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GOOD PRACTICE 
IN WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP TRAINING: 
INTERFACING THE SBA ASSESSMENTS 
AND ETF GOOD PRACTICE SCORECARD 
OLENA BEKH 
EUROPEAN TRAINING FOUNDATION (ETF) 
ROME, ITALY 
25-27 NOVEMBER 2014 
#WELab2014 
#ETFWEInspire
ETF – WHO WE ARE AND WHERE WE STAND? 
AGENCY OF THE EUROPEAN UNION 
Vision 
To make vocational education and training in the partner countries a driver for 
lifelong learning and sustainable development, with a special focus on 
competitiveness and social cohesion 
Mission 
To help transition and developing countries to harness the potential of their 
human capital through the reform of education, training and labour market 
systems in the context of the EU’s external relations policy 
2
SOME FACTS AND FIGURES 
3 
ESTABLISHED 
OPERATIONAL FROM 
BASED IN 
DIRECTOR 
STAFF 
BUDGET 
PARTNER COUNTRIES 
1990 (COUNCIL REG. 1360) 
1994 
TURIN, ITALY 
MADLEN SERBAN 
127 (APRIL 2013) 
€20.14M (2013) 
30
South Eastern Europe: 
Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 
Kosovo*, former Yugoslav 
Republic of Macedonia, Iceland, 
Montenegro, Serbia 
Turkey and Iceland 
European 
Neighbourhood and 
Partnership Instrument 
countries - ENP South: 
Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, 
Lebanon, Libya, 
Morocco, Palestine, 
Syria, Tunisia and Israel 
Central Asia: 
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, 
Tajikistan, 
Turkmenistan, 
Uzbekistan 
European Neighbourhood and 
Partnership Instrument 
countries - ENP East: 
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, 
Georgia, Republic of Moldova, 
Ukraine and Russia 
4
MAIN PARTNERS 
PRIMARY STAKEHOLDERS 
 EU institutions 
 EU Member States 
 European social partners 
 Stakeholders from the partner countries 
SECONDARY STAKEHOLDERS 
5 
 International organisations 
 Regional and geographic organisations 
 International development banks 
 Platforms, networks, NGO’s, education 
training providers
FUNCTIONS 
 F1: supporting the EU’s external assistance policies through 
input to Commission sector programming and project cycles 
 F2: supporting partner country capacity building in human 
capital development 
 F3: providing policy analyses through evidence-based 
analysis; and 
 F4: disseminating and exchanging information and experience 
in the international community 
6
THE SBA POLICY ASSESSMENTS 
IN PARTNER COUNTRIES 
……MEASURE WHAT MATTERS! 
FROM 2009 – A NEW BATTERY OF WOMEN’S 
ENTREPRENEURSHIP INDICATORS WAS INTRODUCED 
INTO THE ASSESSMENT FRAMEWORK – 
“THE ISTANBUL INDICATORS” 
7
Human Capital indicators within SBA indicator package 
8 
SBA Policy Index Dimensions 
1. Entrepreneurship education and training 
2. Second chance 
3. Rules for ‘Think Small First’ 
4. Responsive public administration 
5. SMEs and public procurement 
6. Access to finance 
7. SME opportunities & EU Single Market 
8. Skills & innovation 
9. SMEs and environmental concerns 
10. SMEs in growth markets 
• Lifelong entrepreneurial learning policy 
• Non-formal entrepreneurial learning 
• Secondary and tertiary education 
• Good practice 
• University-enterprise cooperation 
• Women’s entrepreneurship 
• Enterprise training intelligence (data) 
• Availability of training, 
• Quality assurance 
• Start-ups 
• Enterprise growth
SMALL BUSINESS ACT FOR EUROPE 
WORKSHOP ON INDICATORS FOR WOMEN'S ENTREPRENEURSHIP 
ISTANBUL, 18-19 APRIL 2010
SMALL BUSINESS ACT FOR EUROPE 
WORKSHOP ON INDICATORS FOR WOMEN'S ENTREPRENEURSHIP 
ISTANBUL, 18-19 APRIL 2010
SBA WORKSHOP ON INDICATORS FOR WOMEN'S ENTREPRENEURSHIP 
(ISTANBUL, 18-19 APRIL 2010) - STOCK-TAKING ANALYSIS OF NATIONAL POLICIES 
Available: 
• National policies for general support of employment/SME development (positive 
impact of SBA process); 
• Gender strategies or gender-related components are present in the national 
policies. 
