December 21, 2024

Entrepreneurship has no limits regarding race or gender. The black entrepreneurs you’ll learn about here have set the bar not only for Black business owners, but for all business owners.
Some threw job titles behind and took their new ideas into entirely different fields. Some started with little more than $40 and grit.
Some of these African Americans became hugely successful before they reached 30 years old (see our choices later in the article). For others, the jump into entrepreneurship came later.
All had these traits in common as they launched their small businesses: They refused to let skin color be a barrier. They refused to settle for the status quo. They refused to give up.



Top Black Entrepreneurs to Inspire You

Check our list of the top black entrepreneurs.

1.Madam C.J. Walker

You may not have heard of this woman, a leader in Black innovation, since her life spanned 1867-1919. Plagued with hair breakage, she developed a hair care product and traveled the southern states (mostly on foot!) promoting and selling it, as well as a skin and hair care regimen which became known as the Walker Method.


Madam C.J. Walker was one of the first American women to become a millionaire.

2.Oprah Winfrey

There’s a name that’s lost to history, and that’s the name of the television executive who told Oprah Winfrey that she “didn’t have it” and would never be successful in broadcasting. Instead, she became one of the most well-known of media people of all time. Her rich legacy includes staggering levels of financial support to educate and support young people.
Remember this Black entrepreneur’s quote: “If you’re holding anyone else accountable for your happiness, you’re wasting your time.”

3. Moziah Bridges, Mo’s Bows

Moziah Bridges started Mo’s Bows in 2011, when he was 9 years old. Today the teenage founder, president and creative director for Mo’s Bows (mosbowsmemphis.com) still handpicks the fabric used for products, which have reached $700,000 in sales. The Shark Tank graduate also designs all the neckties and bow ties for NBA teams. He pays homage to his Memphis roots with the Go Mo! Summer Camp Fund for Memphis children.



Read More: black entrepreneurs

4. Cory Nieves, Mr. Cory’s Cookies

This New Jersey entrepreneur launched Mr. Cory’s Cookie’s – Mr. Cory’s Cookies (mrcoryscookies.com) when he was just 6 years old. Working with his mother Lisa, the two combined forces to realize incredible business growth. Their homemade treats, delivered to customers’ doors, are made with all-natural, high-quality ingredients. He started with chocolate chip and branched out to include more unique flavors.

5. Mikaila Ulmer, Me & The Bees Lemonade

When she was four years old, Mikaila Ulmer was stung by a bee. The sting led her to want to learn more about bees. Meanwhile, she learned of a children’s business competition called Acton Children’s Business Fair and Austin (Texas) Lemonade Day.
She decided to enter, using her “Great Granny” Helen’s recipe for Flaxseed lemonade, printed in a 1940s cookbook. Mikaila tweaked the recipe by replacing sugar with local honey.



You can learn more about the company at Our Sweet Story – Me & the Bees Lemonade (meandthebees.com) Ulmer donates a percentage of her profits to honeybee research.

6. Maya Penn, Sustainable Fashion

Founder and CEO Maya Penn’s eco-friendly clothing is made from old vintage fabrics, as well as 100% organics fabrics made from cotton, hemp and bamboo. You can learn more about Maya’s ideas at Maya Penn – Sustainable Fashion (mayasideas.com). When she’s not immersed in fabrics and design with her company, Penn as a global activist for sustainability is sought as a speaker. She’s also written a book called You Got This, geared to inspire teens and young adults.

7.Binta Niambi Brown

Brown was an international corporate lawyer when she left that career to become co-chair and co-founder of Black Music Action Coalition. She is also founder and CEO of Omalilly Projects, an artist management and production company.
She didn’t stop there. She is also one of the top fundraisers in the world for political, humanitarian and cultural initiatives. Currently she is also focusing on human rights issues in Cambodia. You can learn more about Binta Niambi Brown at weforum.



8.MoAnA LUU

Luu if the founder of ManLuu, an American fashion house that features Creole luxury. Clothing is not all that graces the online stores pages – you’ll also see decorations, art and more. She also focuses on brand transformation, most notably a revamp of Essence magazine.

9.Dr. David Walcott

Dr. Walcott is internationally respected not only as a doctor, but as a man who deeply cares about improving healthcare. He is the founder of NovaMed, a company which focuses on healthcare in emerging markets, previously underserved by quality healthcare. Most recently Dr. Walcott is a co founder and ceo of InfinitiPartnership, bringing quality healthcare such as cardiac attack care to the Caribbean.

