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Amsterdam News: Black-owned businesses demand share of federal dollars as COVID-19 rages on

COVID-19, HBA in the News

By J. Cunningham, Special to Texas Metro News

The coronavirus pandemic has ravaged the U.S. economy, leaving scores of businesses in limbo and livelihoods in jeopardy.

And Black businesses – many of which were already fighting to access capital – are struggling to weather this economic disaster COVID-19 has wrought.

They are calling on the federal government to ensure that their companies aren’t wiped out by the pandemic’s onslaught.

Last month, the government passed the $2.2 trillion CARES Act, which was supposed to help support businesses and sustain underemployed and out-of-work Americans. But business owners said the funding fell short. The $349 billion Paycheck Protection Program that was part of the CARES Act ran out of money in just two weeks, and multimillion-dollar chains extracted huge sums from the program. For example, Ruth’s Chris Steak House received $20 million, and the Potbelly Sandwich Shop got $10 million.

Smaller business owners meanwhile complained that they couldn’t get their applications through.

Last week, the release of a second loan program to bolster businesses and revive the economy provides about $484 billion for small businesses, hospitals and additional testing. But Black business owners said funds need to be earmarked specifically for African American firms to ensure that their companies survive the pandemic.

“It’s clear that we’re taking the biggest hit, but we’re finding that the resources aren’t being given to the worst hit,” said Larry D. Ivory, president of the Illinois Black Chamber of Commerce, which represents 144,000 businesses, calling the phenomenon “pandemic racism.” “It makes no sense. If you have devastation, you need to put money and resources into the people and places worst hit.”

Black-owned businesses already stand to be disproportionately impacted by the pandemic, reinforcing disparities in the United States. Some 40 percent of revenues from Black-owned businesses are in the top five most vulnerable sectors, including retail, leisure and hospitality, according to a report from the McKinsey Institute that was released earlier this month. Compared to other businesses countrywide, just 25 percent of revenues are affected, the report says.

“We need relief economically,” said Regina Smith, the CEO of the nonprofit Harlem Business Alliance. “We cannot continue to support the continued demise of Black businesses.”

There are about 2.6 million Black-owned businesses in the United States, which employ about one million people, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration. These firms, many of which are small, are considered to be the lifeblood of many communities. They create jobs, they keep money in communities, and they provide residents with needed products and services.

But Black business owners said the COVID-19 pandemic will decimate their ranks if the government doesn’t step in to help keep them from shutting down. They need grants and loans on a hyper-local level that will help Black business owners with their immediate bills and keep them from having to furlough, fire, or cut the pay of employees.

They also need access to local, state and federal government contracts – and specifically, a “master contract” where the government awards money to a nonprofit, community-based partner, and that entity, in turn, identifies Black businesses to fulfill the contract, according to a white paper from the Black Business Empowerment Committee, a group of business owners, houses of worship and community groups committed to growing and sustaining Black-owned businesses.

J. Cunningham is a long-time journalist and editor in New York.

 

http://amsterdamnews.com/news/2020/may/03/black-owned-businesses-demand-share-federal-dollar/

May 3, 2020
https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/art-business-closed-logo-sign-signalise-1519025-pxhere.com_t580.jpg 386 580 Harlem Business Alliance https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png Harlem Business Alliance2020-05-03 10:39:532020-07-03 09:36:27Amsterdam News: Black-owned businesses demand share of federal dollars as COVID-19 rages on

NewYorkTrend NYC: Cannabis & Entrepreneurship: Green Revolution 2018 in Harlem

Cannabis, HBA in the News
According to Business Insider, the market for legal marijuana is massive and exploding in a big way. Legal marijuana sales are predicted to hit $9.7 billion in North America in 2017, according to a new report from cannabis industry analysts Arcview Market Research, in partnership with BDS Analytics. “The Harlem community is poised and will be prepared to take advantage of the cannabis revolution. Our organization has hosted events to inspire and empower Black people to innovate and build better businesses. The Harlem Business Alliance is hoping to push the needle away from the devastating drug policies and toward generational wealth building with this budding industry. The economic opportunity is as huge as it is vital to the Harlem community, by creating new black-owned businesses and atoning for decades of systematic & disparate oppression through the war on drugs,” says, Regina Smith, Executive Director, Harlem Business Alliance.


