Legacy 2016 Miami: 25 Most Powerful Women Issue | Page 10
10BB
AN INDEPENDENT SUPPLEMENT BY MIA MEDIA & COMMUNICATIONS GROUP TO MIAMI HERALD
By Richard McCulloch
MONDAY, JANUARY 11, 2016
Women Are Changing the Color of Entrepreneurship
Richard McCulloch
VP of Client Services & Business Development
Tribeca Marketing Group.
The first time that I met Chef Yolanda
James, I could not help but be overwhelmed
with her presence. An air of confidence
exudes from this Culinary Arts graduate
from the prestigious Johnson & Wales
University. Her smile illuminates a room
with a warmth only rivaled by the steaming
pans of delicious dishes that she makes for
clients as the founder, executive chef and
owner of Sweet & Savory Catering based in
Miami.
She came through our office doors to
By HCIII
introduce her corporate lunch delivery
service which featured great tasting
selections prepared with healthy ingredients
and in portions conducive to a responsible
nutritional lifestyle. With the sedentary
habits that an office environment can often
facilitate, a healthy meal option that tasted
good and could be delivered right to you at
lunchtime was a value proposition that
resonated with me. Not only was it a great
idea, it was especially fulfilling to see a
single mother of color take her dream and
develop it into a reality.
Fast forward one year after meeting Chef
Yolanda and her catering service has not
only grown, but has given birth to a take-out
location; Tightwork Soul Food Seafood and
Grill. Not only has the Chef earned City
contracts to cater events, but the take-out
version of her vision has become a place for
her local community to stop in and enjoy
soul food favorites prepared with the
culinary talents of a professionally trained
Chef, marinated and made with her most
important ingredient; love.
According to statistics, Chef Yolanda is
not the only woman cooking up business as
an entrepreneur. Earlier this year, the
National Women's Business Council released
their analysis of preliminary Census data
which revealed that there were nearly 10
million women-owned small businesses in
the U.S. in 2012, a 27.5% increase from
2007. Despite male dominance when it
comes to the amount of overall
entrepreneurial ventures, don’t sleep on
these women who mean business. In the
same time period, women-owned businesses
grew at a rate four times that of male-owned
businesses, and earned a total of $1.6 trillion
between 2007 and 2012.
Though entrepreneurial motivation for
women varies, there is an interesting
common denominator when it comes to the
rise of women of color running their own
businesses. According to Margot Dorfman,
CEO of the U.S. Women’s Chamber of
Commerce, “We attribute the growth in
women-owned firms to the lack of fair pay,
fair promotion, and family-friendly policies
found in corporate America,” she said.
“Women of color, when you look at the
statistics, are impacted more significantly by
all of the negative factors that women face.
It’s not surprising that they have chosen to
invest in
themselves.”
Dorfman’s observations are certainly
supported by the growth of African American women turning to entrepreneurship as
a means to make a living and forge a legacy.
From 1997 to 2015, the number of African
American businesses owned by women
grew a staggering 322%.
Despite economic factors and workforce
inequalities that could simply reduce Black
women to collateral damage and statistical
victims of an unfair labor market, they are
taking charge of business and creating their
own. The legacy of Black women and
mothers “holding down” the household has
evolved into a quiet movement to hold
down their communities and the future of
their children by creating their own
businesses and subsequently, becoming key
contributors to job creation.
If you are a woman who has ever
doubted yourself as a future entrepreneur,
the data is very clear; you can do it, and as
you start to develop the idea for your
venture, the most important question that
you need to answer is; “if not now, when.”
Richard McCulloch is the VP of Client
Services & Business Development for
Tribeca Marketing Group. He can be
contacted at
[email protected]
Erica Lee Protects Humanity's Greatest Asset: Children
Erica Lee, Program Administrator,
Florida Department of Children and
Families’ Child Protective Services
Erica Lee started as a Child Protective
Investigator protecting those most
vulnerable. Lee takes her commitment very
seriously because she realized early on how
her role affects change for the good of a
child and their families. Lee recounts,
“I can honestly say that every day, I learned
something new, whether it was from the
families I served or the people I worked
with.”
Lee explains the importance of child
protective services in her words. “Children’s
experiences in their formative years are
crucial to their adjustment as adults. The
role of the Florida Department of Children
and Families’ Child Protective Services is to
ensure that children are free from abuse
and neglect and that their families are linked
to resources that will help produce better
outcomes. Parents who are empowered can
empower their children. Ultimately, any
investment made in children and families is
an investment in a stronger person, a
stronger village, and stronger communities.”
Being born in Plymouth, Montserrat in
the West Indies, Erica Lee felt the unfairness
of life because of situations out of her
control. “I remember having a feeling that I
could not affect change in my life. Also,
growing up with a deep dislike for the skin
that I was in; at times feeling
trapped being called too dark skinned or big
lipped.” These feelings of inadequacy led to
bad behavior, which led to her being held
back in the 9th grade. But no woman in her
family ever went to college or even had a
driver's license making her perceived bad
behavior seem acceptable for her.
The turning point came as an opportunity
to go to a JROTC summer camp. There she
was separated from her environment and
found her individuality. Lee was in charge of
a platoon through an obstacle course and
was terrified to take the role. However, an
inspiring counselor’s encouraging words
resonated with her. Instilling that a failure
wouldn’t be that she could not lead her team
to victory bu ]YHY