The Truth About Black Folks and Our Reputation in Business
Four reasons some black businesses get a bad rap (and what entrepreneurs can do to fight it)
Browse 14836 search results
Four reasons some black businesses get a bad rap (and what entrepreneurs can do to fight it)
Arnold W. Donald knows well the challenges of making it to the C-suite. He achieved that goal at a time when companies that embraced diversity did so as a mark of corporate citizenship but without making the connection to bottom-line results.
Publisher and Chairman Earl G. Graves Sr. states unequivocally that historically black colleges are still a solution to providing educational opportunity.
Patreese Walker is a business coach helping other entrepreneurs launch their companies and build a name for themselves.
Expanding to 14 dealerships in four states—North Carolina, South Carolina, West Virginia, and Maryland—Mills Auto posted revenue from $99 million in 2009 to $474 million a decade later—a phenomenal 379% revenue growth that made it the fifth largest black-owned auto dealership in the U.S.