C2FO launches empowerment grants to boost Black-owned businesses, entrepreneurs
June 23, 2023 | Startland News Staff
A new grant program from one of Kansas City’s most high profile scaleups is expected to empower — and help fund — three nonprofit organizations serving Black-owned businesses and entrepreneurs, said Jessie Fields.
“We know small business owners, and especially diverse business owners, face so many challenges,” said Fields, director of talent development and DEI for Leawood-based, global fintech powerhouse C2FO. “That’s why we’re so excited to have a grant that focuses on the needs of the Black-owned business community and takes a step forward in making the system more equitable.”
C2FO announced its Business Empowerment Grant Program in observance of the Juneteenth holiday. The company has donated more than $220,000 to local nonprofit organizations that support Black entrepreneurs and businesses in honor of Juneteenth over the past two years.
Its 2023 Juneteenth Grants initiative launched the week of June 19 with up to $154,400 in donations slated for up to three organizations. (Grant amounts are funded from C2FO’s U.S. marketplace revenue earned on Juneteenth.) Applications opened June 21 and run through Aug. 1. Recipients are expected to be announced the week of Aug. 8.
Click here to learn more about applying for 2023 Juneteenth Grants.
Organizations are invited to review the eligibility criteria and apply if their programs or initiatives fit within the grant requirements. Noted focuses for potential awardees include efforts that benefit Black-owned businesses and entrepreneurs in these areas:
- Technology
- Financial literacy and independence
- Business mentorship
- Leadership
- Addressing a clear, identified area of need in the community that may otherwise go unaddressed through normal means, such as the nonprofit’s operating budget
- Provide lasting benefits for the community
“We choose to invest in our communities by supporting 501(c)(3) organizations that educate and provide resources to entrepreneurs and local businesses because we know that when all businesses have access to the capital they need — when a financial system is truly inclusive — we all win,” C2FO said in an announcement of the Business Empowerment Grant Program.
Diversity, equity and inclusion efforts not only offer commercial appeal and profit motive, but a moral imperative for companies like C2FO, said Sandy Kemper, founder and CEO of C2FO, during a 2021 Startland News event focused on inclusive workplaces.
“Do it for the right reasons,” said Kemper, who has largely eschewed publicizing C2FO’s previous Juneteenth funding efforts. “There’s a cynical eye right now because there were a lot of folks doing a lot of [talking] and have not followed up after BLM, after Trayvon [Martin], after Ferguson [Missouri]. There’s a lot of talk and not a lot of action.”
2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
SNAP cuts are ‘worse than they look on paper’: Food access advocates warn shelves could go bare overnight
Chef Shanita McAfee-Bryant doesn’t mince words about perceptions of the hungry Kansas Citians she serves daily through her award-winning culinary social venture. “These are the people who — if you listen to the rhetoric — are deemed ‘lazy,’” the founder of The Prospect KC’s NourishKC Community Kitchen told Startland News. “We know the narratives being…
LISTEN: Fermenting a clean future through products from meat alternatives to skin creams and baby formula
On this episode of Startland News’ Plug and Play Topeka founder podcast series, we chat with Francesca Gallucci of Natáur, a Baltimore-based biotech company that’s reimagining how essential nutrients are made. Combining synthetic biology, metabolic engineering, and eco-friendly fermentation, they’re producing bio-based taurine (and other naturally occurring sulfur compounds) without relying on petroleum. Gallucci takes…
KCMO slashes fees for outdoor dining permits, launches dining trail for grant winning projects
Kansas City has officially eliminated outdoor dining permit fees, reducing the cost from $850 to zero, thanks to the momentum created by a city-led initiative to encourage investment in outdoor dining experiences, city leaders announced this week, unveiling new plans to promote funded businesses and their projects. Launched in 2024, the Outdoor Dining Enhancement Program…
World Cup will produce KC small biz millionaires in just weeks, leaders say, but it’s only the start
Kansas City can’t look at the World Cup in 2026 as one big event where businesses are going to make good money for a while, and then everything goes back to normal, said Wes Rogers. “This has to be the beginning of the next chapter of our city,” the 2nd District Councilman for Kansas City,…
