A post by "Sarah Blow" http://sarahblow.com

Sarah Blow is the Founder of Girl Geek Dinners and has a passion for Gadgets, Technology and Media (social or technological). She also loves extreme sports and can be found here on twitter. To see more posts click here

  • This is a guest post by Simone Brummelhuis. She’s co-owner of Iens and European Museum Guide. Currently, she works and lives in London. This post no three in a series of four guest posts which will be posted one a day.

    The Netherlands may be known as a liberal country with equal opportunities for men and women, but somehow we managed that in terms of women in the board room, we are doing not so well. While in the United States almost one out of five corporate officers are women, in Europe the female to male ratio on company boards is not even one to twenty. And in Holland it is even less….. However, Norway has set the agenda by imposing a minimum female mandatory quota of 40% in company-boards. And guess what: it works! Heleen Mees of women-on-top and Marieke Bax

    of Topbrainstorm have urged companies and our government to do the same over here. I support this. It makes sound economic sense. Moreover, studies show that companies with more women in senior management are more profitable than those with few women at the top.

    With these developments taking place, let’s see which female internet heroes in The Netherlands can act as such role model and fulfill the quota. Indeed, these women can bring entrepreneurial internet knowledge into the board room.

    Female internet heroes are strongly represented in media, such as Marianne Zwagerman, director of Dutch Telegraaf Media Group and Lara Ankersmit, director of telegraaf.nl., the second largest news site in the Netherlands with a strong user generated content component. Dutch Dragon Den’s Annemarie van Gaal, is founder of AM Media but more known as a keen investor in media companies like bright.nl.

    In more technological driven companies, serial entrepreneur Christine Karman springs to mind, who is founder of Zaphod and member of the advisory board of Technika10, an organisation who provides science and technology classes to girls. Also, I point out CEO Petra van Schayik of Compumatica, founder and CEO Karen Loeffen of Libersy and Jacqueline Smit, country manager of MSN. Although how come that Microsoft is organizing an event, the Dev Days, with no single female speaker?

    Some very popular sites were founded or led by women, such as weekendjeweg by CEO Marianne Baars, which was sold to Holidaybreak, kieskeurig.nl by founder Janet Sellis, which was sold to Sanoma and directwonen.nl by founder and CEO Yvonne Swaans who went to the Alternative Investment Market at the London Stock Exchange.

    Good catch are also some international female internet heroes living and working in The Netherlands, such as CEO Nancy McKinstrey of Wolters Kluwer, ranked in the top ten of the most powerful women in Europe by The Financial Times and founder Marina Tognetti of Myngle, com, a startup global marketplace in language education.

    So who said that we cannot fulfill the quota?

    About the author: Simone worked as a successful lawyer before becoming an entrepreneur by setting up her own B2B publishing company Brummsbooks. Thereafter as co-owner and managing director IENS she developed this start-up into the no. 1 user generated content database publisher of restaurant guides in The Netherlands (online and offline). With the Europeanmuseumguide.com, she intends to do the same. these posts are written as contributing editor for the nextweb.org and are re-produced to reach a wider audience.

    (inspire.girlgeekdinners.com)

    Image removed due to NextWeb.org not having the right to publish the image.

    This entry was posted on Wednesday, May 14th, 2008 at 5:46 pm and is filed under Inspiration. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
  • 4 Comments

    Take a look at some of the responses we've had to this article.

    1. the melody censor
      Sep 1st
      Reply

      Thanks! I’ll do that. And thanks for understanding.

    2. Sarah Blow
      Aug 19th
      Reply

      @the melody Censor:

      Not to worry, I didn’t take it a bad way. The post was a re-post of the one over on nextweb.org we made what is usually a safe assumption that they had the rights to use the image, and had been given permission to re-publish the content here.

      I have removed the image from here but would also advise you to take a look over on nextweb and contact Simone Brummelhuis to ask her to remove the image from there also. I wouldn’t want to offend your friends either and I’m sure Simone will understand too.

    3. the melody censor
      Aug 19th
      Reply

      so, I just looked at my settings on Flickr and realized that you must be one of my contacts, sorry for coming across as a bitch, I just don’t want any of the the ladies to get upset. I hope you understand

    4. the melody censor
      Aug 19th
      Reply

      Hello,
      I’d like you to remove the image you have used from my photostream from the blog entry please. It is a composite of 72 images from other people that I do not hold the rights to, and couldn’t give you permission to use it even if you had asked in the first place…which you didn’t. It is clearly marked All rights reserved, and although it may fit well with your entry, I’d like you to remove it. Thanks

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