Background: Given the population of women and their economic participation, women's entrepreneurship has become a growing phenomenon in the world. However, their entrepreneurship alone cannot lead to the economic and social growth of countries, but it is their proper performance in entrepreneurship that determines the economic and social growth of countries.
Objective: The objective of this research is, in the first step, to identify the factors affecting the performance of women entrepreneurs and, in the next step, to prioritize these factors.
Methodology: This research is qualitative-quantitative in terms of method and descriptive-survey in nature and based on the type of purpose, it is applied. And also, from the perspective of research implementation, it is divided into two steps. In the first step, the factors affecting the performance of women entrepreneurs are identified. This step is carried out by systematically reviewing reputable scientific articles extracted from the Scopus database and coded with MaxQuda software. The statistical population of the first step is articles related to the research topic, and the sample is 49 articles selected after filtering the related articles. The second step is prioritizing the factors affecting the performance of women entrepreneurs, using the Shannon entropy analysis method. The statistical population is a quantitative method of actors in the field of ecology, which includes three categories of female entrepreneurs, trustees, and experts. From each category, 6 people were selected as samples using the snowball method and purposive sampling until theoretical saturation was reached.
Findings Conclusion: The findings of this study can be expressed in two qualitative-quantitative categories. The qualitative aspect of the identified factors that affect the performance of women entrepreneurs includes a supportive economic environment, a supportive social environment, entrepreneurial competencies, personal and psychological