With a clear career path in mind, she trained at college and became very good at her job. “I thought it was what I’d be doing for the rest of my life!”
However, she found her body could not cope with the physical demands of the kitchen, leading to a diagnosis of Endometriosis. Taking a step back, Jodie had to re-evaluate her future.
Thinking that she could perhaps share her chef skills with a new generation, she went to university to study Health and Nutrition, in the hopes of becoming a food tech teacher. “If I couldn’t cook, then I would teach other people to cook.”
Jodie found herself drawn to research around Endometriosis as part of her degree, even more so in her Masters program. The more research she did, the more she found that there was a lack of support for other sufferers in the area. Almost by accident, she found herself sharing her own experiences and signposting people to the few services available in the area. Thus, Endometriosis South Coast was born.
“I had the knowledge but getting it out there, to people, was tough. Setting up this business was my only way of doing it.”
With a lack of business experience, Jodie was aware that she needed to gain as many new skills as possible, to enable her to provide a solid service. She soon came across the Accelerating Women’s Business (AWE) program run by the ϳԹ.
“I knew I had to find something to teach me how to do things properly.”
Jodie first started on the ‘Start my Social Enterprise’ course and was surprised to find many other women experiencing the same overwhelming feeling of being out of their depth with running a business.
“It was a really good networking tool because we were all in the same position. None of us knew more than the other. It was nice to not feel so intimidated. Sometimes you go into these things thinking, ‘everyone knows so much more than me,’ but because of the way it was set up, it wasn’t intimidating at all.”
She has since attended the Business Builders course in order to enhance her skills and to refocus her business efforts. Through both courses, she has had the opportunity to ask questions of people working in similar fields, as well as keeping up to date with best practices. “It's always a good one to keep doing refreshers because it changes so quickly.”
Jodie says her business is now thriving! “We’re in a good place. We have the basics down now,” Jodie explains. “There are always more things that can be learnt.”
Through the AWE, Jodie learnt how to value herself as a businesswoman. She took what felt like an almost impossible task and broke it down into small chunks of achievable targets. She now feels she can see a clearer path to reaching her ultimate goal.
Jodie’s advice for anyone starting their own social enterprise journey is to take all the help you can get: “Sign up to all the courses you can find. The ϳԹHIVE is amazing, Sandie is just a font of knowledge. You can’t get through this on your own. There’s no way you can set up a social enterprise on your own. It takes a network!”
Read lessLynn Leach
We spoke to Lynn Leach, the founder of MJLM Millinery to find out what the support provided through the AWE project has meant to her and her business. MJLM Millinery is a hat making service based in Portsmouth, Hampshire, serving local customers.
Suffering terribly from stress and depression, Lynn turned to millinery in 2016 as a way to cope through a difficult emotional period. Having been an established watercolour artist in her 20s, she knew the power of having a creative outlet as “a way to take the mind off of everything else!” Millinery became her main hobby. She had no intentions of making it her main source of income.
She started by buying 40 second-hand hats and began to upcycle them. “It got to the stage where I wasn’t just happy with the upcycling, I wanted to learn how to make everything from scratch,” so started taking classes at the London Fashion College. It wasn’t long before she found herself selling them to people who, much to her own surprise, liked them.
With all the good feedback and local encouragement she was getting, Lynn started to think seriously about how she could turn her hobby into a fully formed business.
“I knew all my life that I was going to run my own business at some point, I just never felt it would ever be possible, or even knew how.”
After hearing about the programme from colleagues at the ϳԹ, Lynn joined Accelerating Women’s Enterprise at the start of 2019, shortly after she decided to develop the business and has never looked back!
The program helped Lynn to develop the skills needed for her evolving business. As well as the importance of developing a brand for MJLM Millinery, she says the most valuable takeaway for her was how to effectively utilize her immediate network, family and friends, for sales as well as support.
“The support through networking was invaluable for me, and still is! I found that my concerns were shared by everyone in my AWE cohort. Questions such as how to find clients, how make enough money to cover the bills, how to stay motivated, and how to plan for success.”
2 years on from starting the business, Lynn feels that she is far beyond the hobby stage, her business is continuously evolving despite the challenges faced by a global pandemic. Lynn say that anyone thinking of starting their own business should “research your customer base, and if it’s a niche market like mine, research how you’re going to reach those people, then just do it!”
Read lessMore success stories can be found .
View our online training options and legacy toolkit
Organisations wanting access to our training materials can also register.
Some of the AWE training modules are also available as part of the toolkit.
Find out more about AWE
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Our team
Dr Zoe Dann is a Senior Lecturer in Enterprise and Entrepreneurship, with a special interest in female entrepreneurship. Zoe is the Principal Investigator and project manager for the AWE project in Portsmouth.
Courtney Elkins is the AWE Programme Coordinator.
Mrs Amy Doyle is the founder of the ϳԹ's Female Entrepreneurs Network. Amy is the Entrepreneur Liaison for the AWE project, providing a first point of contact for entrepreneurs and organisations interested in participating.
Dr Georgiana Busoi is a Principal Lecturer and Director of Undergraduate Marketing Programmes. She is the lead on materials development for the ϳԹ in the training element of the project.
Professor Johnston is Professor of Organisational Studies at the ϳԹ and Associate Dean (Research) in the Faculty of Business and Law. Professor Johnston has a strong research interest in gender representation. In 2015 she was made a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences for her contribution to the study of gender equality.
Dr Carol Ekinsmyth is an Economic Geographer and researcher of gender and entrepreneurship. A main responsibility for Carol on this project is the data capture and analysis of the England-based element of the research.
Dr Beldina Owalla is a Research Fellow in the Faculty of Business and Law. Her research primarily focuses on understanding the impact of gender and culture on entrepreneurial activities. She is working on intersectional case studies for the project.
Dr Xing Huang is a Senior Lecturer in Accounting and Financial Management at the ϳԹ. Her current research interests include Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) issues in finance and enterprise. On this project, she is mainly looking at disadvantaged female entrepreneurs’ obstacles in accessing financial resources such as bank credit.
Accelerating Women’s Enterprise (AWE) is a collaborative project supporting women's entrepreneurship in the UK and France. AWE funded by the European Union’s .
Get in touch
If you'd like to find out more about the AWE Project, simply email us at awe@port.ac.uk
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