Our Black Year (35 page)

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Authors: Maggie Anderson

BOOK: Our Black Year
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I have been blessed to have the support of several other business and community leaders whom I've grown very accustomed to leaning on. My new friends, I promise you this: You will never feel like you wasted your time on me. I will give you my all and all I have is yours. I love you so very deeply and fully for living up to your duty as members of the Talented Tenth. Thank you for standing up for the rest . . .
Emmett Vaughn, director, Diverse Business Empowerment, Exelon Corporation, and 2008 recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award for Contribution to Minority Economic Development by the US Department of Commerce; Jackie Mayfield, CEO and founder, Compro Tax; Peggy Morris, Lakei Forest Cosby, and every member of Sisters for Sisters Network, Inc.; Meagan and Darrius Peace, owners of Hayah Cosmetics and founders of the Magic City Black Expo; Tony Billinger, director of supplier diversity, Office Max; Michael Blake, White House liaison to the African American community and minority business; Vicky Hsi, supplier diversity lead, Kraft Foods; Carla Hunter Ramsey, director of supplier diversity, National Grid; Kenny Loyd, president and owner, South Coast Paper; Ron Busby, CEO and founder, US Black Chamber of Commerce; Don Bowen, chief program officer, National Urban League; Terry Clark, vice president, Entrepreneurship and Business Development, National Urban League; Paul and Sheena Jones, owners of JTE Spirits and founders of the Association of Black Alcoholic Beverage Companies; Marlon Hill, partner, Delancy Hill law firm; Marva Allen, CEO of Hue Man Bookstore and CEO of the Power of One (Harlem's “buy local” program); Dr. Pamela Jolly, CEO of Torch Enterprises; Regina Dyson, creator of Heritage Hues interiors and paints; Selena Cuffe, owner of Heritage Link Brands; Mike Hill, CEO and founder, the Atlanta Metro Black Chamber of Commerce; Devin Robinson, associate professor of economics, Oglethorpe University, author of
Rebuilding the Black Infrastructure
, and leader of the movement to reclaim the Black hair care industry; Mike Armstrong, SVP and GM, BET International; Lori Hall
Armstrong, chief activation officer, Verbify Consulting Firm; Michael Bowlds, CEO and founder, Mountaintop Marketing; Chuck Debow, director, National Black Chamber of Commerce; Andre Hughes, partner, Accenture, and CEO of Powered by Action; Ron Childs, vice president, Flowers Communications Group; Dr. Georgianne Thomas and Alvelyn Sanders, owners of Georgianne's Skin Treats; Dr. Moe Anderson, DDS, CEO and founder, Austin Black Newcomers Association; Pastor Otis Moss, senior pastor, Trinity United Church of Christ; Ed Swailes, president, The Syndicate; Derryl Reed, owner, Smokin' Joe Sauces; Chike Akua, CEO, Imani Enterprises, and author of
A Treasure Within: Stories of Remembrance and Rediscovery
; Tracye Dee Hinton, former owner, WineStyles South Loop; Nicole Jones, former owner, Sensual Steps Shoe Salon and now CEO, To The Nines; Grammy winner Kandi Burruss, owner, TAGS Boutique; Peaches Chin, co-owner, TAGS Boutique; Robin Douglass, CEO and founder, African American Chamber of Commerce of Westchester and Rockland Counties; Nickey Jefferson, professor of economics, Tuskegee University; the DeBriano family, founders, Tag Team Marketing and the Black Business Network; Mike Norman, CEO and founder, SoChange; Kenny Johnson, CEO and founder, The Richmond Group; Ian Robinson, director of marketing, Fort Washington River Tours; Farrah Gray, owner, Farrah Gray Publishing and author of
Reallionaire
; Michelle Goldsborough, CEO and founder, Parents Empowerment Group; Tionne “T-Boz” Watkins, member of world-famous girl group TLC; Mell and Angie Monroe, proprietors, Welcome Inn Manor; Yvette Moyo, founder, Real Men Cook and Real Men Cook Charities; Donna Bellinger, president, Chicago chapter of the National Alliance of Market Developers; Jonathan Swain, owner, Kimbark Liquors; Fred Zeno, owner, Compro Tax Central; Ken Smykle, CEO and founder,
Target Market News
; and Nicole and Andre Dandridge, owners, the Dandridge law firm.
Each and every one of you has a precious place in my heart and I look forward to working with you in furthering this movement.
I am indebted to all those organizations, universities, business owners, and community groups that invited me to speak, honored my family, hosted a fund-raiser, or otherwise enabled me to share EE in the community.
You are the backbone of this new and important movement. Thank you for linking arms with us.
I cannot thank enough the team of researchers at the Kellogg Graduate School of Management. You all did a phenomenal job on the study. Trust me: That's a major compliment coming from an alum of the University of Chicago Booth Graduate School of Business. Sometimes people forget that EE was always about the study, the experiment, the knowledge, and the science, and that we were just the test subjects, the guinea pigs. Thane Gautier, Dwetri Addy, Ajamu Baker, Arielle Deane, Stephanie Dorsey, and Susan Edwards, I thank you for keeping EE pure and true. While here I want to express gratitude for Deborah Johnson Hall, owner of JAM Research, who worked on capturing the empowerment experiments of other families across the country. And I cannot forget Marrion Johnson and Aisha Kazeem of Northwestern University for volunteering your time and sharing your brilliant young minds with EE. You all represent the academic foundation of EE, and I look forward to your help measuring, monitoring, and tracking the progress of EE en masse.
I want to thank and send a huge hug to my entire book team. Sometimes I think getting this book done was tougher than conducting the experiment, so I am very fortunate and happy that I had such a talented, committed, professional, and caring team to help me through. Your respect, compassion, hard work, true understanding of, and genuine interest in this endeavor mean so much to me. Jessica, Mindy, Kirby, Julie, Susan, and Ted again, thank you for asking the tough questions, challenging me, exercising my brain, testing my talents, and really bringing out the best in me. I feel good putting our baby in your gifted hands.
I want to give a quick shout out to the mainstream media that covered EE. You didn't have to and may not have wanted to, but you made this happen, and you did it in a balanced, objective, open-minded way. Thank you for enabling the discussion we dreamed of and for presenting EE to the world.
To all those truth seekers and truth speakers in the Black media who reported on EE, I thank you for telling our story and keeping it alive
even after the experiment. Thank you for converting our li'l project into a major movement. Maybe the revolution
should
be televised.
I am so very grateful for every one of you who took the time to visit our website, send an e-mail, read the newsletter, forward info about EE to your friends, join our Facebook Fan Group “Fans of The Empowerment Experiment,” become a member of the EE nation by registering on the website at
www.EEforTomorrow.com
, donate to the EE Foundation, come out to our events, or to hear me speak. They may seem like little things to you, but they mean everything to me and my family. You are our fuel. EE is nothing without you. It's not about the Andersons anymore—it's about all of us. Thank you, and please stay involved and excited.
And finally, to all my soldiers and scholars, my fighters and dreamers, whether I know you or not, who are out there struggling for a better life for our kids, a better legacy for our community, and a better America for us all, I send strength, love, faith, and a fist in the air. I know you are giving your lives to this for the same reason I do . . . and that's because you know we can do more and we deserve more. We had it before and we will bring it all back. Y'all know what I mean.
 