Lacking: 
• Comprehensive support to women’s entrepreneurship - no specific government 
focus on women 
• Economic and social empowerment of women entrepreneurs, 
• Individual policy measures for women’s entrepreneurship – but they often remain 
just recommendations on paper 
• Lack of specific policies translates into the lack of statistical data on women’s 
entrepreneurship
SBA WORKSHOP ON INDICATORS FOR WOMEN'S ENTREPRENEURSHIP 
(ISTANBUL, 18-19 APRIL 2010) - STOCK-TAKING ANALYSIS OF NATIONAL POLICIES 
 Women businesses are “ghettoized” in a narrow range of activities/sectors: 
• They traditionally develop business (trade, shops, service and hospitality industry, 
solicitors, lawyers, hairdressers, agricultural production, textile, book publishing, 
craftworks – knitting, dressmaking /sewing, catering, etc). 
• Women businesses are limited in growth due to being highly labour intense and 
linked to their neighborhoods. 
 Social attitudes and discrimination: 
• Women often find themselves paid less for the same jobs. 
• Under difficult life circumstances are more willing to take jobs that men refuse. 
• Experience problems in moving to the leading/managerial positions and feel lack of 
support in balancing/reconciliation of family and work-related responsibilities. 
• Women often engage in family business activities (without formal employment, 
registration, etc).
WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP INDICATORS 2012! 
 POLICY SUPPORT FRAMEWORK FOR 
WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP 
 WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP TRAINING 
AND SUPPORT 
 FINANCING FOR WOMEN’S 
ENTREPRENEURSHIP 
 NATIONAL NETWORKS OF WOMEN 
ENTREPRENEURS 
13
SBA policy assessment regions 
Eastern Partnership: Armenia, Azerbaijan, 
Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, Ukraine 
WBT: Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, 
Montenegro, Serbia, FYR Macedonia, Turkey 
SEMED: Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Israel, 
Lebanon, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, Pelestine
ALL THREE LAST SBA POLICY ASSESSMENT REPORTS 
FEATURE WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP 
2012 – EASTERN 
PARTNERSHIP 
2012 – PRE-ACCESSION 
REGION 
2014 – THE 
MEDITERRANEAN 
MIDDLE EAST AND 
NORTH AFRICA 
15
WE START TO SEE THE IMPACT OF SBA POLICY ASSESSMENTS… 
 Increased awareness of the economic impact of better participation of women in 
entrepreneurial activities as a response to social-cultural concerns and traditional 
approaches to women’s employment 
 Better understanding by governments and social partners of the data needs and 
their lack across all SBA assessment countries in the view of raised appreciation of 
evidence based approaches to policy development, 
 Growing focus of policy discussions on the ways and approaches to human capital 
aspects of women’s entrepreneurship and the role of training and mentorship in 
it, 
 Augmented attention of stakeholders to the links between sound policy and good 
practice, and as a result – more sustainable policy partnerships and more 
effective policy implementation measures allowing practitioners to shape the 
policies. 
16
EVOLVING ENGAGEMENT OF ETF INTO THE 
WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP WORK 
Development 
of SBA policy 
framework on 
Human Capital 
SBA policy 
assessments 
Developm 
ent of new 
indicators 
on WE 
Piloting and 
revising the 
assessment 
instrument 
Good Practice 
project 
(includes WE) 
Defining our 
position re: 
WE Policy 
area 
Consolidating 
and 
supporting 
collective 
action 
What’s best 
to do 
NEXT? 
SBA policy 
assessments
THE POLICY-PRACTICE NEXUS 
POLICY 
PRACTICE
ETF’S GOOD PRACTICE WORK • Development of the tool kit 
for validation (peer review) 
of good practice 
• Main focus on Human 
Capital: Entrepreneurial 
Learning and Enterprise 
Skills 
• Three phases of piloting 
and improving the 
methodology (2012, 2013 
and 2014) 
19
A COMMUNITY OF GOOD PRACTITIONERS IS 
GROWING! 
