Black Entrepreneurs take over Miami for Black Tech Week

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Last week, on February 15, 2016, some of the most enterprising entrepreneurs of color convened in Miami, Florida to pitch start-ups and ventures at the Power Moves Miami Conference, a space filled with innovation and discovery.

Initiated by CEO Earl Robertson in 2014, PowerMoves Nola begun as a national initiative to connect entrepreneurs of color to mentors, capital, support and investment opportunities. So far, Power Moves has already helped nearly 100 companies secure more than $27 million in capital commitments. This year, Power Moves expanded to the sandy beaches of Miami to join Black Tech Week. Sponsors Morgan Stanley and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation invested a whopping $1.2 million to support the launch and planting, seeking to grant access to resources that entrepreneurs of color have historically been denied.

While there, Power Moves Miami held numerous intensive and informative boot camps that allowed entrepreneurs to walk away with sound advice. There were also several pitch competitions that provided entrepreneurs with the opportunity to pitch their ideas and win nearly $25,000.

Statistically, within the marketplace, Black and Hispanic students earn nearly 20 percent of computer science degrees, but make up only 9 percent of the technology industry and less than 1 percent of technology company founders. Additionally, according to data analysis from Silk, African-Americans and Latinos make up only 4 percent and 5 percent of the overall tech workforce, respectively. Through forming strategic partnerships, Power Moves and its partners are actively removing the barriers that prevent entrepreneurs from entering and competing in the marketplace.

Carla Harris, Morgan Stanley’s Vice Chairman, Global Wealth Management and Senior Client Advisor, discussed the importance of having events like Power Moves Miami. Impressed by the caliber of entrepreneurs at this year’s conference, she stated, “Power Moves Miami has been able to source high quality, high growth entrepreneurs and develop them.” She predicted that Power Moves Miami will be the place for great investors and entrepreneurs of color to meet and build with one another. “This will be the place where you will be able to find entrepreneurs of color on a larger scale.”

Sheila Herrling, Case Foundation’s SVP of Social Innovation, said the same. In a conversation, Herrling mentioned that the obstacles preventing the visibility of entrepreneurs of color is due to the standard myths of entrepreneurism which, in turn, affects participation. To offset this, she shared, we must “tap into the social capital” that entrepreneurs of color possess-something she feels Power Moves is doing in real time.

Earl Robertson, CEO of Power Moves and the New Orleans Startup fund, stated that, “people tend to overcomplicate entrepreneurship. When a really talented entrepreneur receives the right capital it can assist his/her community. Power Moves was put in place to “even out the unevenness of wealth distribution in some communities and make sure those communities have heroes that are well resourced.” Of the 11 female entrepreneurs of color to ever accrue over a million dollars for their companies, 4 came through Power Moves. This impressive track record speaks to the tremendous impact of this organization and highlights the fact that the fasting growing number of entrepreneurs in the U.S. are Black women, who have grown in number by an outstanding 322% since 1997 (Fortune).

Relocating from NOLA, the 2016 Power Moves Conference worked in conjunction with Black Tech Week to inject African American and Afro Caribbean entrepreneurs into Miami’s financial ecosystem. Felicia Fletcher, founder of Black Tech Week, asserted that: “You have to build the city that you want. Black Tech Week is our gift to the ecosystem in Miami… There is such genius and raw talent in our community. We don’t need to leave our community to be successful.” She was echoed by the Knight Foundation’s Matt Hagan, who affirmed the viability of Black businesses in stating, “Ecosystems are what we focus on. Diversity is our competitive advantage.”

Power Moves Miami is a shining example of Black innovation and ingenuity. It has set a new precedent for entrepreneurs of color and affirms the widespread belief that our leaders are already among us.

For me, to see entrepreneurs of color coalesce from across the country to pitch, share, and develop their ideas was awe-inspiring. Over the past few years, there has been a call for Black communities to take ownership over their commerce. At Black Tech Week, our community came together to do just that. Power Moves Miami proved that it’s time to for Black entrepreneurs to step into the spotlight and shine in their brilliance. With a tremendous need to see entrepreneurs of color make an impact in their communities and in the economy at-large, Power Moves Miami is a much needed resource. With the success of Black Tech Week, it is my hope that this model is duplicated across the country. Innovative minds nationwide have much to gain from such a resourceful and forward-thinking organization.

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