From Ted Gregory:
Abiding gratitude to the Caramel Hurricane for her courage, integrity, passion, and grace; to Kirby Kim for his thoughtful initiative; to Mindy Werner and Lindsay Jones for their keen vision; to Jessica Campbell and all the folks at PublicAffairs for their important work; to my mom for her heart; to the kids for tolerating Distracted Dad Syndrome; and to Terri, my true love.
Appendix 1
Over the course of our adventure John and I discovered an enormous amount of illuminating information as well as numerous organizations that are working on issues related to Black economic empowerment. Here are some of the highlights.
Books
Behind the Dream: The Making of the Speech that Transformed a Nation
, by Clarence B. Jones and Stuart Connelly (2011, Palgrave Macmillan)
Blackonomic$: The Way to Psychological and Economic Freedom for African Americans
, by James Clingman (2000, Milligan Books)
Desegregating the Dollar: African American Consumerism in the Twentieth Century
, by Robert E. Weems Jr. (1998, New York University Press)
Encyclopedia of African American Business
, edited by Jessie Carney Smith (2006, Greenwood Press)
Encyclopedia of African American Business History
, edited by Juliet E. K. Walker (1999, Greenwood Press)
The History of Black Business in America: Capitalism, Race, Entrepreneurship
, by Juliet E. K. Walker (1998, Macmillan Library Reference USA; 2003, revised, St. Martin's Press)
The New Urban Renewal: The Economic Transformation of Harlem and Bronzeville
, by Derek S. Hyra (2008, University of Chicago Press)
Race and Entrepreneurial Success: Black-, Asian-, and White-Owned Businesses in the United States
, by Robert W. Fairlie and Alicia M. Robb (2010, The MIT Press)
Success Runs in Our Race: The Complete Guide to Effective Networking in the African-American Community
, by George Fraser (1996, Quill)
Talking Dollars and Making Sense
:
A Wealth Building Guide for African-Americans
, by Brooke Stephens (1997, McGraw-Hill)
Academic Institutions
Columbia University's Center on African American Politics and Society (
http://iserp.columbia.edu/research-initiatives/centers/center-african-american-politics-and-society
)
Morehouse College Entrepreneurship Center (
http://www.morehouse.edu/centers/entrepreneurship/index.html
)
North Carolina A & T State University Center for Entrepreneurship and E-Business (
http://www.ncat.edu/~iceeb/
)
Temple University's Center for African American Research and Public Policy (
http://www.temple.edu/caarpp/index.htm
)
Tuskegee University's Cooperative Extension Program (
http://www.tuskegee.edu/about_us/outreach/cooperative_extension.aspx
)
University of Texas's Center for Black Business History, Entrepreneurship and Technology (
http://www.utexas.edu/research/centerblackbusiness/about_center.htm
)
 