ARMENIA 
EGYPT 
FRANCE 
GREECE 
HUNGARY 
IRELAND 
ISRAEL 
THE NETHERLANDS 
PALESTINE 
SWEDEN 
TAJIKISTAN 
20
THE PROJECT TO DATE 
• CREATING NEW CAPITAL FROM TRAINING PRACTICE 
• IMPLICATIONS FOR POLICY MAKING 
• USE OF PEER REVIEW METHOD – AND GOING VIRTUAL(!) 
• PILOT PROJECT KICK-OFF 2012 
• FINALISATION 2014 
• LAUNCH 2015 
• 3 CALLS SO FAR: YOUTH, WOMEN, SME SKILLS 
• IMPROVEMENT RECOMMENDATIONS, ELABORATIONS FOR PEER 
REVIEW (PREPARATION, PEER REVIEW PROCESS, TOOLS, USE OF 
PLATFORM) 
21
THE GOOD PRACTICE ASSESSMENT GRID 
FIVE GOOD PRACTICE DIMENSIONS 
• TRAINING NEEDS ANALYSIS (RELEVANCE) 
• TRAINING DESIGN (TRAINING CONTENTS, 
PEDAGOGY) 
• TRAINING ENVIRONMENT (INFRASTRUCTURE, STAFF) 
• M&E AND IMPROVEMENTS (CRITICAL REVIEW) 
• MARKETING (DISSEMINATION) 
22
THE GOOD PRACTICE ASSESSMENT GRID (2) 
• EACH DIMENSION COMPRISES 5 LEVELS (INCREASINGLY 
DEMANDING) 
• EACH LEVEL COMPRISES A NUMBER OF CRITERIA 
(BULLETS) 
• PEER REVIEWERS DETERMINE IF CRITERIA ARE 
SATISFIED (QUESTIONS, EVIDENCE) 
• EACH CRITERIA/BULLET HAS A QUANTIFIABLE SCORE 
23
EXAMPLE… 
24
25
THE SCORING SYSTEM 
SCORING 
• EACH BULLET HAS A QUANTIFIABLE SCORE 
• SCORES ARE EXPONENTIAL: INCREASED VALUES WITH HIGHER LEVELS 
• SPECIFIC CALL INTEREST AREA (ACCESS TO FINANCE) 
HOW TO SCORE 
• PEER ALLOCATE SCORES TO EACH LEVEL (ALL DIMENSIONS) 
• SCORES ARE SUMMED AND AVERAGED FOR PEER TEAM (CHAIR) 
• THRESHOLD: 12 POINTS PER DIMENSION + 60 POINTS IN TOTAL 
• GOOD PRACTICE STAR SYSTEM 
26
THE STARS … AND THE SKY IS THE LIMIT! 
Good Practice Star System 
• One Star: good practice 
• Two Stars: very good practice 
• Three Stars: excellent practice 
27
ETF’S POLICY ANALYSIS AND ADVICE 
A POLICY BRIEF OF WOMEN’S 
ENTREPRENEURSHIP 2013 
WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP POSITION PAPER 
2014 
28
ETF POSITION PAPER IS DISCUSSING THREE QUESTIONS: 
1. Why women’s entrepreneurship is important and why 
does it require targeted support? 
2. What are the key issues about women’s 
entrepreneurship and what would be their specific 
support needs? 
3. What can be done: how can policy makers and 
practitioners engage the challenges and what ETF can 
do?
And what is behind the striking figures on WE? 
Eastern Europe and Central Asia - 36.6% of business owners are women, 
Pre-accession region - as low as 27.5% 
Southern and Eastern Mediterranean - bottom out at just 17.2%. 
The top performers in female business ownership among the ETF partner countries are: 
Kyrgyzstan 60.4% 
Moldova 53.1% 
Belarus 52.9% 
Ukraine 47.1% 
Georgia 40.8% 
Turkey 40.7% 
WE SHOULD BE ABLE TO EXPLAIN SOON WHAT’S BEHIND THESE NUMBERS! 