10.Janice Bryant Howard

Some entrepreneurs start their company with three times less capital than is average. Howard started her Act1Group with practically zero capital.
Howard moved back to her hometown, Tarboro NC and launched Act1Group, an employment agency and consulting service. She didn’t have a fax machine, office furniture or other equipment needed to start a company. She had little money. All she had was a phone.



Through building her clients using her own marketing skills, Howard has built Act1Group into an industry leader among employment agency companies.
Read More: black woman entrepreneurs

11.Nathalie Walten

Walten is the CEO and co-founder of Expectful, a company which focuses on holistic care of mind and body for expectant mothers. The interactive website covers all aspects of motherhood, including meditations, events, supportive groups and more. Expectful includes a number of experts on staff, in fields such as nutrition and post-partum care.
This young entrepreneur followed a path similar to that of other minority founders of companies – she saw a need based on personal experience and followed her heart to creating a company that she loves.



12.Vimbayi Kajese

Kajese is the founder and ceo of #Adtags. Kajese had been astonished and dismayed to learn that only 1% of stock images featured people of color. Stock images are a source of pictures which can be purchased by companies or advertisers.
#Adtags’ mission is to increase the use of visual content featuring people of color. The content is available for use by globally-c0nscious brands. In the advertising business of sponsored content, #Adtags is known as a business of “diversity crusaders.”

Black Entrepreneurs Who Made It Before 30

We’ve already met a mix of black entrepreneurs who “made it” before they were 30 years old. We’ve also met a few who “made it” in other careers before they left or expanded their businesses ventures to become entrepreneurs.
Here are more young black entrepreneurs who are awesome examples of turning an interest into optimum use in the business world.



13. Asmau Ahmed, Plum Perfect

It took her 8 years, but Asmau Ahmed had the perfect background for creating Plum Perfect. The Columbia grad (MBA Columbia Business School) also is also a chemical engineer.
She developed a personalized digital shopping experience for women of color. Customers begin by uploading a selfie. Then, based on the selfie and their answers to questions, Plum Perfect helps them build a unique color signature with recommended products, via a full administrative dashboard.

14. Anne-Marie Imafidon, Stemettes

Imafidon worked at Goldman Sachs before launching Stemettes, or Girls Do STEM Too… – Stemettes ®. Stemettes is a social enterprise designed to inspire and support young women and nonbinary persons towards careers in science, engineering, the arts and math.

15. Ashifi Gogo, Supply Chain Management and Technology Co.

Gogo’s company, Sproxil, is a supply chain mgt. and technology company based in Atlanta. Gogo used his business skills to create Sproxil.



Sproxil’s goal is to build trust, and develop intrinsic security, from end to end of the supply chain using mobile technology. A company’s brand is protected from fraud – such as counterfeiting and theft- which could occur along the chain. To date, Sproxil is protecting more than 2.5 billion product units.

16. Amari Ruff, SUDU, Technology Based Logistics Company

Ruff is the founder of SUDU Logistics, a multi-million-dollar tech enterprise. Here’s how the tech works:
SUDU connects the small and medium sized transportation entrepreneurs with the big companies, such as the giant box stores and manufacturers. SUDU focuses on entrepreneurs who are women, minorities or Veterans. It is basically an on-line marketplace that uses moving analytics technology to connect an entrepreneur with the big customers.
SUDU is a Chinese word that means speed and tempo.



17.Essynce Moore

At 6 years old, Essynce Moore launched a line of clothes and products for black youth called Essynce Couture. This young fashion designer hasn’t stopped there. She’s an actress and an author, who makes optimum advantage of her worldwide name recognition to inspire and support other black-owned business.

18.Asia Newson, Super Business Girl

Newson launched her venture into entrepreneurship making waves with her candles, especially her signature pink, yellow and light blue candle. From those beginnings she expanded to Super Business Girl, a training model on Facebook pages that teaches other young peers how to become entrepreneurs. She also teaches via online workshops which are geared to middle and high school students.

Start Supporting Young Black Owned Businesses Today

As small business owners know, all businesses – white owned businesses, black owned businesses – suffered during 2020 and 2021.
But from February 2020 through August 2021, the number of black business owners grew by 38%. We haven’t learned the official “why” about that stat, but here’s a guess. Those new business owners came from generations of shared histories – and deep down already knew how to turn a seemingly impossible challenge into a new vision for success.
Image: Depositphotos Comment â–Ľ


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