CAIRN.INFO : Matières à réflexion

The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) indicates that women entrepreneurs create, run and grow businesses across all sectors. They make important contributions to innovation, employment, and wealth creation in all economies. However, women still face a significant number of difficulties and obstacles in establishing and running businesses. As a result, women create fewer businesses and their ventures underperform as they remain smaller in terms of revenue, job creation, and size relative to those of men.
Some scholars argue that these difficulties could be related to how entrepreneurship is perceived. The definition of an entrepreneur has long been defined based on masculine characteristics, such as ambitious, aggressive, risk-taking, and natural-born leader. As this male stereotype persists in entrepreneurship, women tend to assign more weight to masculine traits when defining a successful entrepreneur, describing he or she as competitive, active, independent, decisive, and self-confident. However, women have long been defined as affectionate, understanding, warm, and compassionate. This juxtaposition of male and female stereotypes leads to an incongruence of what it means to be a successful female entrepreneur. When women entrepreneurs define themselves like other women, they risk experiencing imposture syndrome and stereotype threats because they consciously or unconsciously try to cope with the prevailing masculine norms in entrepreneurship.
Studies have found that women turn to entrepreneurship notably to create a better work and family balance, but this is not their only motivation for venture creation…

English

Entrepreneurship is a gendered field. Despite years of special programs to help female entrepreneurs, they still face many challenges and limitations as entrepreneurship is perceived as a male-dominated field. A qualitative study of eleven growth-oriented female entrepreneurs was conducted. How do they face gender stereotypes as business owners? Do they internalize masculine norms and consequently experience stereotype threat and impostor syndrome, or do they succeed in performing as successful women entrepreneurs? The results show that even the most experienced growth-oriented female entrepreneurs cannot escape the influence of the prevailing masculine norms. This study explores the repercussions of gender norms and stereotypes in female entrepreneurship and gives advice to help female entrepreneurs overcome them.

Français

L’entrepreneuriat est un terrain genré. Malgré des années de programmes et de supports adressés aux femmes entrepreneuses, elles rencontrent toujours des difficultés et des défis liés à la prédominance masculine perçue dans l’entrepreneuriat. Une étude qualitative a été conduite auprès de onze entrepreneuses orientées vers la croissance. L’article étudie comment ces femmes entrepreneuses qui sont orientées vers la croissance entrepreneuriale abordent les stéréotypes de genre dans leur business. Intériorisent-elles les normes masculines et sont-elles par conséquence confrontées à la menace de stéréotypes et au syndrome de l’imposteur ou réussissent-elles à devenir des femmes entrepreneuses à succès ? Les résultats montrent que même les plus qualifiées des entrepreneuses ne sont pas épargnées par l’influence de la norme masculine existante. Cette étude analyse les conséquences des stéréotypes et normes de genre sur l’entrepreneuriat féminin et propose des suggestions afin d’aider les femmes entrepreneuses à les surmonter.

Diana Garcia-Quevedo
Diana Garcia-Quevedo is a PhD Candidate at ESCP Business School. She holds an Engineering degree, a Master in Entrepreneurship, and a Master in Theory of Organizations. She possesses international work experience as program manager, consultant, and entrepreneur. Her entrepreneurial passion, her own and previous experience with women entrepreneurs took her into research. She studies entrepreneurship, gender issues, and sustainability and is particularly interested in female entrepreneurship, business performance, growth, gender, and sustainable entrepreneurial practices.
Cette publication est la plus récente de l'auteur sur Cairn.info.
Il vous reste à lire 94 % de cet article.
Acheter le numéro À partir de 22,50€ 128 pages, papier et/ou électronique add_shopping_cart Ajouter au panier
Acheter cet article 5,00€ 11 pages, format électronique
(html et pdf)
add_shopping_cart Ajouter au panier
Autres options
S'abonner à cette revue link Via la page revue
Membre d'une institution ? business Authentifiez-vous
Mis en ligne sur Cairn.info le 07/02/2022
https://doi.org/10.3917/entin.049.0060
Pour citer cet article
Distribution électronique Cairn.info pour De Boeck Supérieur © De Boeck Supérieur. Tous droits réservés pour tous pays. Il est interdit, sauf accord préalable et écrit de l’éditeur, de reproduire (notamment par photocopie) partiellement ou totalement le présent article, de le stocker dans une banque de données ou de le communiquer au public sous quelque forme et de quelque manière que ce soit.
keyboard_arrow_up
Chargement
Chargement en cours.
Veuillez patienter...