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LGBTQ+ entrepreneurs are still being left behind. It doesnt have to be this way.
Its no secret that venture capital (VC) has long excluded entire groups of founders.Most people are familiar with the figure that women receive only 2% of all VC funding, a number thats barely moved in decades. But fewer know that LGBTQ+ founders receive even less under 1%. Related Corporations perform better in every way when they have LGBTQ+ board members Despite the clear advantages shown in the data, only a miniscule number of board seats are held by out LGBTQ+ people. In practice, this means that LGBTQ+ innovators with viable, high-potential businesses are still routinely overlooked or passed over not because their ideas are weak, but because they dont match the image investors are accustomed to funding. Dive deeper every day Join our newsletter for thought-provoking commentary that goes beyond the surface of LGBTQ+ issues Subscribe to our Newsletter today This isnt speculation. Its backed by data and echoed in personal stories from founders across the country. According to a UK survey reported by CNBC, 75% of LGBTQ+ founders hide their identity when pitching to investors. PinkNews reports that LGBTQ+ entrepreneurs are going back into the closet to appear more fundable. Some omit personal details, change their appearance, or avoid using inclusive language all to increase their odds of being taken seriously in a pitch room.These patterns are real. And we saw them repeatedly while filming Show Her the Money, an award-winning documentary focused on the gender funding gap in venture capital. While the film focuses on the funding gap for women, about half of the featured cast members (founders and investors) identify as LGBTQ+ women. The overlap wasnt intentional it happened organically.The stories were striking. Founders shared how they felt the need to dress more conservatively, skip personal anecdotes, or straighten up their bios to make investors comfortable. The emotional labor it takes to code-switch while asking for funding is exhausting, and its happening every day in boardrooms, Zoom calls, and demo days across the country.But buried in those challenges were moments of something else: clarity, courage, and connection.Theres something powerful about a founder walking into a room, leading with authenticity, and finding the right investor who sees them fully. It doesnt just fund a business; it affirms a person. And when that happens, you can feel the shift. We witnessed it during filming, and weve continued seeing it at screenings in over 100 cities. From New York to Chattanooga, we hear from LGBTQ+ founders who finally feel seen, and from investors who are realizing what theyve been missing. Still, theres a long way to go.VC culture tends to reward familiarity. Investors often fund people who remind them of themselves or other successful founders theyve backed. Its not malicious, its subconscious pattern-matching. But when the pattern has always been cis, straight, white men, it means brilliant LGBTQ+ entrepreneurs get passed over simply for being different.That needs to stop. And the frustrating part? Theres no financial logic behind it. LGBTQ+-led companies are outperforming expectations, building strong teams, creating jobs, and delivering returns. Backing LGBTQ+ founders isnt charity, its good business. More VCs are starting to take note, and organizations like She Angels Investors and Gaingels are working to close the gap. But we need more people on both sides of the table pushing this forward.In the last few years, the number of women angel investors has risen to 40%. Thats a real sign of momentum. The same growth is possible and necessary for LGBTQ+ investors. Because the people making funding decisions shape what products, services, and solutions get built. If we want the future to reflect everyone, we need to invest in everyone.So how do we change this?Heres where to start:If youre an investor, look closer at who isnt being included. Funders who expand their networks and redefine what founder material looks like are already seeing better returns. Seek out funds prioritizing diversity, and listen to founders whose voices you havent heard enough.If youre a founder, dont dim yourself. There are people looking to fund exactly what you bring to the table. Check out groups like Gaingels, Astia, or Power to Pitch, and visit showherthemoneymovie.com for access to pitch prep resources and funding opportunities.If youre in a position to build or influence ecosystems, accelerators, pitch events, mentorship programs rethink your criteria. Who gets invited to speak? Who gets on stage? Whos missing, and why?If youre outside of this space entirely, your voice still matters. Read the data. Share these findings. Champion LGBTQ+-led businesses and question why inclusion is still an afterthought in so many boardrooms. The problems are clear. The solutions are available. Whats missing in many cases is the willingness to shift the default.The truth is: When we fund LGBTQ+ founders, were not just promoting equity; were backing smart, visionary, high-impact businesses. Its time to make that the norm, not the exception.If youre still wondering how to help, start here:Ask whos missing from your table.Fund what you want the future to look like.Be louder than the biases that still linger.Because when we invest in founders who have been left out not despite who they are, but because of the perspectives they bring we dont just change business.We change whats possible.Subscribe to theLGBTQ Nation newsletterand be the first to know about the latest headlines shaping LGBTQ+ communities worldwide.
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