American vice-president Kamala Harris speaks on stage with the CEO of petrol, Caroline Wanga, to the Global Black Economic Forum at the 30th Annual Festival of Petrol Culture at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center on July 6, 2024 in New Orleans, in Louisiana.
Michael Democker | Getty Images News | Getty images
During a year when the American consumer was weighed down by economic uncertainty, geopolitical tensions and inflation, black entrepreneurs are impatient to go to the festival of petrol culture to connect with their main customers.
“Essence Fest is like my Black Friday,” said Rochelle Ivory, owner of Beauty Brand on the Edge Baby Hair. “This is my biggest sales weekend of the year. This is where I do all the capital that I reinvest in my business.”
Friday, Fest Essence Fest, with around 500,000 people attend the event in New Orleans. It generates about $ 1 billion in economic activity, according to the organizers.
“This is the event not to be missed,” said Brittney Adams, owner of Eyewear Brand Focus and Frame. She said that this year, Essence Fest is even more important because it has seen black consumers withdraw expenses.
“I would say that the uncertainty of the economic and political climate-it gives people a little hesitation. Should they save money? Should they buy the things they want?” Adams said.
Ivory said that its sales are down around 30% from one year to the next, but that it hopes that people will come to New Orleans who are looking to spend their time and their money on the festival market.
“It could make or undo some of us,” she said. “This is one of the rare places where black women, the black founders can really meet and be seen.”
The Global Black Economic Forum aims to provide visibility and create solutions for owners of black companies with fest gasoline. This year, the speakers include the judge of the Supreme Court Ketanji Brown-Jackson and the governor of Maryland Wes Moore. Last year, the president of the time, Kamala Harris, spoke.
“We intentionally organize a space that allows managers to preserve, build and reinvent the way we can collectively increase the economic opportunities to prosper,” said Alphonso David, CEO of GBEF.
Quarter of a second half
While many black Americans express economic anxiety, the data is less clear.
In the first quarter of this year, according to data from the federal reserve, the medial median wages of black workers was $ 1,192 an increase of 5% from one year to the next. Black unemployment was 6% in the last job report, a historically low number, but still greater than the national average of 4.2%.
However, the data does not seem to fully reflect the feeling of many black Americans who are concerned about the political, cultural and economic changes that have taken place since the election of President Donald Trump.
“Never let a good crisis get lost,” said John Hope Bryant, founder and CEO of Operation Hope, one of the largest non -profit organizations in the country focused on financial education and empowerment.
Bryant said he considered the concerns of black Americans as an opportunity in the second half of 2025.
John Hope Bryant is the founder and CEO of the Hope operation.
SauS Griffin | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty images
“This president has done something that has not been done since the 1960s, which is Unify Black America. Wealth was created at the beginning of 20 yearsth century because blacks were forced to work together. But instead of black life, let’s make black capitalist material, “he said.
Pastor Jamal Bryant of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church has galvanized black consumers with an organized boycott of Target This started in February in response to the retailer’s decision to reduce diversity, actions and inclusion initiatives.
Bryant said he was in discussion with Target but that he is ready to organize a longer term boycott if the retailer does not hold the promises she made to the black community after the murder of George Floyd. He urges black Americans to use the estimated forecasts of 2.1 billions of dollars in power forecasts by 2026 to stimulate economic and political changes.
“I would dare say that” protests from the portfolio “are a revolutionary activity,” said Bryant.
“I think we have to be very selective in the light of” Big Ugly Bill “which has just passed and how it will negatively affect our community,” he said, referring to Trump’s megabill who spent the congress this week.
Celebrate and educate
Invest Fest, an event that mixes trade and culture created by the financially targeted media company, you launch your leisure in Atlanta in August.
The CO-PDC Rashad Bilal and Troy Millings have said that the event will remain focused on financial literacy, but this year they focus on the urgent need for education and entrepreneurship in technology.
“It’s definitely now or never, the moment is now,” said Bilal.
“The important thing this year is the way technology will disrupt a lot of career paths and businesses, and we have to prepare for this, which is why AI is at the forefront of the conversation, crypto is at the forefront of conversations, real estate as always and entrepreneurship,” said Millings.
The news this year is a partnership with the Open Optity venture capital company and a pitch competition where an entrepreneur can gain $ 125,000 in financing to develop his business.
“We need more companies that can reach an evaluation of $ 100 million to an evaluation of $ 1 billion, to obtain on the stock market. The 9 times out of 10 paths is technology,” said Bilal.
The festival participants signed an exhibition wall on the first day of the festival of petrol culture on July 05, 2024 in New Orleans, in Louisiana.
Aaron J. Thornton | Wireimage | Getty images
The National Conference Black MBA Association in Houston in September will have a similar tone. The event is known for its career fair where the largest companies in the country recruit as well as for networking and dynamic social activities.
This year, the acting CEO Orlando Ashford is working to establish an education in artificial intelligence and financial literacy as the pillars of the event.
“Doing business as usual is not an option,” Ashford told CNBC. “AI is something that I literally refer to me as a tsunami of change that is on the way. We will all be forced to rotate in some respects in terms of AI. Those of us who are in front, who will kiss it and the lever can actually transform it into a wave.”