C2FO: $10M investment from Starbucks CEO will unlock $100M in loans to small, diverse businesses

March 7, 2023  |  Startland News Staff

Sandy Kemper, C2FO, and Howard Schultz, Starbucks

One of Kansas City’s most successful scaling startups announced Tuesday a new initiative — funded by Sheri Schultz and Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz — to provide access to $100 million in working capital for small and diverse businesses.

The partnership — designed to use Leawood-based C2FO’s innovative lending approach to deliver flexible, equitable access to loans at competitive rates — is enabled by a $10 million investment from the Schultz Family Foundation into C2FO’s lending program. It also publicly reunites collaborators Howard Schultz with Alexander “Sandy” Kemper, founder and CEO of C2FO, who previously joined a Startland News for a panel discussion on the importance of diversity and inclusion in the workplace.

Sheri Schultz and Howard Schultz, Schultz Family Foundation, speaking at an event with the Aspen Institute; photo courtesy of the Aspen Institute

Through the new initiative, C2FO will leverage the foundation’s Entrepreneurs Equity Fund investment to expand its existing funding capacity with impact credit firm Community Investment Management, enabling C2FO to expand its existing loan program and deliver an additional $100 million in projected loans in the next year, the company said.

Unlike products from banks and alternative lenders, each loan is based on each business’s unique potential, C2FO detailed in a press release, including growth and management team, rather than solely on the number of years it has been in business, last year’s profit, or last month’s accounts receivable balances.

Click here for more information about the partnership and C2FO’s loan application process.

The Schultz Family Foundation, established in 1996 by Sheri and Howard Schultz, interim CEO and chairman emeritus of Starbucks, creates pathways of opportunity for populations facing barriers to success, focusing on youth transitioning to adulthood and marginalized populations, including Black, Indigenous, and People of Color. By investing in scalable solutions and partnerships in communities across the country, the Foundation aims to help tackle the barriers and roadblocks that prevent individuals from reaching their full potential and, in doing so, strengthen our communities and our nation.

The Foundation’s Entrepreneurs Equity Fund (EEF) is a $100 million commitment to invest in diverse businesses as vehicles for fostering a more inclusive economy, creating jobs, and building wealth in historically marginalized communities.

“We are proud to partner with the Schultz Family Foundation. This is a fabulous opportunity for our two organizations to support small and diverse-owned businesses in a big way,” said Alexander “Sandy” Kemper, founder and CEO of C2FO. “We know that when businesses have equitable access to the capital they need — when a financial system is truly inclusive — we all win. Our partnership with the foundation will increase the number of loans we are able to give, supporting even more businesses than ever with easy, equitable and flexible access to capital.”

Such efforts are particularly worthwhile, Kemper said, because they enable businesses to expand their day-to-day operations without diluting diverse business owners’ equity ownership.

“America’s future rests on our entrepreneurial fire. But in recent years, the spark within many entrepreneurs has struggled to find the oxygen to burn bright,” said Howard Schultz. “The causes are many: predatory practices, lack of access to capital and social networks, the need for learning and community, and the systemic failures that lead some to not even try.”

“Providing working capital to help diverse businesses meet customer demand and scale has enormous potential to be a powerful economic catalyst for the country as a whole and historically marginalized communities in particular,” the Starbucks leader continued.

RELATED: An absent-minded workplace gaffe, a nationwide Starbucks controversy; why the CEO ‘leadership jersey’ demands fearlessness on diversity, inclusion

C2FO’s partnership with the Schultz Family Foundation is based on each organization’s mutual commitment to diverse-owned businesses, the two leaders shared. And it’s the most recent effort that builds on C2FO’s history of creating products and offerings that support businesses through innovative working capital solutions, the company said.

RELATED: New C2FO-powered payment hub unlocks capital for diverse-owned businesses

RELATED: C2FO donates all marketplace revenue it earned Friday to three KC nonprofits for Juneteenth

Because diverse-owned businesses have increasingly incorporated C2FO products and services into their cash management strategy, in 2022, the C2FO platform provided more than $4.7 billion in funding to minority- and women-owned businesses across the United States. This fueled business growth and enabled owners to invest in increased staffing, product or technology expansions, and more, the company said.

Check out a 2021 Startland News virtual panel discussion below that featured Sandy Kemper, Howard Schultz and Morgan Stanley executive Carla Harris sharing perspectives on diversity and inclusion initiatives in the workplace.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2023 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Modern world requires entrepreneurs to think like creatives, says KU’s Innovator in Residence

        By Tommy Felts | September 5, 2024

        Editor’s note: The University of Kansas’ School of Business is a partner of Startland News. LAWRENCE, Kansas — Building a skill set around creativity is critical to entrepreneurship — especially at a time when careers can be short-lived, said Josh Wexler. “Jobs are no longer for life,” explained the Innovator in Residence at the University…

        Grantmaking reboot ‘just one piece of the larger puzzle’ in Kauffman Foundation reset, CEO says

        By Tommy Felts | September 5, 2024

        Overhauling the Kauffman Foundation’s grantmaking strategy aligns with a broader, holistic reset for the influential Kansas City organization, said Dr. DeAngela Burns Wallace, emphasizing org-wide moves to deepen the impact and dialogue sparked by its giving. “We’re still engaged in the work happening locally, regionally, and nationally,” said Burns-Wallace, president and CEO of the Ewing…

        KC Current’s goalkeeper AD Franch lauded for teaming with WeCodeKC to empower urban youth 

        By Tommy Felts | September 4, 2024

        AD Franch is more than just a world-class athlete; she’s a true community servant, said Tammy Buckner, founder of WeCodeKC, heaping praise on the KC Current goalkeeper-turned-advocate for technology education in Kansas City. “Her passion and dedication to our students are unmatched,” said Buckner. “Through her partnership, we’ve been able to bring sports and technology…

        Midwest crypto platform Normal aims to bring blockchain ‘banking’ to the mainstream

        By Tommy Felts | September 4, 2024

        Cryptocurrencies are poised to radically disrupt and transform monetary systems across the globe, said Joshua Blew, noting the coming financial freedom offered by such developments is closely tied to individuals’ access to the best tools and ownership of the right assets. But connecting to them in a world of banking behemoths and entrenched financial institutions…