The Cannabis and Entrepreneurship Summit is scheduled for June 21, National Black Theatre (2031 5th Avenue), 5-9PM. Tickets are available at https://greenrevolution2018.splashthat.com/ . Social media hashtags to follow the conversation: #hbagreenrevolution and #cannabisentrepreneurship.

The Cannabis and Entrepreneurship Summit will feature participation from: Amber Senter (keynote speaker, Supernova Women); Drug Policy Alliance; Minorities for Medical Marijuana: NY Minority Alliance; Minority Cannabis Business Association; Cannabis Cultural Association; Cannaclusive; Cannatech; BDTNDR; and, Women Grow.

Smith says, “Cannabis is the hot buzzword, but it’s more than just a trending topic. It has been used as a tool to incarcerate and disenfranchise our community. Now as popular opinion shifts, it (cannabis) has the power to be economically empowering. If we aren’t paying attention and preparing our community for this shift, by working together and sharing knowledge, we will be left behind again. This event will be the first of many led by HBA and specifically for Black people in Harlem. By starting conversations like these, we can grow a community of Black entrepreneurs and prepare them early to not just participate in but to dominate in the cannabis industry.”

The Harlem Business Alliance has pledged its service as an advocate for the preservation and retention of Harlem’s business community for over 37 years. Programs include, but are not limited to: Harlem’s first co-working space; first adult stem program; 10,000 entrepreneurs served through programs and services; 2,000 entrepreneurs received one-on-one counseling and over 1,200 workshops. With HBA’s guidance, their client’s small businesses bloomed from concept to tangible product, street vendor to store owner and food enthusiast to food artisan. Disrupt Harlem Code Squad was launched in Fall 2015, the first hyper-focused program to connect young adults with entrepreneurship options via technology.  Lastly, the HBA acknowledges when you educate a woman, you educate a generation; this inspired the groundbreaking Lillian Project, a tailored entrepreneur incubator for native-born African American women.

The time is now. The Cannabis and Entrepreneurship Summit will unlock opportunities for black people. Scheduled for Thursday, June 21, 5:00-9:00 PM, National Black Theatre (2031 5th Avenue). Tickets can be purchased at https://greenrevolution2018.splashthat.com/ .  Follow on social at #hbagreenrevolution and #cannabisentrepreneurship.

READ AT NYTREND NYC

June 8, 2018
https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/harlem-business-alliance-cannabis-entrepreneurship-33255312.png 154 433 Harlem Business Alliance https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png Harlem Business Alliance2018-06-08 18:24:522020-07-03 09:40:35NewYorkTrend NYC: Cannabis & Entrepreneurship: Green Revolution 2018 in Harlem

Positive Community Magazine – Black Women Did That : HBA Celebrates Brains, Grace and Power of Black Women

HBA Events, HBA in the News

In recognition of the success and inspiration they have brought to world, the HBA celebrates black women for all that they do and will continue to do. “Growing up surrounded by strong, intelligent black women, running thriving businesses and organizations throughout Harlem — Black Girl Magic was always the rule. Not the exception,” said Regina Smith, executive director of Harlem Business Alliance (HBA). HBA shined the spotlight on nine of those outstand-ing women as part of their 36th annual fundraising gala, May 3, 2017 at Mist, Harlem, a first for the organization, which traditionally honors both women and men. This year’s theme, “Black Women Did That,” recognized the silent power of countless black women who fueled nu-merous movements from the Underground Railroad to Civil Rights, and brought innovations to space, science, arts, and entrepreneurship.

