70 pc women entrepreneurs in India eager to improve business-critical skills — Report
Published on Apr 28, 2025
By IANS
- NEW DELHI — Seventy per cent of women business owners in India, especially
those from tier II and III cites, want to improve their financial, marketing,
and digital skills to scale their ventures, according to a report on Monday.
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- The findings, based on a survey of over 1,300 new and
existing women business owners (aged 18-55 years) across non-metro cities,
showed that 52 per cent of women entrepreneurs operate in digitally native
sectors like retail, e-commerce, and edtech.
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- The Bharat Women Aspiration Index (BWAI) 2025, released
by the UK-based business financial platform Tide, captures the aspirations and
pain points of women entrepreneurs from tier II and III, and beyond towns in
India. It also sheds light on the opportunities and challenges they face.
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- It showed that just over 1 in 10 or 12 per cent, are
ranked digital skilling as a key priority -- signaling a mismatch between
industry needs and self-perception; and 54 per cent feel financial institutions
perceive them as less creditworthy.
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- Notably, 90 per cent of businesses are driven by Gen Z
and millennial entrepreneurs, with 83 per cent emerging from tier 2 and beyond
-- highlighting how more entrepreneurs are emerging from smaller Indian cities.
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- India’s women entrepreneurs from Tier 2, 3, and beyond
towns are ambitious, digitally aware, and determined to grow - but they are
held back by structural gaps in finance, networks, and visibility.
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- Yet, 86 per cent rarely or never participate in any
business networks, cutting them off from critical peer support.
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- Even though they run their own businesses, 52 per cent
still need a male family member to access credit - reflecting deep-seated
gatekeeping in credit systems.
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- “The BWAI 2025 findings reflect a deep aspiration among
women entrepreneurs in India’s smaller towns -- but show that big challenges
remain. It’s heartening that many women are more confident in their ability to
manage finances and market their businesses,” said Gurjodhpal Singh, CEO, of
Tide India.
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- "However, barriers like limited access to formal
networks, digital tools, and financing - some still routed through male
intermediaries - remain widespread," he added.