Ford Motor Company is partnering with Babson College, the leading academic institution for entrepreneurship, and a number of other historic Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) to create programs for Black entrepreneurship. Known as the HBCU Entrepreneurship Consortium, these institutions include Clark Atlanta University (Atlanta, Georgia), Grambling State University (Grambling, Louisiana), Jackson State University (Jackson, Mississippi), Morehouse College (Atlanta, Georgia), North Carolina A&T (Greensboro, North Carolina), and Southern University (Baton Rouge, Louisiana).
Organizations
100 Black Men of America, Inc. (
http://www.100blackmen.org/home.aspx
)
Black Business Network (
http://www.blackbusinessnetwork.com/
)
Black Shopping Channel (
http://www.blackshoppingchannel.com/
)
Houston Citizens Chamber of Commerce Economic Empowerment Initiative (
http://www.hccoc.org/index.html
)
Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies (
http://www.jointcenter.org/about
)
National Alliance of Market Developers (
http://www.namdntl.org/
)
National Association of Investment Companies (
http://www.naicvc.com/
)
National Black Chamber of Commerce (
http://www.nationalbcc.org/
)
National Black MBA Association (
http://www.nbmbaa.org/home.aspx?PageID=637&
)
National Council of Negro Women (
http://www.ncnw.org/about/index.htm
)
National Minority Supplier Development Council (
http://www.nmsdc.org/nmsdc/
)
National Urban League (
http://www.nul.org/
)
Rainbow PUSH Coalition (
http://www.rainbowpush.org/
)
Recycling Black Dollars (
www.rbdmedia.net
)
United States Black Chamber of Commerce (
http://usbci.org/
)
Directories of Black-Owned Businesses
The Empowerment Experiment Foundation is in the process of building a national interactive directory of quality Black businesses to help facilitate our goal of proving the power of self-help economics. Stay tuned for that. Meanwhile, here are some other resources.
 

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