READ THE ISSUE OF POSITIVE COMMUNITY MAGAZINE HERE

May 14, 2017
https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/2017-positivecomm-hbagala.jpg 487 623 Harlem Business Alliance https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png Harlem Business Alliance2017-05-14 18:43:102020-07-01 21:15:41Positive Community Magazine – Black Women Did That : HBA Celebrates Brains, Grace and Power of Black Women

Harlem World Magazine : Seitu’s World: Annual Harlem Business Alliance Awards Gala 2017

HBA Events, HBA in the News

On Wednesday, May 3rd, 2017 the 36Th Annual Harlem Business Alliance Awards Gala Celebrates ‘Black Women Did That’ Honoring The Brains, Grace and Power Of Black Women at MIST Harlem , New York.
Guests included Sylvia Rhone, Jeanne Wardford, Vera Moore, Dyana Williams, Glynda C. Carr, Kimberly Peeler-Allen, Jodie Patterson, Dr. Aletha Maybank and La-Verna J. Fountain, and many, many others.

READ AT HARLEM WORLD MAGAZINE

May 14, 2017
https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/hba1.jpg 400 522 Harlem Business Alliance https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png Harlem Business Alliance2017-05-14 18:32:472020-07-01 18:36:39Harlem World Magazine : Seitu’s World: Annual Harlem Business Alliance Awards Gala 2017

NewsOne: Gentrification Shaping Entrepreneurship In Harlem

HBA in the News
Written By Nigel Roberts

Posted November 26, 2016

Editor’s note: This is the second installment of NewsOne’s two-part examination of Black business in Harlem. In Part 2, NewsOne explores the impact of gentrification on Black businesses in Harlem. In Part 1, NewsOne examined Harlem’s vibrant Black start-up scene.

A multiracial set of business people and techies—some in suits, others in shirt-sleeves, jeans and the latest top of the line sneakers—gathered on a Friday morning in late October at Mist Harlem, a café and event space on West 116th Street in Manhattan.

They were attending the annual conference of Silicon Harlem’s annual conference, a for-profit company that is laying the groundwork, both human and technological, to transform Harlem into a thriving tech hub. Microsoft, Verizon, are just two big names that attended the event.

“Entrepreneurialism is on the rise everywhere, and Harlem is one of the hotbeds,” co-founder and CEO of Silicon Harlem Clayton Banks told NewsOne.

Indeed, it’s impossible to look at the growth of entrepreneurship in Harlem without addressing the impact of gentrification.

The historic community, which has a long history of Black entrepreneurship, has become a magnet for people who are not part of the traditional fabric of the community. Not long ago, it would have been rare to see White people in the community, known for spawning Black political powerhouses such as Adam Clayton Powell Sr., Adam Clayton Powell Jr., the Rev. Calvin O. Butts, and longtime Congressman Charlie Rangel.

But over the last decade, a dearth of affordable housing in Manhattan and a depressed housing market in Harlem have prompted interlopers of all stripes to move into the community. Now, luxury condos pierce the landscape amid housing revitalization efforts, Whole Foods is scheduled to open on 125th Street. And skyrocketing rents have forced many longtime and low-income Black residents to pull up stakes.

To be sure, the revitalized, increasingly diverse community attracts business people who do not live in Harlem. Banks describes what’s going on in Harlem as a natural evolution.

“We have been known for mom and pop shops in this village for years,” he stated. “So, it’s a natural progression for people to take advantage of this new economy—the sharing economy, digital economy, on-demand economy, innovation economy—and nurture it here in Harlem.”

Clayton Banks

Source: Nigel Roberts / Silicon Harlem CEO Clayton Banks gives opening remarks at the organization’s annual convention

But to Banks, the gentrification is economic—not race-based. He points to many Black acquaintances who have relocated to Harlem and bought million-dollar brownstones.

Whether it’s race-based or grounded mostly in economics, a new wave of residents is impacting new businesses and the people who own them.

John Henry, 23, is a Harlem entrepreneur. He started Mobile City, a tech-based concierge business, in 2012. Henry sold the company for a nice sum and has now turned his sights to venture capital and real estate technology tied to the community.

John Henry

Source: Aurora La Luna / John Henry

He’s also the managing director of Cofound Harlem, one of the community’s newest business incubators.

