This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.
KrASIA (Kr): What have been the motivating factors of your advocacy and participation in gender lens investing?
Virginia Tan (VT):My background actually lies in law and finance. I spent the first 10 years of my career working on structuring investments in emerging markets. But my source of inspiration for building up Teja Ventures dates back to when I was 22 years old.
I took a gap year, right after graduating from law school. For one year, I worked in third world countries to broaden my perspective of the world. I visited post-civil war Nepal, the slums of South America, and more. And that’s where I realized that in many ways there wasn’t enough funding to solve the problems and challenges that women faced.
Throughout my corporate career, I worked on conventional finance deals but also thought about how we could use such financing to achieve socially desirable outcomes. In 2013, I moved to China to work on the One Belt, One Road investments. While I was in Beijing, a group of ladies and I decided to start building communities for women. It began with 10 people, then 100, and 1000. Before I knew it, in less than three years, Lean In China had 100,000 people spread across 30 cities in China.
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