Alida Burke has spent more than a decade helping build Growcer, a sustainable food technology company, working her way through university programs and accelerator and scale-up stages.
Already an Insider? Log in
Get Instant Access to This Article
Become an Ottawa Business Journal Insider and get immediate access to all of our Insider-only content and much more.
- Critical Ottawa business news and analysis updated daily.
- Immediate access to all Insider-only content on our website.
- 4 issues per year of the Ottawa Business Journal magazine.
- Special bonus issues like the Ottawa Book of Lists.
- Discounted registration for OBJ’s in-person events.
Alida Burke has spent more than a decade helping build Growcer, a sustainable food technology company, working her way through university programs and accelerator and scale-up stages.
Last year, Anya Geerts launched Paloma, an event booking app and back-end system that allows guests and planners to easily book events from start to finish. Paloma saw beta customers report booking increases of 75 per cent.
Yoobin Lee killed her first product after 18 months, despite realizing revenue, and pivoted her startup, Quip, to medical billing desktop software.
These three founders represent a growing cohort of women-led tech companies in Ottawa that are gaining traction, often with little fanfare.
National statistics show women founders receive just two to four per cent of venture capital, according to a Women Entrepreneurship Knowledge Hub (WEKH) report. But Ottawa bucks that trend. Its ecosystem has built targeted support structures that are delivering results. For example, SheBoot graduates have raised more than $20 million since the program launched in 2020 and Capital Angel Network directed 57 per cent of its 2022 investments to women-led startups.
These women-led companies are scaling quietly and successfully, and often without fanfare.
Burke sees the visibility gap as partly intentional. “Focus can sometimes be more on the business and not on the person,” she said. “Women are less likely to be loud about themselves versus loud about a cause or a business.”
Burke and her business partner Corey Ellis founded Growcer more than 10 years ago at the University of Ottawa. They built it around food security and sustainability using vertical farming and high-tech growing systems in shipping containers. Burke added that women often approach public visibility differently than their male counterparts.
“It feels tough to be in the spotlight versus supporting the thing you’re championing,” she said. “The focus tends to stay on the mission rather than the founder.”

