Often Black Entrepreneurs Have Merit,
But too often they are Invisible and Unconnected

Blacks and other under-represented entrepreneurs often possess significant merit and unparalleled talent that would elevate them to the elite of their pursuits but unlike their exceptional peers from the majority community in North America, blacks too often are invisible and unconnected to the resources of the decision makers

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THE WILL TO FIND A WAY

The Houston/Chavers Initiative creation was inspired by the analytical rigor and commitment of Charles Hamilton Houston while pursuing justice and equality and the dedication and business acumen of P.W. (Pearl William) Chavers in pursuing economic progress for people of African descent. These twin principles guide and serve as the spirit and raison d'etre of the HCI. 

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The Problem HCI is addressing

Mike Milken and Drexel Burnham Lambert initiated raising millions of dollars for black-owned businesses when other bankers turned them down including for: TLC Beatrice ($985 million), Georgetown Capital Partners ($105 million), American Shared Hospital Services ($35 million).

The TLC Group became viable because Mike Milken agreed to back Reginald F. Lewis. “What impressed me most was that he did his homework before any transaction. Eventually, we were pleased to provide nearly $1 billion in financing when the transaction closed in 1987.” Mike Milken.

When Mike Milken was indicted for securities fraud in 1989, access to the mainstream of money dried up for African American entrepreneurs because no other investment firm since has raised as much money for black-run companies.

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Clearinghouse

HCI seeks to be the clearinghouse to launch and revive black businesses, address their needs and formulate how they gain access to needed capital. Launching and stabilizing a business correlates to both adequacy of non-cash pay start-up equity capital and eventually the ability to obtain lower cost debt capital to finance the following: 1) working capital and 2) growth. So future debt is the twin of present-day equity.

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Network

Our network is our greatest value. HCI has a vibrant and unique network that is inclusive of: venture investors and venture capital firms, family offices, Wall Street executives, corporate executives and managers, supply-chain vendors, university professors and administrators.

We live in a ‘relationship economy’ in which everything from access to capital, vendors, customer acquisition, product placement are predominantly driven by relationships and connections. Our network is a strong lever that we bring to our portfolio companies.

Our passion and goal is to democratize the capital raising ecosystem and to create our own ecosystem for black and other minority owned/run companies to connect and thrive together. HCI will amplify the mission and help our portfolio companies accelerate their journey by helping them access capital and scale.

We will challenge the status quo and dare to venture where others have not been and will not go.

Trustworthy Company

Purpose

The Houston/Chavers Initiative endeavors to assist in improving the economic status of men and women of the black community. Through our activities the HCI aims to be a catalyst for business development for black entrepreneurs who historically have had a difficult time accessing the capital raising ecosystem to start or expand a business.

We strive to help ambitious and bold entrepreneurs who lack access, relationships and formative resources. HCI looks to build bridges between investment capital and entrepreneurial potential.

Our mission is to spur black entrepreneurs and other underrepresented founders to develop transformational, prosperous, sustainable and scalable companies that will positively impact aspects of our society. We believe we add value by asking the right questions, not by having all the answers.

We will welcome anyone from any ethnic background who has a unique product or service and demonstrates market penetration potential to ramp-up and scale.

I knew there was talent beyond just white voices. There were soulful sounds being made by Blacks but no one could hear them because they had nowhere to go to produce the kind of music Blacks wanted to hear,” Berry Gordy told an audience during a tribute to him at the Art Institute of Chicago. “All I wanted to do was help Black singers recognize their talent and share it with the world.”

Berry Gordy – hit making songwriter, Motown Records Founder, talent developer, visionary. Known as “The Chairman,” Berry Gordy, the founder and architect of Motown Records — an American original that arguably featured the most exceptional assembly of talent in music history.

What Berry Gordy and John H. Johnson did was to transform industries that blacks previously did not play leading roles in –  and not only did they enter their chosen professions – but they dominated and transformed those industries and changed the way black businesses were looked on by people from all cultures.

The HCI is looking for bold entrepreneurs who are talented, determined and can demonstrate a strong value proposition that is scalable and sustainable.

“He put a human face on African people. He changed the face of American journalism,” Jesse Jackson said. “The media projected us as less intelligent than we were, less hardworking, less patriotic, more volatile, less worthy. But John Johnson affirmed us with a clear mirror and clear water. We were not ugly, the water was dirty, and the dirty mirror gave distorted images of who we really were.”

John H. Johnson, widely regarded as the most influential African American publisher in American history. Johnson expanded from magazine publishing into book publishing, and owned Fashion Fair Cosmetics, the largest black-owned cosmetics company in the world, Supreme Beauty Products, and produced television specials. Johnson also later became chairman and CEO of Supreme Life Insurance, where he had began his career.

