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Business Tip:  She educates entrepreneurs of color—about equitable access to capital.

Business Tip: She educates entrepreneurs of color—about equitable access to capital.

Published 6 days, 6 hours ago
Description

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Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Sahra S. Halpern.

Interview Purpose

The purpose of this interview is to educate small business owners—especially entrepreneurs of color—about equitable access to capital, alternative lending pathways, and how to become “capital ready.” Sahra Halpern, President and CEO of the Business Consortium Fund (BCF), explains how mission‑driven lending fills the gap left by traditional banks and helps small businesses survive, grow, and ultimately graduate into mainstream financing.

The conversation also aims to demystify lending, reduce fear around capital, and encourage entrepreneurs to build trusted financial relationships before entering moments of crisis.


Core Themes Discussed 1. Why Small Businesses Are Turned Down by Banks

Halpern explains that many small businesses are rejected by banks not because they lack potential, but because banks operate under strict underwriting and regulatory requirements. These systems often fail to account for resilience, experience, contracts, and future growth.

BCF exists to serve as a bridge—supporting businesses where banks cannot and preparing them to eventually return as qualified borrowers.


2. Capital Curious vs. Capital Ready

A key distinction introduced in the interview is the difference between businesses that are “capital curious” and those that are “capital ready.”

Many entrepreneurs know they need funding but lack:

  • Financial organization
  • Clear projections
  • Proper documentation
  • A capital strategy

BCF provides technical assistance to help businesses prepare for financing instead of setting them up to fail.


3. Mission‑Driven Lending and Community Impact

Halpern frames lending as an ecosystem, not a transaction. When small businesses succeed:

  • Business owners gain stability
  • Employees gain jobs
  • Communities grow stronger
  • Large corporations benefit from more diverse and capable supply chains

BCF focuses on long‑term economic impact, not short‑term profit.


4. CDFIs vs. SBA Loans

The interview draws a clear distinction between Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) like BCF and government entities such as the SBA.

Key differences highlighted:

  • SBA programs shift based on political administrations
  • SBA underwriting has tightened in recent years
  • CDFIs are nonprofit, mission‑aligned, and relationship‑driven
  • CDFIs look at the whole entrepreneur, not just credit score
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