Business

Unlocking inclusion for women of color in web3


Audrey is a VC at speed investa pan-European early-stage fund.


Adetola Olatunji is a Columbia Business School MBA candidate, investor (formerly of New Profit and Kapor Capital), startup advisor and VC Fellow at BBG Ventures in NYC.


Michelle Dhansinghani is a Columbia Business School MBA candidate, founder of VC Unleashed, a global community of BIPOC MBA investors, and head of community for This Week in Fintech.


Sharlene Guiriba is an MBA and MPP candidate at the University of Chicago and VC Fellow at Harlem Capital primarily focused on web3 and fintech.

Shazia Hasan is a communications & marketing leader within the cryptocurrency sector.

On International Women’s day, Bain Capital Crypto enthusiastically announced its new investment team with a collage of photos revealing that its new lineup consisted solely of men.

Women in all corners of the crypto industry took notice. Faced with the backlash, the original tweet was deletedBain Capital Crypto addressed the controversy, and announced Lydia Hilton as a partner shortly thereafter.

Although this was a move in the right direction, we felt it was important to address the crypto industry’s diversity challenges — and how they can be overcome — through the lens of women of color.

By definition, web3 is an inspiring vision for a new iteration of the internet. So why build it the same way as we did Web 2.0?

Why re-build hierarchies of exclusion in this new era? This tweet is only one of many that highlight the challenge of inclusion and the opportunity to broaden crypto’s impact through diversity.

Who benefits from the upside of cryptocurrency?

The lack of women benefiting from the financial upside of crypto disproportionately affects women of color. For example, 16% of NFT artists are women, and they have only received 5% of the multibillion-dollar industry’s turnover. On the institutional side, Black women make up just 4% of crypto investors worldwide.

However, this discrepancy is complex. Women and people of color are more likely to invest in crypto. About 44% of all crypto traders are people of color, and 41% are women.

Black and Latinx communities are driving broader adoption of cryptocurrency, with 23% of Black Americans other 24% of Latinx Americans owning these assets, compared to only 11% of white Americans.

How is it possible that a group more likely to be interested in investing in a currency receives an inequitable distribution of the resulting wealth?

Image Credits: Twitter

Related posts

Waymo works with Geely to make electric AVs for Ride-Hail in the United States

TechLifely

Senator Mark Warner on cybersecurity, Musk’s Twitter and legislating killer robots

TechLifely

Daily Crunch: News and updates from TechCrunch’s Meta Connect 2022 coverage

TechLifely

Leave a Comment