The pathway for entrepreneurs is frequently filled with roadblocks, especiallyfor women and people of color. But employing community-driven solutions to shape public policy can help overcome barriers to many of these entrepreneurs’successes.To find solutions that work, it's incredibly important that ideas for development are shaped within communities, instead offrom outsiders purporting to understand a community’s perspective and needs.
Girls for Technology is one of my favorite examples. It was started by Sabrina Tucker-Barrett, who worked for an insurance company in Hartford, Connecticut, where she became concerned that local insurers struggled to find qualified workers largely because the school system wasn’t training students for the quality jobs available.
She formed Girls for Technology and began working with local schools to offer STEM-related programming to encourage and prepare young women to be leaders in science, technology, engineering, and math.
Last fall, four Hartford high school students who had participated in the Girls for Technology afterschool programpitched an extraordinary invention to Facebook executives in Menlo park, California.
58003 It relays information on workplace attire, hairstyle, and demeanor. Their idea, inspired by the community program, won a Facebook “Best Social Impact Award.”
Throughout the country, community-based organizations and programs are recognizing the need to invest time and resources into helping underserved entrepreneurs. These are people with big ideas for scalable businesses and the potential for expanding markets, but they require outside investment to establish themselves and grow.
Entrepreneur activities are increasing across the country, but government, philanthropy, and the private sector must step up efforts to make the entrepreneur environment more inclusive and ensure everyone is welcomed, respected, and valued. Only with equitable treatment and access to opportunity can women and people of color reach their full capacity in the nation’s economy.
A primary concern for these entrepreneurs is access to capital. The wealth gap demonstrates that African Americans and Latinos have fewer financial resources than whites, so when it comes to financing their dreams they are disadvantaged. (For example, recent U.S. census data revealed that black wealth is 7% of whites’.) In fact, financing is a challenge for all entrepreneurs: Venture Capitalists reject 98-99 percent of the ideas they are presented because they don’t meet their criteria for funding, or other subjective reasons.
Entrepreneurs often turn to their savings or family, friends, and networks for funding. Women and especially minorities don’t often have access to networks of wealth and social capital or simply don’t know how to navigate. This fact makes it even harder to get ideas out of the garage.
There are a small number of community-created sources for startup capital. Detroit has two notable organizations – Michigan Women Forward, started by 30 Michigan women in 1986, and prosperUS. Both are sources of microfinancing for new and very small businesses with a focus on helping minority entrepreneurs. (To date, prosperUS has allocated 93% of its loansto minority-owned businesses.) But these two are the exception, not the rule; the nation needs many more locally created sources of this type.
For those entrepreneurs skilled enough to chart a course forward, another hurdle is developing the tactical and technical knowledge to launch and run their startup. 58003 Technical assistance is almost as valuable for entrepreneurs as capital.
58003 In Connecticut, as well as across the country, entrepreneurs are being assisted with strong mentorship, seed capital, working space, and professional expertise. It’s making a difference.
The Women’s Business Development Council supports women entrepreneurs across Connecticut with workshops, one-on-one coaching, and training programs. In just five years, The Refinery has mentored 39 companies and helped raise more than $30 million in funds for women and perse entrepreneurs.
Collab New Haven, an incubator/accelerator, is providing funding, mentoring, and education to entrepreneurs, focusing primarily on minority-and women-owned startups. Build Institute in Detroit exemplifies what’s happening across the country – since 2012, more than 1,800 aspiring entrepreneurs have graduated from their classes, which providwsthem with tools, resources, and a support network.
part of what makes these organizations successful is their understanding of entrepreneurs and their communities. Local, state, and federal governments have significant resources that can be used to assist entrepreneurs, but a partnership within the community is essential for success. The same is true for the private sector.
Successful entrepreneurial ventures in high-growth industries can account for half the new jobs created in a metropolitan area. But for that kind of activity to happen in communities of color, we must make more of an investment in developing community-based programs and solutions that enable entrepreneurship and innovation.
That’s the inclusive economic development story we should all want to tell.