Black entrepreneurs this week delivered a message to companies wanting to address racial inequalities: Hire and wire.
Statements of support are great, they argued, but what really counts is money. Hire black employees, or wire investments their way.
The numbers are stark: Only 1% of VC-backed startups are headed by black founders, and only 3% of VC investors are black.
Some major investors have gotten the memo:
While Ben & Jerry’s was widely praised for its strong statement, a lot of other brands ended up sounding the same.
Customers want more than statements. They’re flooding brand social media accounts with demands to hire black workers and support racial justice groups.
It looks like it’s starting to work: Niantic, Uber, DoorDash, and dozens of other tech companies are all pledging money toward fighting racism.
Even fast food companies are opening their purses. Twitter users made #WendysIsOverParty trend this week because of apparent confusion over a prominent Wendy’s franchisee’s political donations.
Wendy’s clarified that the company doesn’t donate to presidential campaigns. However, it pledged $500k to the Thurgood Marshall College Fund and other social justice orgs.