The Harlem Business Alliance, which advocates and nurtures Black-owned business and has been a cornerstone in the community for three decades, has a different take: gentrification is taking a toll on Harlem’s established Black-owned businesses.

“Our businesses have been dying so fast that we can’t keep up with the count, and there aren’t enough new ones to replace them,” said Walter Edwards, Harlem Business Alliance chairman. “Many of us are doing battle, rolling up our sleeves to make sure Black people still have a piece of the action. Some of my colleagues are talking about a legacy—if this corner is mine, I’m going to hold onto this. We’re going to come and help you hold onto this.”

The organization’s executive director, Regina Smith, added that there’s a lot of buzz online about the booming entrepreneurship in Harlem, but most of them are not Black-owned.

Smith said many of the community’s longtime business owners are struggling with access to credit, rising rent and other issues that make it challenging to continue doing business in Harlem.

In the community’s business development ecosystem, Henry views Cofound as a “generalist” incubator.

“We didn’t want to be like other programs that specialize,” he said. “We want to attract companies from anywhere and everywhere, irrespective of skin color. It doesn’t matter, as long as you make a commitment to stay in Harlem.”

At the Oct. 21 conference, Adam Neumann, the co-founder and CEO of the shared workspace company WeWork, announced a new partnership with Silicon Harlem. The $16 billion company, which is slated to open a Harlem co-work space in December 2016, is launching Mission Possible.

Adam Neumann

Source: Nigel Roberts / Adam Neumann announces the launch of Mission Possible

Through the initiative, entrepreneurs will receive up to 12 months of workspace at the Harlem location, as well as mentorship from industry experts. It’s sure to draw scores of people to Harlem who dream of becoming business owners.

Meanwhile, the Harlem Business Alliance is preparing young Harlem residents to be part of community’s burgeoning tech hub. Smith said she’s optimistic about the young people participating in the organization’s business development programs. And the young business people, she said, are keen to get their piece of the pie.

READ AT NEWS ONE

December 9, 2016
https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/DSC_0546-40-bwlogo.jpg 737 880 Harlem Business Alliance https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png Harlem Business Alliance2016-12-09 18:48:342020-07-01 18:51:52NewsOne: Gentrification Shaping Entrepreneurship In Harlem

NewsOne: Harlem Incubators Nurturing Vibrant Start-Up Scene

HBA in the News

Business incubators and gentrification are shaping the wave of entrepreneurship in the historic Black mecca.

Written By Nigel Roberts

Posted November 24, 2016

Editor’s Note: This is the first of a two-part series that examines entrepreneurship in Harlem, where NewsOne looks inside a few of the community’s business incubators. In Part 2, NewsOne explores how gentrification is helping to shape that growth.

Promptly at 7 p.m., Gina Ramcharan started a marketing lesson for her class of African-American female entrepreneurs.

The group of 25 women, from Millennials to Baby Boomers, filled a nicely renovated co-working space on Lenox Avenue in Harlem. Many of them, after a full day of work, arrived with cups of coffee and snacks to help energize them through the evening.

They meet every Monday night for an intensive 12-week business incubator program for African-American women called the Lillian Project, organized by the Harlem Business Alliance. These businesswomen are part of the wave of entrepreneurs in Harlem who are revitalizing the historic mecca of African-American culture.

Lillian Project 2

Source: Nigel Roberts/Lillian Project entrepreneurs.

Following The Steps Of ‘Pig Foot Mary’

Harlem Business Alliance, which has fostered and advocated for Harlem’s Black-owned businesses for three decades, is a cornerstone in the business community.

The Lillian Project is named for Lillian Harris Dean, aka “pig foot Mary,” an entrepreneur who came to Harlem in 1901 from Mississippi and built a successful soul food business on her meager wages as a maid.

The first cohort, which graduates in December, is learning the nuts and bolts of starting and operating a successful business. It’s also a sisterhood in which the businesswomen encourage each other and share ideas.

Lillian Project 2

Source: Nigel Roberts/Lillian Project entrepreneurs.

