Women in Startups
Women in startups need useful next steps
Women in startups use this F/MS resource hub to find funding options, validation guides, founder examples and startup tools without vague empowerment copy. Start with the practical problem in front of you, then move into the guide that fits.
Pick the founder problem in front of you
The hub works like a decision map. Choose the thing blocking your next week, then read the guide or tool that helps you act.
Find funding options
Compare grants, founder-friendly funding paths, women-focused investors and non-dilutive options before chasing every pitch opportunity.
Validate the idea
Start with the riskiest assumption, customer interviews, pricing tests and demand signals before spending months on a product.
Build the first version
Keep the first build small enough to ship, test and improve. The goal is a working proof point, not a feature-heavy product.
Learn by doing
Move from reading to practice through the F/MS Startup Game when you want a structured way to test startup decisions.
Startup advice that matches how women founders build
Many startup guides assume warm investor access, spare time, technical teams and room for expensive mistakes.
Women founders often build with tighter constraints, smaller networks and more pressure to prove the downside first.
Start with the guides that are live now
These startup-basics guides are already published on the site. Use them as the first path through the hub.
What Is a Minimum Viable Product for Female Entrepreneurs
Learn what a minimum viable product needs to prove, what to leave out, and how to avoid spending months on a product nobody wants.
Read the guideMVP Testing Methods That Work in 2026
Use testing methods that check demand, pricing, behavior and retention signals before you treat launch day as proof.
Read the guideBuilding Your First MVP on a Bootstrap Budget
Validate the idea, build a lean first version and get closer to paying customers without making venture capital the first move.
Read the guideUse the full hub
These core pages make the site useful as a complete resource hub, not only a homepage.
About Women in Startups
Understand why the hub exists and how it fits the F/MS startup-learning ecosystem.
Open about pageStartup resources for women founders
Choose the path for funding, validation, first builds or startup practice.
Open resourcesStartup next step checklist
Turn a broad founder problem into a smaller decision ready for testing.
Use the checklistWomen in Startups FAQ
Get quick answers about the hub, founder stages and the F/MS Startup Game.
Read the FAQContact Women in Startups
Send a focused resource question, guide suggestion or ecosystem note.
Open contact pageQuestions women founders ask first
Use these answers to decide where to go next in the hub.
What is Women in Startups?
Women in Startups is an F/MS resource hub for female founders. It collects practical startup guides around funding, validation, minimum viable products, bootstrapping, founder networks and startup basics.
Where do I start?
Start with the Startup Basics guides if you are still testing the idea or building your first version. Move into funding content after you have the customer problem, the evidence and the next milestone.
Is this only for venture-backed startups?
No. The hub covers venture capital, grants, alternative funding and bootstrapping. Many women founders need a path that works before institutional funding is realistic.
How does this connect to the F/MS Startup Game?
The F/MS Startup Game turns startup learning into practice. Use the hub to understand the topic, then use the game when you want to test decisions and build founder habits.
Start with the next practical step
Read the startup-basics guides, test one assumption, and use the F/MS Startup Game when you want to practice founder decisions instead of only reading about them.