ONYX Magazine May/June 2020

Page 12

BUSINESS

Getting Your Business Off Life Support Ways to survive the global health threat, COVID-19 By Laura Dorsey

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here is an economic saying: “When America catches a cold, Black America gets pneumonia.” The problem with this saying is that if we use that same correlation and COVID-19 is America catching a cold, there is no definition for what the COVID-19 pandemic will be to Black America. A recent commentary asked, ‘Where are our Black leaders when we need them?’ The real question is, what does Black leadership look like? For so long, America has viewed African American leadership from a monolithic lens. There was a time when Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm X filled that criteria for us, but the world does not work like that today. Black America today faces wide-scale problems that must be addressed in a number of ways. The nation’s leading civil rights organizations requested an urgent meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer regarding racial equity in the coronavirus response proposal. Marc H. Morial, the president & CEO of the National Urban League; Melanie Campbell, the president & CEO of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation and Convener of the Black Women’s Roundtable; NAACP President & CEO Derrick Johnson and Rev. Al Sharpton, the founder and president 12 ONYX MAGAZINE

of the National Action Network, insisted that coronavirus response legislation must take racial equity into account. The fact is Urban communities of color are likely to suffer the brunt of the economic impacts of the coronavirus crisis, and any legislative response must contain targeted relief. The answer was ‘we hear you,’ but no definitive actions were initiated. Now is not the time for a wait-and-see approach or half measures. The unemployment rate is predicted to hit a staggering 20%, the highest since the great depression. If history repeats itself, minorities will struggle the most and be the hardest hit. JPMorgan Chase indicates that the average small business has 27 days of cash in reserve, but minority businesses often have less than 20 days’ worth. Dr. Eugene Franklin, the president of the Florida State Black Chamber of Commerce, suggests that small businesses should take this time to get their paperwork in order and work on their business plans. Normal is going to be different on the post coronavirus pandemic economic scene. If cash is king, then inventory is the queen. Failure to resource plan in these two areas will have catastrophic consequences. What is your plan to keep your customers/clients and employees? A strong market plan that creates a unique value proposition is nec-

essary to create separation from competitors. Franklin suggests that we take a WIN (What’s Important Now) approach to the economic challenges that the COVID-19 pandemic brings. A reminder to small businesses that the government response used in the 2008 financial crisis did not work for minority businesses. Low-interest funds are not always easy to come by for minorities with limited access to money and very few assets. People are talking about investing in the community and letting money circulate as a way of strengthening communities. It turns out that there are 35 African American owned banks and credit unions in the United States. Two of them are in the state of Florida: 1) FAMU Federal Credit Union – Tallahassee 2) One United Bank – Miami. It will be essential to provide large-scale support for small businesses that have lost customers and had to shutter operations. His recommendation: • Apply for Small Business Administration loans, in addition to the disaster loans, which only apply to businesses in states that have declared emergency status. Some state governments are offering aid packages. • Explore private sector programs and fintech products. Facebook said it would offer $100 million in grants to small businesses. And fintech companies such


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Dad, the outdoorsman

2min
page 43

Workplace: Five ways leaders should communicate during a pandemic

5min
pages 44-48

Feature: The essence of Jonathan Blount

7min
pages 36-38

Entrepreneurship: It’s your move

5min
pages 34-35

Gifts to celebrate mom from afar

2min
page 42

Community Local heroes

6min
pages 39-41

CareerSource Central Florida offers more access to jobs amid pandemic

3min
page 33

Travel: Take travel online

3min
page 17

Impact: COVID 19 and corrections

5min
pages 26-27

Guardian Care: When six feet becomes six miles

6min
pages 28-29

ONYX Reads: Books for your musical soul

3min
page 22

Health/Wellness: There is no such thing as a big-boned person

5min
pages 30-32

Money Matters

8min
pages 18-21

On the Rise: Resiliency during a pandemic

5min
pages 14-15

Medically Speaking: Another silent killer

6min
pages 8-9

Contributors

2min
page 4

Commentary: Ending ‘acceptable losses’ in disasters

3min
page 16

The power of a song in a strange land

5min
pages 10-11

Partners: Orlando Utilities Commission helps community

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page 7

Business: Getting your business off life support

4min
pages 12-13

Elevate: Restoring the mind during a pandemic

6min
pages 5-6
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