The businesses range from an environmentally conscious entrepreneur building a clothing line from recycled fabrics to another who plans to launch an alcohol-infused cupcake business.

A few of them, like Agzja Carey and Deondra Carter, plan to launch B Corps, a new category for companies that have a core social mission while also making profit.

Ramcharan said the selection committee chose Carter and Carey from among more than 100 applicants, in part, for their vision to create unique businesses that also fill community needs.

Gina Ramcharan

Source: Nigel Roberts / Gina Ramcharan teaches a marketing lesson for Lillian Project entrepreneurs.

Carey said she created the Sanaa Project LLC, an umbrella company for her education services, to deliver quality, innovative, cultural content that’s tailored to students and families of color.

She’s successfully provided programming under one of her brands, Crayons & Culture, in the Bedford Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn. With a new contract for services in Harlem, Carey said the Lillian Project is helping her to design an effective business model and to formulate a strategic plan for her expansion.

Cary, an experienced entrepreneur and social activist since 13, said education is her profession, but community organizing is at the core of what she does. The company’s mission is to “build institutions that redistribute the wealth and power among the Black community.”

According to Ramcharan, many of Harlem’s growing number of affluent Black residents take their children outside the community for school and have to look elsewhere for the cultural context of their education.

Services And Products To Meet The Needs Of Harlem’s Community

Carter, a real estate agent, wants to tackle the housing affordability problem—a growing challenge not just in Harlem, but also throughout New York City.

“I rent and sell all types of real estate in Harlem, including luxury condos and multi-million dollar renovated houses. But I see the need to help keep longtime residents in the community,” she said.

Carter’s company, Co-Own Inc., will offer clients of all races and ethnicities affordable housing options through collective purchasing power.

She has an “entrepreneurial gene,” inherited from her mother, experience operating small businesses, and has worked in marketing and financial services. The Lillian Project is helping her flesh out the details of her business plan.

In another part of the community, John Henry, managing director of Cofound Harlem, one of the community’s newest business incubators, is planting the seeds to create not just new businesses in Harlem, but also jobs and economic growth.

He negotiated a deal with a Harlem developer, who was committed to the community’s business development, to provide free space for the incubator and the new companies. In addition to rent-free space, Cofound offers its participants $50,000 of in-kind services and mentorship. Henry said he was able to get large companies, like Amazon and Google, to buy into their vision.

In exchange, the businesses in Cofound’s incubator must commit to staying in Harlem for at least four years.

The first cohort completed the 9-month program, which Henry calls a work in progress that he and his partners are fine-tuning. They selected just four companies out of about 150 applicants.

Henry said Cofound selected Creatr as one of the four companies in the incubator for a few reasons: team dynamics, great concept and proven track record.

Creatr is an online education platform, currently for photography but with a vision for additional virtual training in more intricate online design tools.

Team Creatr

Source: Jamall Oluokan / R-L Jamall Oluokan, Shomari Miller and Jason DePeaux

Strategy Is The Name Of The Game

Jamall Oluokun, CEO of Creatr, told NewsOne that the idea came from the experience of operating Papercutmag.com, in which users submit photographs. He and his partners noticed that the quality of uploaded photographs was poor and decided to offer training through a membership-based site.

“We’re at the launch stage,” said Oluokun, who has years of experience working in the technology media space and is optimistic about his company’s future. “Our mentors have been instrumental in the areas of networking and guiding us in marketing and distribution.”

Silicon Harlem is also nurturing business growth in the community. It’s a for-profit company that is laying the infrastructure—both human and technological—to transform Harlem into an attractive venue for the tech industry.

Cofounder and CEO Clayton Banks explained that his company offers a virtual program. The organization advises companies, sits on their boards and helps them attract capital. Companies in its incubator range from financial technology to Internet of Things and digital education platforms.

Together, these incubators—and others scattered throughout the community—are nurturing the next generation of Harlem’s business leaders.