30
ACCORDING TO ETF ANALYSIS… 
1. WOMEN AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP KEY COMPETENCE 
• FOLLOWING TRADITIONAL ROLE MODELS 
• WOMEN ARE A MORE “EDUCATED” PART OF A MANKIND BUT LACK SELF-EFFICACY 
• OFTEN UNAWARE OF HAVING ENTREPRENEURIAL POTENTIAL 
• TRYING TO PUT ON “MAIL” ENTREPRENEURIAL ROLES… 
2. MARKET CONDITIONS, INSTITUTIONS AND LEGAL BARRIERS 
3. WORK–LIFE BALANCE FACTORS AND CONSIDERATIONS 
4. SOCIO-CULTURAL FACTORS EFFECTING WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP 
• STEREOTYPES, FAMILY AND PEER PERCEPTIONS 
• EXISTENCE OF A LARGE INFORMAL ECONOMIES AND CRISIS FACTORS 
• DISCRIMINATION IN SOCIETY AS A RESULT OF SOCIAL, CULTURAL OR RELIGIOUS FACTORS
PUTTING ALL ENDS TOGETHER… WHAT DO WE DO? 
ETF’S APPROACH: 
Focus on the human capital areas of policy and practice is needed - to 
target specific needs of development of women’s entrepreneurial potential 
as compared to general SME support measures and instruments. 
SELECTED POLICY DIRECTIONS: 
• Raising policy awareness 
• Access to highly effective and gender sensitive education and training 
• Focus on mentoring, coaching and network support 
32
EXPECTED OUTCOMES OF THE WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP LABORATORY 
1. New knowledge and reinforced good practice networks to support 
“entrepreneurial women’s human capital” and strengthened cooperation links 
between the EU and the ETF partner regions – with focus on Eastern Partner 
region, involving a broader EU neighbourhood. 
2. Increased understanding of the complexity of challenges and variety of policy 
approaches and practices to develop women’s entrepreneurship “ecosystem”. 
3. Increased awareness of the importance of digital competence for women 
entrepreneurship support agents, in the Eastern Partner region. 
4. Recommendations for future programmes and measures at international, 
regional and national levels to boost women’s entrepreneurship in the Eastern 
Partnership and increase the impact of the SBA process on the policy and 
practice in the region. 
5. Launching the ETF Good Practice Women’s Entrepreneurship community! 
33
QUESTIONS TO: 
NAME: OLENA BEKH 
EMAIL: OBE@ETF.EUROPA.EU 
PHONE: +39 011 6302233 
WEBSITE: WWW.ETF.EUROPA.EU 
TO BE CONTINUED! ETF ENTERPRISING PEOPLE

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Good practice in women’s entrepreneurship training:interfacing the SBA assessments and ETF Good practice scorecard

  • 1. GOOD PRACTICE IN WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP TRAINING: INTERFACING THE SBA ASSESSMENTS AND ETF GOOD PRACTICE SCORECARD OLENA BEKH EUROPEAN TRAINING FOUNDATION (ETF) ROME, ITALY 25-27 NOVEMBER 2014 #WELab2014 #ETFWEInspire
  • 2. ETF – WHO WE ARE AND WHERE WE STAND? AGENCY OF THE EUROPEAN UNION Vision To make vocational education and training in the partner countries a driver for lifelong learning and sustainable development, with a special focus on competitiveness and social cohesion Mission To help transition and developing countries to harness the potential of their human capital through the reform of education, training and labour market systems in the context of the EU’s external relations policy 2
  • 3. SOME FACTS AND FIGURES 3 ESTABLISHED OPERATIONAL FROM BASED IN DIRECTOR STAFF BUDGET PARTNER COUNTRIES 1990 (COUNCIL REG. 1360) 1994 TURIN, ITALY MADLEN SERBAN 127 (APRIL 2013) €20.14M (2013) 30
  • 4. South Eastern Europe: Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo*, former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Iceland, Montenegro, Serbia Turkey and Iceland European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument countries - ENP South: Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Palestine, Syria, Tunisia and Israel Central Asia: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument countries - ENP East: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Republic of Moldova, Ukraine and Russia 4
