How These Black Founders Are Building Startups Without Investors
Briefly

How These Black Founders Are Building Startups Without Investors
"Truitt had bootstrapped her business and wasn't initially convinced that venture capital was the best way to grow it. "I was thinking about my business as a legacy that I would build and pass down," she tells Fast Company, "and that is not something investors love. They want to know if it's a solid idea, [that] there's a need for it in the market, and how quickly you can get out of it and pay [them].""
"Women entrepreneurs launched some 3.5 million new businesses over the past decade, with as many as 78% of them owned by women of color. By 2016, an estimated 1.9 million firms owned by black women employed some 376,500 workers, generating $51.4 billion in revenue. Yet despite all this combined economic clout, venture capitalists have largely stayed away."
"A 2014 Babson College study found that most women-led businesses have been funded by the founder herself or by friends and family. Only 4% of women-owned businesses and 13% of minority-owned businesses received VC funding last year. Part of the reason is that less than 3% of VC funds have black and Latinx investment partners, according to analysis by Social + Capital."
Janine Truitt founded Talent Think Innovations in 2013 and bootstrapped the consulting firm, viewing the business as a legacy rather than a venture-backed, exit-oriented company. Venture capitalists typically seek rapid returns, market need validation, and quick exits, which can clash with legacy-focused founders. Women entrepreneurs launched some 3.5 million new businesses over the past decade, with as many as 78% owned by women of color. By 2016, an estimated 1.9 million firms owned by black women employed roughly 376,500 workers and generated $51.4 billion in revenue. Funding disparities persist: most women-led firms rely on founder, friends, and family funding, and fewer than 3% of VC funds have black and Latinx partners, limiting access to venture capital for underrepresented founders.
Read at Fast Company
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]