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How to Finance a Black Women-owned Business in 2023
Rating: 4.7 out of 5(62 ratings)
2,474 students

How to Finance a Black Women-owned Business in 2023

What it takes today
Last updated 6/2023
English

What you'll learn

  • Business Planning, your business credit history: Dun and Bradstreet.
  • Data and Resources for Black women businesses
  • The best non profit, local/state/federal resources
  • Steps in the business financing process
  • What type of financing products and sources/investors/lenders are best for your business
  • Why you should seek out venture capital these days. Which ones to go to. How you should approach them.

Course content

1 section22 lectures40m total length
  • Introduction0:19

    Introduction to the class.

  • Class agenda and topics1:03

    Agenda for the class. We discuss what we are about to learn.

  • Business Credit Scores1:25

    Credit reporting resources. What a credit report is. How you can get a copy of yours for free. Online resources like NAV.com. Get free personal and business credit scores and reports you can actually understand. It takes two minutes to sign up.

    "Personalized financing recommendations from over 100 available options

    Free tools and insights to build business credit

    24/7 credit monitoring and real-time alerts."

  • Business Loan Resources2:14

    Online business financing resources

    https://fundbox.com/

    https://www.ondeck.com/

    https://www.kabbage.com/

    https://foundersuite.com/

    https://www.loanbuilder.com/ (PayPal)

    https://paypal.com/

  • PayPal5:09

    PayPal Business Loan

    ○ Loans from $5,000 to $500,000

    PayPal Working Capital

    ○ Loans from $1,000 to $125,000

  • Federal Government Funding3:34

    SBA lending: SBA Microloan, SBA Community Advantage Loan, and SBA 7(a) loan.

    Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA), a bureau of the U.S. Department of Commerce

  • State/Local Government Funding2:29

    Two resources at the State and local level in DC and Maryland.

  • Data on 105 Black & Latino Founders Who Raised $1mm+2:30

    From the Harlem Capital Study.

  • More on 105 Black & Latino Founders Who Raised $1mm+1:31

    Number of firms and median amount raised.

  • Financing Strategies1:35

    Financing strategies in summary.

  • How startup funding is supposed to work...2:41

    Typical startup funding path and information.

  • Why You Should Forget the Previous Slide!0:36

    Why it doesn't work that way from Black women.

  • Business Planning1:25

    Business planning resources. Links to MinorityFinance.com business plan templates.

  • Intellectual Property1:24

    What is intellectual property and how do you protect it? Why it is important to your business.

  • Udemy Web Courses (free for paid attendees)0:57

    Free courses on investing and on crowdfunding.

  • New Funds1:52

    New investment funds targeted to Black women.

  • More investment funds targeted to Black women1:19

    Jay Z and Will Smith.

  • Even more investment funds targeted to Black women.1:46

    Bumble Fund and the Detroit Development Fund.


  • Digital Applications0:59

    Bitcoin, ICOs, STOs.

  • Gwen Hurt founded and runs Shoe Crazy Wine1:01

    Gwen founded and runs Shoe Crazy Wine.

  • Gwen Hurt on being a Black woman entrepreneur4:51
  • Thank you!0:12

Requirements

  • Basic familiarity with business terms
  • Desire to own and operate a business

Description

Maggie Lena Walker was the first female bank president of any race to charter a bank in 1902. Black women have continued down this path of entrepreneurship. According to one report, "the number of businesses created by black women in the United States alone is up more than 460% over the last 20 years, making them the fastest growing group of entrepreneurs in the nation."

Of course, we've known this for some time, and have the track record to prove it. We launched MinorityFinance in 1998 and noted that 65% of the inquiries from the site came from Black women. While others have come along after our launch, we remain active and at the forefront.

The key issue then, and now, is money: "according to the Diane Project, black female founders are only able to raise an average of $36,000 in venture funding, while start-ups owned mostly by white males have received on average $1.3 million." We provide data-based advice and instruction, based on our years of experience, to help you over this hurdle.

Our class provides information on the current state of Black women businesses. We provide actionable information you can use to get financing for your business.

AGENDA

• Business Planning

• Your business credit history: Dun and Bradstreet.

• Data and Resources for Black women businesses

• The best non profit, local/state/federal resources

• Steps in the business financing process

• Protecting your ideas: intellectual property rights

• What type of financing products and sources/investors/lenders are best for your business: banks, credit unions, factors, hard money lenders, crowdfunding, credit cards, venture capital, digital currency, ICOs.

• Why you should seek out venture capital these days. Which ones to go to. How you should approach them.

For more, see our new book on Amazon: Thriving As a Minority-Owned Business in Corporate America: Building a Pathway to Success for Minority Entrepreneurs 1st ed.

Who this course is for:

  • Entrepreneurs
  • Women
  • African Americans