  • 5. MAIN PARTNERS PRIMARY STAKEHOLDERS  EU institutions  EU Member States  European social partners  Stakeholders from the partner countries SECONDARY STAKEHOLDERS 5  International organisations  Regional and geographic organisations  International development banks  Platforms, networks, NGO’s, education training providers
  • 6. FUNCTIONS  F1: supporting the EU’s external assistance policies through input to Commission sector programming and project cycles  F2: supporting partner country capacity building in human capital development  F3: providing policy analyses through evidence-based analysis; and  F4: disseminating and exchanging information and experience in the international community 6
  • 7. THE SBA POLICY ASSESSMENTS IN PARTNER COUNTRIES ……MEASURE WHAT MATTERS! FROM 2009 – A NEW BATTERY OF WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP INDICATORS WAS INTRODUCED INTO THE ASSESSMENT FRAMEWORK – “THE ISTANBUL INDICATORS” 7
  • 8. Human Capital indicators within SBA indicator package 8 SBA Policy Index Dimensions 1. Entrepreneurship education and training 2. Second chance 3. Rules for ‘Think Small First’ 4. Responsive public administration 5. SMEs and public procurement 6. Access to finance 7. SME opportunities & EU Single Market 8. Skills & innovation 9. SMEs and environmental concerns 10. SMEs in growth markets • Lifelong entrepreneurial learning policy • Non-formal entrepreneurial learning • Secondary and tertiary education • Good practice • University-enterprise cooperation • Women’s entrepreneurship • Enterprise training intelligence (data) • Availability of training, • Quality assurance • Start-ups • Enterprise growth
  • 9. SMALL BUSINESS ACT FOR EUROPE WORKSHOP ON INDICATORS FOR WOMEN'S ENTREPRENEURSHIP ISTANBUL, 18-19 APRIL 2010
  • 10. SMALL BUSINESS ACT FOR EUROPE WORKSHOP ON INDICATORS FOR WOMEN'S ENTREPRENEURSHIP ISTANBUL, 18-19 APRIL 2010
  • 11. SBA WORKSHOP ON INDICATORS FOR WOMEN'S ENTREPRENEURSHIP (ISTANBUL, 18-19 APRIL 2010) - STOCK-TAKING ANALYSIS OF NATIONAL POLICIES Available: • National policies for general support of employment/SME development (positive impact of SBA process); • Gender strategies or gender-related components are present in the national policies. Lacking: • Comprehensive support to women’s entrepreneurship - no specific government focus on women • Economic and social empowerment of women entrepreneurs, • Individual policy measures for women’s entrepreneurship – but they often remain just recommendations on paper • Lack of specific policies translates into the lack of statistical data on women’s entrepreneurship
  • 12. SBA WORKSHOP ON INDICATORS FOR WOMEN'S ENTREPRENEURSHIP (ISTANBUL, 18-19 APRIL 2010) - STOCK-TAKING ANALYSIS OF NATIONAL POLICIES  Women businesses are “ghettoized” in a narrow range of activities/sectors: • They traditionally develop business (trade, shops, service and hospitality industry, solicitors, lawyers, hairdressers, agricultural production, textile, book publishing, craftworks – knitting, dressmaking /sewing, catering, etc). • Women businesses are limited in growth due to being highly labour intense and linked to their neighborhoods.  Social attitudes and discrimination: • Women often find themselves paid less for the same jobs. • Under difficult life circumstances are more willing to take jobs that men refuse. • Experience problems in moving to the leading/managerial positions and feel lack of support in balancing/reconciliation of family and work-related responsibilities. • Women often engage in family business activities (without formal employment, registration, etc).