PHOTO CREDIT: Getty, Nigel Roberts

READ AT NEWSONE

November 24, 2016
https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/14781833867071.jpg 1008 1511 Harlem Business Alliance https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png Harlem Business Alliance2016-11-24 18:55:012020-07-01 18:57:32NewsOne: Harlem Incubators Nurturing Vibrant Start-Up Scene

NY Daily News: Big retailers moved uptown in greatest numbers in 2012; survey shows 11.2% rise in corporate chains in Harlem, Washington Heights and Inwood

HBA in the News

By DOUGLAS FEIDEN

America’s big retail chains gained a major foothold in upper Manhattan this year, far outstripping increases they made in the numbers of store locations in the rest of the city, a recent survey by the Center for an Urban Future found.

National retailers like Applebee’s, Subway, Starbucks and Dunkin’ Donuts now have a total of 338 stores in Harlem, East Harlem, Washington Heights and Inwood, according to an analysis of 13 uptown ZIP codes the Center prepared for the Daily News.

That’s an 11.2% increase from the 304 store locations the think tank recorded in 2011 — and it reflects a retail boom that is transforming both the 125th St. corridor in Harlem and the 116th St. strip in East Harlem.

The rest of Manhattan saw only half that growth as the number of big retail outlets expanded to 2,826 in 2012 from 2,671 in 2011, a 5.8% increase. And citywide, the tally of national chains climbed a mere 2.4%, to 7,232 stores.

Read More at: https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/manhattan/chain-reaction-leads-uptown-article-1.1227884

December 26, 2012
https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Screenshot_2020-08-07-Big-retailers-moved-uptown-in-greatest-numbers-in-2012-survey-shows-11-2-rise-in-corporate-chains-i....png 552 740 Harlem Business Alliance https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png Harlem Business Alliance2012-12-26 12:25:092020-08-07 12:27:06NY Daily News: Big retailers moved uptown in greatest numbers in 2012; survey shows 11.2% rise in corporate chains in Harlem, Washington Heights and Inwood

NY Daily News: Harlem’s revitalization continues with Whole Foods Market, slated to arrive at W. 125th St. and Lenox Ave. in 2015

HBA in the News

By MICHAEL J. FEENEY

Whole Foods Market is coming to Harlem, promising to improve the quality of food shopping options while ratcheting up the level competition in the competitive retail grocery sector.

The popular grocery store chain, known for its all-natural and organic products, plans to bring a new location to a vacant lot on the corner of W. 125th St. and Lenox Ave., the company announced this week.

“It’s long been a focus of Whole Foods Market to work with the Harlem community,” said Christina Minardi, the company’s regional president, in a statement released on Tuesday.

“With so many Harlem residents shopping with us at our other New York City locations, we’re so pleased to bring our natural and organic grocery concept to an area of the city we’ve been looking forward to joining for quite some time,” she said.

Read More at: https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/manhattan/mixed-reaction-harlem-foods-article-1.1187055

October 18, 2012
https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png 0 0 Harlem Business Alliance https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png Harlem Business Alliance2012-10-18 12:22:132020-08-07 12:23:55NY Daily News: Harlem’s revitalization continues with Whole Foods Market, slated to arrive at W. 125th St. and Lenox Ave. in 2015

NY Amsterdam News: Inspiring moments at HBA’s ninth annual Economic Summit

HBA in the News

By HERB BOYD and DANIYA L. SANUSI

Derek Dingle is a con-summate storyteller who gathers his inspiration mainly from legends of the past—notables such as the late John Johnson, the founder of Black Enterprise magazine, A.G. Gaston and Earl Graves, where Dingle has been mainstay and ed-itor-in-chief. “Sometimes you have to look to the past to find your inspiration,” Dingle said, taking full measure of his panel’s theme, “Inspiration.” Dingle, introduced by Maria Gran-ville, followed welcoming remarks from Walter Edwards and Regina Smith, chair and executive director of the Harlem Business Alliance, re-spectively, hosting their ninth annual economic summit. There were also opening comments from Henrietta Lyle, chair of Manhattan Communi-ty Board 10, and Khalil Gibran Mu-hammad, director of the Schomburg Center, where the event was held. His long association with Black En-terprise, Dingle continued, gave him the entrepreneurial impetus to co-found Milestone Media Comics and set the stage for Black superheroes. “What we have to learn to do is to le-ve•age our properties and proper-ly market them,” Dingle said. And having a few resourceful business partners doesn’t hurt, he chuckled. Partnership, which would ring like a mantra throughout the sessions, was certainly a point stressed by Ember Media’s Clayton Banks during his time at the podium. Banks, like Dingle, is a very impressive speaker with tons of information about how to survive in business. in fact. he came armed with a Pow-

