SBR Members Highlight the Importance of Financial Education for Women on FICO Panel at NAWBO’s 2022 Advocacy Days
Access to capital is essential for women entrepreneurs when starting or growing a business. But finances and credit scores can be intimidating and are often not well understood. Indeed, in a recent survey the National Association of Women Business Owners (NAWBO) did with payroll platform Gusto, more than two-thirds of women business owners had utilized personal savings to fund their business, while much fewer had acquired a private business loan (23%) or a SBA-backed loan (15%) that would require the use of a credit score.
Earlier this month at
NAWBO’s 2022 Advocacy Days in Washington, D.C., FICO joined SBR members NAWBO and NASE in a panel discussion to stress the importance of access to capital to women entrepreneurs, educate women business owners on how credit scores work, and provide them with the financial tools and resources they need to thrive.
NAWBO Incoming Board Chair Karen Bennetts kicked off the event in a keynote discussion with Congresswoman Claudia Tenney (R-NY). Representative Tenney has been a champion for women’s entrepreneurship and
introduced the Women’s Business Centers Improvement Act earlier this year, which would reauthorize the Women’s Business Center Program through 2025. Representative Tenney emphasized the importance of financial education for women business owners. “Financial education empowers women to better understand and advocate for their business goals and needs. It is fundamental that women leaders across all businesses – large and small, no matter their background or current financial state, continuously educate themselves on how credit scores are calculated, how to improve them, and how to build credit,” she said.
The keynote discussion was followed by an expert panel on the role credit scores and financial literacy play in accessing capital and the steps women business owners can take to maintain and improve their credit. The panel was moderated by Marsha Barnes, Founder and CEO of
The Finance Bar, and featured:
- Joanne Gaskin, Vice President of Scores and Analytics and Founder of Score A Better Future at FICO
- Katie Wonnenberg, Vice President for Government Relations and Public Affairs, National Association for the Self-Employed (NASE)
- Karen Bennetts, NAWBO National Incoming Board Chair and Owner & Founder of Little Red Bird
Joanne Gaskin, Vice President of Scores and Analytics and Founder of Score A Better Future at FICO, described how credit scores work and why FICO founded the
Score A Better Future program. Score A Better Future is a free program that gives individuals the knowledge and access to services they need to understand and grow their credit score. “Understanding your finances and how your credit score works is incredibly important to the long-term success of your business. We created the free Score A Better Future program to provide individuals the education and credit counseling they need to achieve their financial goals, whether starting or growing a business, buying a new home, or other opportunities,” Joanne said.
Katie Wonnenberg, Vice President for Government Relations and Public Affairs at NASE, spoke about the organization’s perspective on access to capital issues as a member organization of the
Small Business Roundtable (SBR). SBR is the largest coalition of small business and entrepreneurship organizations, dedicated to advancing policy, securing access, and promoting inclusion to benefit the businesses at the heart of the American economy. “One of the primary reasons SBR was founded was because member organizations identified a common need for education among business owners when it came to access to capital. By partnering with FICO, SBR is able to connect business owners to a trusted, reliable source to better understand their financial picture as they look to start and grow their businesses,” Katie said.
NAWBO Incoming Board Chair Karen Bennetts described the importance of access to capital to women business owners and why it's a pillar of NAWBO’s
2022 Advocacy Agenda. “Access to capital consistently ranks as the top issue of concern for women entrepreneurs. It is quite often the difference between making it and going out of business. As a member of SBR and in partnership with FICO, NAWBO has been able to provide its members with the financial education and tools they need to learn and succeed,” Karen said.
Financial literacy and access to capital are key to ensuring the success of women-owned businesses. SBR is proud to partner with FICO and NAWBO to close the financial education gap and help women business owners achieve their goals.
