Good morning! Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard addresses the Signal chat leak, Olympic track and field will require DNA sex tests from female athletes, and a retail tech startup speaks to the power of the female-founder ecosystem.
– Circle back. Anu Duggal founded Female Founders Fund more than a decade ago with the idea to “build [her] own ecosystem” for women, developing a universe of female founders that could serve as an alternative to men’s golf-course dealmaking.
A deal Female Founders Fund just struck proves that the ecosystem is steadily taking shape. The venture capital firm invested in its first repeat founder: Mariah Chase, who cofounded the plus-size fashion brand Eloquii, and is back with a retail tech startup called Ekyam.ai. Ekyam raised a $2 million pre-seed round, for which Female Founders Fund served as the lead investor, Fortune is the first to report. Greycroft, also a past Eloquii investor, also participated. Duggal calls the investment a “full-circle moment” and her “thesis coming to life.”
Chase is now a three-time founder (and a Female Founders Fund LP). Her first startup was a subscription accessories business that she sold to QVC in 2012. Duggal and Chase met in 2014, and Eloquii was one of Female Founders Fund’s first investments from its $5.85 million Fund I. When Eloquii sold to Walmart in 2018, that was Female Founders Fund’s first portfolio exit. Since then, Female Founders Fund has returned its first fund, and Duggal has touted the importance of mid-market acquisitions in achieving that goal. Chase stayed at Walmart for four years, and in 2023, Walmart sold Eloquii to FullBeauty Brands.
Mariah Chase cofounded and sold the plus-size brand Eloquii before launching the retail middleware service Ekyam.ai. Courtesy of Ekyam Ekyam is Chase’s first pure tech business. The company was started by Abi Sachdeva, who is its chief technology officer; Chase first served as an adviser and came onboard as cofounder and CEO less than two months ago. Ekyam is a “middleware” software service, built to communicate among retailers’ many disparate tech platforms—like order management systems, returns platforms, and ecommerce solutions like Shopify. “Data between these platforms has to be moved in a relatively synchronous fashion so you know what inventory you have, how much you have to sell, how much is sold, and how much was received,” Chase explains. While she was at Eloquii, Chase recalls, the company ended up in a situation where it lost much of that information because the two engineers who knew how to transition it between systems left the company. She says that only now is AI advanced enough to build this solution.
When Chase was building Eloquii, she says she was advised not to invest in this kind of service. “I was often told to invest in the merchandise assortment and marketing and make the backend just good enough to get by,” she says. COVID supply-chain shortages changed some of that thinking, but it’s still a common phenomenon. “I look back and kick myself that I didn’t actually invest more in the technology of the backend. All that does is hero and support and make more profitable on a per-unit basis the merchandising and the marketing. I’m hoping, from this vantage point, to shift that message a little bit.”
Emma Hinchliffe emma.hinchliffe@fortune.com
The Most Powerful Women Daily newsletter is Fortune’s daily briefing for and about the women leading the business world. Today’s edition was curated by Nina Ajemian. Subscribe here.
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- Group chat. Tulsi Gabbard, director of national intelligence, called the Signal chat incident—in which the Trump administrations highest-ranking officials discussed military plans on a group chat that included the editor of The Atlantic—a “mistake.” Gabbard said at yesterday’s hearing that the information was “candid and sensitive,” but not classified. Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton spoke out, reflecting on the controversy around her own email server and telling Glamour: “The hypocrisy is staggering, but worse, the arrogance and incompetence puts the lives of our military men and women in danger.”
- Track tests. Track and field is the first sport at the Olympics that will require DNA sex testing from athletes in female competitions, a decision that the governing board said it made to protect women’s sports. New York Times
- Antibiotic approved. For the first time in 30 years, the FDA approved a new antibiotic for urinary tract infections. They’re the most-common medical issue faced by women, with up to 60% of women getting a UTI once in their life. Time
- Bouncing back. After BOS Nation’s launch faced immediate backlash from fans—over the team name and “Too Many Balls” marketing video—Boston’s National Women’s Soccer League team has rebranded as Boston Legacy FC. “It’s about earning our place in Boston’s storied sports history,” said controlling owner and cofounder Jennifer Epstein. Wall Street Journal
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Alliance Homecare, which provides in-home health services, appointed Kaci Scheuler as chief revenue officer. Previously, she was global head of sales at Summer Discovery.
Enable, an AI-powered rebate management platform, named Susan Hailey CHRO. Most recently, she was an advisor to Enable’s CEO and CHRO, and she previously served as VP, global talent acquisition and equity, diversity, and inclusion at OpenText.
Private equity firm Kingswood Capital Management named Merche del Valle chief talent officer. Previously, she was managing director, chief talent officer, and CHRO at Grain Management; she also founded Coach Synapse.
Reinsurance company Aspida Re appointed Elinor Friedman to its board of directors. She was previously managing director at Willis Towers Watson.
ALZpath, which develops diagnostic tools for Alzheimer's disease, appointed Samantha Budd Haeberlein to its board of directors. She is chief medical officer at Enigma Biomedical Group.
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American women are giving up on marriage Wall Street Journal
DOGE’s spending cuts pass the buck to America’s women MSNBC
‘I’m not trying to turn GSK into Google’: How GSK’s Silicon Valley veteran has transformed the pharma giant into a tech powerhouse Fortune
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“Sometimes, I’m looking at the world where we are taking so many steps back…I want to be part of the people who keep us moving forward.”
— Top U.S. women’s figure skater Amber Glenn on being part of the LGBTQ community
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