Derek Dingle at the podium; Clayton Banks and Maria Granville seated (Herb Boyd photo)
erPoint presentation that listed his “10 Commandments for Small Busi-nesses.” “Thou shall not work for free,” Banks intoned on the second of the commandments. Once you start doing this, he warned, you’ll be on the way to selling yourself cheap and reaping what your talent says you should earn. The second half of the Harlem Busi-ness Economic Summit jumped into high gear with panelist Julian Rob-erts of the JRSportBrief, a self-styled sports guru and host of one of the fastest growing sports vlogs (a video blog) on the Internet. Roberts started the vlog on You-Tube in 2009 as a way to express his thoughts and opinions on hot sports topics and to interact with other sports fans.

Read More at: https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/amsterdam-news-hba-summit2-scaled.jpg

October 7, 2012
https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/amsterdam-news-hba-summit2-scaled.jpg 2172 2560 Harlem Business Alliance https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png Harlem Business Alliance2012-10-07 12:17:402020-08-07 12:21:41NY Amsterdam News: Inspiring moments at HBA’s ninth annual Economic Summit

NY Daily News: Hue-Man Books ‘pops-up’ for first time since store’s closing to help MIST Harlem open its 300-seat arts and entertainment space

HBA in the News

By MICHAEL J. FEENEY

Two Harlem businesses — one new, one resurgent — turned to an NBA champion to help them begin making good on their plans to bring more programming to the community.

Miami Heat hoops star Dwyane Wade signed copies of his new book, “A Father First: How My Life Became Bigger Than Basketball” on Wednesday night at the brand new — and not quite finished — My Image Studios (MIST) Harlem.

The kick-off event at MIST Harlem, located at the Kalahari Condominiums on W. 116th St., was co-sponsored by Hue-Man Bookstore, a popular Harlem business that closed in July, ending a 10-year run.

When it’s completed, MIST Harlem will be a nearly 300-seat arts and entertainment space replete with a 130-seat restaurant and bar.

Plans for the venue, which will cater its programming to what its founders called the African and Latino diaspora, were in the works for nearly four years and MIST Harlem CEO Roland Laird said he’s thrilled to have it in Harlem.

“This is a place where culture emanates from,” said Laird, whose partners include developers Carlton Brown and Walter Edwards (both are founders of Full Spectrum; Edwards is also the chairman of the Harlem Business Alliance). “It’s very important to have a place that’s centered in African and Latino culture.”

Read More at: https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/manhattan/hue-man-books-pops-up-time-store-closing-mist-harlem-open-300-seat-arts-entertainment-space-article-1.1153534

 

September 6, 2012
https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Screenshot_2020-08-07-Hue-Man-Books-pops-up-for-first-time-since-stores-closing-to-help-MIST-Harlem-open-its-300-seat-ar....png 492 740 Harlem Business Alliance https://hbany.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/hba_2017_site_logo.png Harlem Business Alliance2012-09-06 12:14:142020-08-07 12:28:38NY Daily News: Hue-Man Books ‘pops-up’ for first time since store’s closing to help MIST Harlem open its 300-seat arts and entertainment space
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The Harlem Business Alliance (HBA), a 501(c)3 not-for-profit established in 1980, creates environments and opportunities that produce successful entrepreneurs and creates jobs for local residents. HBA is dedicated to enriching the local business community, with an emphasis on black owned businesses through education, support and advocacy. We believe local businesses create better communities and we inspire Black entrepreneurs to grow their roots not just locally but globally.

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