Who We Are

HCI directly addresses the issues of unequal capital access encountered by Black entrepreneurs of merit. While there are certainly talented Black entrepreneurs, strikingly, only 1% of venture-backed founders are Black. HCI will work to successfully facilitate capital access for those deserving Black entrepreneurs.

Ray Richardson founded – along with a pool of like-minded black executives and professionals – the HCI back in 1998 and ran it until 2010 with personal funds. So, the organization, while certainly and proudly connected to the historical Civil Rights struggle that marches on in the wake of the unfortunate, tragic and, most important, needless death of George Floyd, has a decades long legacy of encouraging racial justice and fair, open access to capital specifically in the realm of black entrepreneurship.

HCI operates in a manner distinct from the typical incubator in that Black entrepreneurs are provided with real time dialogue with potential funders. HCI is an ‘Investment Sourcing Platform’ for primarily black but also other diverse minority entrepreneurs of merit who are seeking broader and more favorable access to financing to grow or to start their businesses. HCI will focus on those entrepreneurs with bold ideas that deeply satisfy customers demands, solve significant problems and are ether scalable or can deeply penetrate the intended market. While we will endeavor to selectively invest funds in our clients to cover certain growth and start-up costs and to bolster balance sheets on a ‘friends and family’ angel basis, the greatest emphasis will be placed on the provision of advisory services and related incubation support so that the clients are highly visible and attractive to funding sources that will provide the main financing. The goal is to heighten our client probability of success by assisting them in laying the strongest foundation.

Oftentimes, talented black entrepreneurs lack resources critical to success including adequate start-up equity capital and other formative resources to launch their venture. Or, if already established, lacks access to growth capital and credit as well as capital expenditure resources to expand their business. That is when the HCI steps in with its network of capital and operational relationships, serving as a supportive conduit to the next level of success.

The HCI, as an ‘Investment Sourcing Platform,’ has substantial core strengths including:

  1. Bring an untapped, unfamiliar and often unrecognized source of entrepreneurial talent to the visibility of the startup capital markets.
  2. In addition to sourcing established talent from within corporations and emerging talent from historically black colleges and universities, we go to where entrepreneurs are with targeted “on-location” forums to bring potential investors face-to-face with black entrepreneurs in their environment (e.g., New York, New Orleans, Atlanta, Nashville, Chicago, Oakland) or via virtual conferences.
  3. We offer expert consulting to drive content for successful pitches as well as technical assistance needed to create business plans, etc.
  4. We offer coaching to entrepreneurs to increase their VC acumen as they prepare for pitches – often times black entrepreneurs will have a compelling concept and unique and attractive product or solution, but they may not have the “vernacular” or “elevator pitch” to succinctly describe their idea or product and get the investor interested enough to ask follow-up questions.
  5. We source and filter out entrepreneurs to ensure that they have the potential to “scale” and “sustain” relevant market presence and will be able to articulate to investors key elements: category size and growth rate, trends, attractiveness of product or solution, etc.
  6. We present entrepreneurs to investors who have innovative ideas/concepts inclusive of penetration strategy and scalability model.
  7. We support entrepreneurs who can confidently articulate that their business model includes not just initial innovation, but also the sustainability and operational capacity that will yield long term profitability and viability.
  8. We institutionally offer pre-angel/angel minority investment to bridge entrepreneurs to their first and/or main rounds of external funding but, furthermore, link black investors and investors from other communities to black entrepreneurs for additional funding support to generate a 360-degree cycle of wealth. Black businesses are generally under-capitalized from the start, therefore HCI seeks to level the playing field to increase the probability of successful business launch – then leading to survival – then leading to sustainable growth and ultimately to a scalable business. Indeed, black businesses have more stages of development than their main-stream counterparts because of the relative lack of capital available to them.

HCI understands that the Black community, HBCUs in particular, is filled with a culture of entrepreneurial excellence, aptitude and aspiration that only needs connection and exposure to a receptive investor(s) to thrive. Based on the legacy of institutions such as Tennessee State University, for example, one can easily envision a pipeline of entrepreneurs from HBCU’s that rivals the output of such schools as Harvard, Stanford, MIT, University of Pennsylvania, University of Michigan, etc.

“Hope is tenacious. It goes on living and working when science has dealt it what should be its deathblow.” Paul Laurence Dunbar

Who Traditionally Has Access to Capital

Silicon Valley

Ivy League and Ivy Plus Grads

Wall Street

HCI seeks to introduce black entrepreneurs to the Capital Access table

@ Copyright HCI Enterprise LLC