  • 13. WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP INDICATORS 2012!  POLICY SUPPORT FRAMEWORK FOR WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP  WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP TRAINING AND SUPPORT  FINANCING FOR WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP  NATIONAL NETWORKS OF WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS 13
  • 14. SBA policy assessment regions Eastern Partnership: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, Ukraine WBT: Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, Serbia, FYR Macedonia, Turkey SEMED: Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Lebanon, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, Pelestine
  • 15. ALL THREE LAST SBA POLICY ASSESSMENT REPORTS FEATURE WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP 2012 – EASTERN PARTNERSHIP 2012 – PRE-ACCESSION REGION 2014 – THE MEDITERRANEAN MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA 15
  • 16. WE START TO SEE THE IMPACT OF SBA POLICY ASSESSMENTS…  Increased awareness of the economic impact of better participation of women in entrepreneurial activities as a response to social-cultural concerns and traditional approaches to women’s employment  Better understanding by governments and social partners of the data needs and their lack across all SBA assessment countries in the view of raised appreciation of evidence based approaches to policy development,  Growing focus of policy discussions on the ways and approaches to human capital aspects of women’s entrepreneurship and the role of training and mentorship in it,  Augmented attention of stakeholders to the links between sound policy and good practice, and as a result – more sustainable policy partnerships and more effective policy implementation measures allowing practitioners to shape the policies. 16
  • 17. EVOLVING ENGAGEMENT OF ETF INTO THE WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP WORK Development of SBA policy framework on Human Capital SBA policy assessments Developm ent of new indicators on WE Piloting and revising the assessment instrument Good Practice project (includes WE) Defining our position re: WE Policy area Consolidating and supporting collective action What’s best to do NEXT? SBA policy assessments
  • 18. THE POLICY-PRACTICE NEXUS POLICY PRACTICE
  • 19. ETF’S GOOD PRACTICE WORK • Development of the tool kit for validation (peer review) of good practice • Main focus on Human Capital: Entrepreneurial Learning and Enterprise Skills • Three phases of piloting and improving the methodology (2012, 2013 and 2014) 19
  • 20. A COMMUNITY OF GOOD PRACTITIONERS IS GROWING! ARMENIA EGYPT FRANCE GREECE HUNGARY IRELAND ISRAEL THE NETHERLANDS PALESTINE SWEDEN TAJIKISTAN 20
  • 21. THE PROJECT TO DATE • CREATING NEW CAPITAL FROM TRAINING PRACTICE • IMPLICATIONS FOR POLICY MAKING • USE OF PEER REVIEW METHOD – AND GOING VIRTUAL(!) • PILOT PROJECT KICK-OFF 2012 • FINALISATION 2014 • LAUNCH 2015 • 3 CALLS SO FAR: YOUTH, WOMEN, SME SKILLS • IMPROVEMENT RECOMMENDATIONS, ELABORATIONS FOR PEER REVIEW (PREPARATION, PEER REVIEW PROCESS, TOOLS, USE OF PLATFORM) 21
  • 22. THE GOOD PRACTICE ASSESSMENT GRID FIVE GOOD PRACTICE DIMENSIONS • TRAINING NEEDS ANALYSIS (RELEVANCE) • TRAINING DESIGN (TRAINING CONTENTS, PEDAGOGY) • TRAINING ENVIRONMENT (INFRASTRUCTURE, STAFF) • M&E AND IMPROVEMENTS (CRITICAL REVIEW) • MARKETING (DISSEMINATION) 22
  • 23. THE GOOD PRACTICE ASSESSMENT GRID (2) • EACH DIMENSION COMPRISES 5 LEVELS (INCREASINGLY DEMANDING) • EACH LEVEL COMPRISES A NUMBER OF CRITERIA (BULLETS) • PEER REVIEWERS DETERMINE IF CRITERIA ARE SATISFIED (QUESTIONS, EVIDENCE) • EACH CRITERIA/BULLET HAS A QUANTIFIABLE SCORE 23
  • 25. 25
  • 26. THE SCORING SYSTEM SCORING • EACH BULLET HAS A QUANTIFIABLE SCORE • SCORES ARE EXPONENTIAL: INCREASED VALUES WITH HIGHER LEVELS • SPECIFIC CALL INTEREST AREA (ACCESS TO FINANCE) HOW TO SCORE • PEER ALLOCATE SCORES TO EACH LEVEL (ALL DIMENSIONS) • SCORES ARE SUMMED AND AVERAGED FOR PEER TEAM (CHAIR) • THRESHOLD: 12 POINTS PER DIMENSION + 60 POINTS IN TOTAL • GOOD PRACTICE STAR SYSTEM 26
  • 27. THE STARS … AND THE SKY IS THE LIMIT! Good Practice Star System • One Star: good practice • Two Stars: very good practice • Three Stars: excellent practice 27
  • 28. ETF’S POLICY ANALYSIS AND ADVICE A POLICY BRIEF OF WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP 2013 WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP POSITION PAPER 2014 28
  • 29. ETF POSITION PAPER IS DISCUSSING THREE QUESTIONS: 1. Why women’s entrepreneurship is important and why does it require targeted support? 2. What are the key issues about women’s entrepreneurship and what would be their specific support needs? 3. What can be done: how can policy makers and practitioners engage the challenges and what ETF can do?
