Wine entrepreneur
among women chosen for Springboard Australia
Original article from StartupSmart
By Michelle Hammond
Wednesday, 13 February 2013
Wednesday, 13 February 2013
Picture Source: tenderfieldtours.com.au
Melbourne-based entrepreneur Georgia
Beattie is among the first group of Australian businesswomen selected
to participate in the US-founded Springboard
Enterprises program.
Springboard Enterprises was founded by US entrepreneur
Kay Koplovitz, who is in Australia this week to raise the profile of
Springboard’s Australian arm, which launched in May last year.
Koplovitz founded Springboard in 2000. Since then, it
has helped more than 500 female-founded US companies get off the ground.
These companies have raised more than $US5.8 billion,
with a third sold to larger companies or listed on the sharemarket.
Springboard Australia is the country’s first venture
forum program for women-led, technology-oriented businesses seeking investments
for product development and expansion.
It is led by Sydney businesswoman Wendy Simpson, who
has remained vocal about the plight of Australian female entrepreneurs since
stepping into the role.
After encouraging businesswomen to apply for the
program, Springboard has selected eight standouts from more than 100
applications.
Among them is Georgia Beattie, whose start-up offers
single serve wine packaging.
This idea came about while Beattie was at a festival,
where she witnessed the limitations of wine packaging when a bar manager
couldn’t serve wine because “it was too hard at outdoor events”.
Since then, Beattie – whose father and brother also
work in the business – has launched the brand Lupè Wines as well as the
contract packaging arm of the company, Single Serve Packaging.
But it wasn’t until she launched Lupè as a trial in
Japan, Korea and Singapore that she realised the potential of the brand in the
Asian export market.
Now Beattie has become part of the Springboard
Enterprises network. In addition to receiving advice from successful
entrepreneurs and investors, she will be offered support from specialist
mentors on an ongoing basis.
When asked how much money she hopes to raise, Beattie
told StartupSmart it will be “definitely over the $3 million mark”.
But the value of the program goes far beyond funds, she says.
“The past 24 hours have completely changed my
perception of how big my company can be,” she says.
“I’ve gone from being a little bit afraid of the idea
of getting venture capital to, ‘This is the only way I’m going to be able to
achieve the fast growth my company needs’.
“There are past alumni [of Springboard Enterprises]
who have flown in from the states and these guys are just absolute killers.
They’re such an inspiration.”
The other women selected for Springboard Australia are
Samantha Cobb, Melanie Perkins, Tessa Court, Natasha Rawlings, Deborah Noller,
Vanessa Wilson and Fiona Waterhouse.
Their businesses are spread across a broad range of
categories including biotech, clean tech, cloud computing, consumer technology
and marketing.
Noller’s business, Switch
Automation, received a $2 million Commercialisation Australia grant in
2011, while Rawlings’ start-up, StreetHawk, was among the 2012
Tech23 companies.
According to Koplovitz, Australian female
entrepreneurs need more support in order to access global venture capital
markets.
“There are plenty of people who are willing to invest
in young companies at the very [early] start-up stage,” Koplovitz told The
Australian.
“What is needed is to help women at the next level of
growth who need to raise formal capital, equity capital.”
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