Essayer OR - Gratuit
Black Women Find A Way
Entrepreneur
|April - May 2019
When African American female founders are turned down by investors and banks (which is almost always), what do they do? They find incredibly innovative ways to use their skills and resilience to fund their businesses. Here's what they know.
Most women under the age of, say, 45 dread a particular time of the month. (Fellas, stay with me.) So, Arion Long, an African American millennial out of the Washington, D.C., area, came up with the Femly Box, a way to make the monthly menstrual routine less burdensome and more like a gift. Her ultimate PMS kit includes a supply of organic, all-cotton feminine products, along with wholesome wellness treats, like shea butter, herbal tea, and organic chocolates. For about $30 a month, it comes in a pretty package that gets delivered right to a woman’s door, just in time for her cycle.
When Long, a former health plan communications specialist, launched her business in 2015, she had only one problem: getting funding from investors. “Let’s face it,” she says. “I was talking to middle-aged white men. They didn’t know the product or use the product. And they didn’t care. I’m a brown-faced, five-foot-one-inch young woman, who wasn’t taken seriously. I had done my research and was ready. But young white men—some of whom had simply jotted down an idea on a beverage napkin—got the nod.” Long was hoping to snag a modest $10,000 to $75,000 investment. Everyone she talked to said no.
The numbers bear out her plight. Since 2009, out of the $424.7 billion in total tech venture capital funding, the portion given to Black female founders? A minuscule .0006 percent, according to Project Diane 2018, a report by DigitalUndivided, an entrepreneurial pipeline for women of color. Further, the average investment is only $42,000, compared with the overall average of $1.3 million. The picture is not much better for traditional bank credit. A recent report from the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City reveals that 40 percent of Black women who request financing don’t receive a single penny— nearly twice as many as nonminority women who are turned down.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition April - May 2019 de Entrepreneur.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Entrepreneur
Entrepreneur US
3 Ways These Small Businesses Plan for the Future
I Here's how to put the 'success' in your succession plan.
4 mins
May/June 2026
Entrepreneur US
Seilin & Co.
CRAFTSMANSHIP WITH GLOBAL AMBITION
3 mins
May/June 2026
Entrepreneur US
COGIT
BUILT ON INTEGRITY, DRIVEN BY DESIGN
3 mins
May/June 2026
Entrepreneur US
Japan
OPENING NEW DOORS FOR GLOBAL INVESTORS IN A RAPIDLY EVOLVING ECONOMY
3 mins
May/June 2026
Entrepreneur US
JR Kyushu
CONNECTING KYUSHU TO THE WORLD
6 mins
May/June 2026
Entrepreneur US
Decrease Your Stress With a Custom AI Assistant
It'll give you a full debrief on your week and forecast the one ahead.
2 mins
May/June 2026
Entrepreneur US
How to Get Paid for Your Ideas
Want to be a public speaker, or create a best-selling course? You must turn your ideas into something tactical, practical, and memorable. Here's how.
7 mins
May/June 2026
Entrepreneur US
How to Make AI Recommend You
Want your business to pop up in AI queries? And be suggested to your ideal customers? Here's a specific plan.
3 mins
May/June 2026
Entrepreneur US
Kura Sushi
A HIGH-TRUST RESTAURANT MODEL BUILT FOR GLOBAL SCALE
3 mins
May/June 2026
Entrepreneur US
Increase Sales With AI-Powered Follow-Ups
This simple system will make your sales process faster and more effective.
2 mins
May/June 2026
Translate
Change font size