  • 30. And what is behind the striking figures on WE? Eastern Europe and Central Asia - 36.6% of business owners are women, Pre-accession region - as low as 27.5% Southern and Eastern Mediterranean - bottom out at just 17.2%. The top performers in female business ownership among the ETF partner countries are: Kyrgyzstan 60.4% Moldova 53.1% Belarus 52.9% Ukraine 47.1% Georgia 40.8% Turkey 40.7% WE SHOULD BE ABLE TO EXPLAIN SOON WHAT’S BEHIND THESE NUMBERS! 30
  • 31. ACCORDING TO ETF ANALYSIS… 1. WOMEN AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP KEY COMPETENCE • FOLLOWING TRADITIONAL ROLE MODELS • WOMEN ARE A MORE “EDUCATED” PART OF A MANKIND BUT LACK SELF-EFFICACY • OFTEN UNAWARE OF HAVING ENTREPRENEURIAL POTENTIAL • TRYING TO PUT ON “MAIL” ENTREPRENEURIAL ROLES… 2. MARKET CONDITIONS, INSTITUTIONS AND LEGAL BARRIERS 3. WORK–LIFE BALANCE FACTORS AND CONSIDERATIONS 4. SOCIO-CULTURAL FACTORS EFFECTING WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP • STEREOTYPES, FAMILY AND PEER PERCEPTIONS • EXISTENCE OF A LARGE INFORMAL ECONOMIES AND CRISIS FACTORS • DISCRIMINATION IN SOCIETY AS A RESULT OF SOCIAL, CULTURAL OR RELIGIOUS FACTORS
  • 32. PUTTING ALL ENDS TOGETHER… WHAT DO WE DO? ETF’S APPROACH: Focus on the human capital areas of policy and practice is needed - to target specific needs of development of women’s entrepreneurial potential as compared to general SME support measures and instruments. SELECTED POLICY DIRECTIONS: • Raising policy awareness • Access to highly effective and gender sensitive education and training • Focus on mentoring, coaching and network support 32
  • 33. EXPECTED OUTCOMES OF THE WOMEN’S ENTREPRENEURSHIP LABORATORY 1. New knowledge and reinforced good practice networks to support “entrepreneurial women’s human capital” and strengthened cooperation links between the EU and the ETF partner regions – with focus on Eastern Partner region, involving a broader EU neighbourhood. 2. Increased understanding of the complexity of challenges and variety of policy approaches and practices to develop women’s entrepreneurship “ecosystem”. 3. Increased awareness of the importance of digital competence for women entrepreneurship support agents, in the Eastern Partner region. 4. Recommendations for future programmes and measures at international, regional and national levels to boost women’s entrepreneurship in the Eastern Partnership and increase the impact of the SBA process on the policy and practice in the region. 5. Launching the ETF Good Practice Women’s Entrepreneurship community! 33
  • 34. QUESTIONS TO: NAME: OLENA BEKH EMAIL: OBE@ETF.EUROPA.EU PHONE: +39 011 6302233 WEBSITE: WWW.ETF.EUROPA.EU TO BE CONTINUED! ETF ENTERPRISING PEOPLE

Editor's Notes

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