An Economic Force
Minority women-owned businesses at a crossroads
As the number of women entrepreneurs of color has soared over the past quarter century, experts say women of color have become a significant economic force and have reached a historical juncture in the nation as both women and minorities are increasingly thriving.
“They have the combination of the two worlds. I see their advancement in corporate America as well as in the small business world. They are being encouraged to take more risks,” said Dr. Alicia J. Jackson, dean of Susquehanna University’s Sigmund Weis School of Business and among the growing number of women heading business schools around the country.
“Part of the education of introducing women to business is understanding there are educated risks you can take as long as you balance it with some level of hedging.”
Women entrepreneurs of color in the country tallied just 388,309 with $18 billion in gross revenues in 1987, the first year the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Minority Business Development Agency began specifically tracking this demographic.
By 2002, the latest data from the agency recorded a 300 percent increase to 1.5 million companies that were at least 51 percent owned by women of color. Those companies recorded $111 billion in gross receipts – an increase of 500 percent.
The Center for Women’s Business Research has followed the trend through 2008 for firms owned at least 50 percent by women of color and estimates today there are about 2.3 million such companies generating $235 billion in revenue.
“Women of color have made great strides in establishing their own businesses – they see entrepreneurship as a key to freedom and wealth creation. They are getting more education and more experience in the workplace than they were 20 years ago. They have branched out into more traditionally male dominated industries, such as construction and IT, and are achieving great success,” said Edith McCloud, associate director of MBDA’s Office of Administrative and Financial Management.
“While the glass ceiling still exists in corporate America and women seek to fulfill their entrepreneurial dreams, you will continue to see talented women launching their own businesses.”
Entrepreneurial women of color represent the fastest-growing segment of privately held firms in the nation, establishing businesses twice as fast as male minority business owners and more than four times the rate of non-minority men and women.
While minority women entrepreneurs still trail minority men business owners and non-minority entrepreneurs in gross revenues, their soaring numbers increasingly are turning them into a force in today’s financial world.
Dr. Jackson said that as an African-American she was helped by The PhD Project sponsored by the CPA firm KPMG’s foundation www.phdproject.com , after the company in 1994 set out to diversify its workforce through educating minority students for academic posts. While affirmative action programs were being successfully challenged in the courts, such private efforts helped fill the gap and lead to a steady climb in minority business professors.
Today, Dr. Jackson said minority women have far wider horizons than previous generations.
“I think they recognize their options in business are wide open ... Business speaks a language that’s not color-based - other than green.”
Susan Gluck Mezey, chair of Loyola University Chicago’s political science department, told NAWBO in a recent interview that women of color also have moved ahead in the workplace by standing up for their rights in court, prevailing in discrimination and sexual harassment cases where historically they have been disproportionately affected.
“Discrimination has played a huge role in depressing women’s opportunity and pay, in general, and for women of color in particular,” Mezey said.
Mitigating many of the inequities – though not pay gaps, yet – have been a flurry of anti-discrimination cases in the courts and Congress. That was punctuated recently by President Obama’s signing of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, which extends the statute of limitation for filing wage discrimination complaints.
The new administration also is signally its intent to address historic barriers to women in the workplace in other ways, Mezey said, noting the First Lady’s recent appointment of Harvard classmate Jocelyn Frye as her policy and project director. Frye has been a longtime and outspoken proponent of affirmative action and workplace equity while working on behalf of women and families.
Mezey said some social obstacles still are unaddressed - from single parenthood to teenage pregnancies - that serve as obstacles to many. And women – who are less likely to be unionized in much of the country – also are absorbing ramifications of the current recession through layoffs and the too often concomitant loss of health insurance.
Olga Martinez, president of Allright Diversified Service Inc. in Fresno, Calif., knows what it took to break into the male-dominated general-construction business a decade ago. But while she says it was difficult, she also says no woman of color should be deterred any longer.
“You do run into – I wouldn’t call it discrimination – but I’d call it where the opportunities aren’t handed to you. I‘d go to huge conferences in different parts of the country and be in circles of men talking about the construction industry and they’d look at me like, ‘How can you have a construction company?’ They’d assume it was my husband’s, which I don’t have, or father’s, or brother’s. When I said I was at the top, they knew I was a force to be reckoned with.
“After awhile, with guidance and prayer, I got very comfortable in the industry. If I didn’t have an answer, I’d go even to a man to get an answer.”
Over the years, Martinez said she’s observed how much minority women entrepreneurs’ confidence has grown.
“When I’m out networking I see more and more courage.”
Martinez, who was affiliated with the Los Angeles NAWBO chapter until she was forced to cut back due to health problems, said the organization is emblematic of women organizations that are “incredibly useful and valuable” to women entrepreneurs.
“They often have dynamic speakers and within the organization there are dynamic women. We share our stories, our successes and failures. It’s extremely important.”
Martinez said the federal Section 8(a) program also was a key for her firm. Under the Small Business Administration, it provides for disadvantaged businesses - mainly owned by minorities and women - to compete for federal work through sole-source contracts or set-asides.
By obtaining a mentor to help navigate the complex program, attending conferences to network and get training, and learning the intricacies of the federal system, Martinez has propelled Allright Diversified into a company with about two dozen employees – a workforce that swells during larger jobs usually involving either erecting or demolishing buildings on military bases around the country.
“In this industry, if you want to have the opportunity of a level playing field, you have to find out who in the country offers that opportunity. Now all women have an opportunity to seek SBA Section 8(a) contracts as long as they fall within the disadvantaged criteria. It’s been phenomenal,” she said.
Martinez said the SBA provided training and education, but that any success requires an entrepreneurial willingness to “hustle” and travel almost anywhere for jobs.
“There are programs, seminars, mentors, and conferences encouraging minorities and women of color to go for it,” she said.
Martinez also said women of color, and all women, need to come together to advance their business through education, shared experiences with technology, and workplace opportunities.
“I think when women find they aren’t alone - and they can call other women for support - I think it gives us a stronger confidence level. We’re realizing it’s tough out there … but I really believe anything and everything is possible.”