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Kim Roxie has opened a vegan makeup store in the historic district famously known as Black Wall Street. Roxie began her entrepreneurial journey in 2004 when she opened a makeup storefront in her hometown of Houston, Texas. According to Fox 23, her mother supported the launch with a $500 investment . “She gave me $500 and I saved up the rest of the money,” Kim told the outlet. “My mom loved makeup, she loved sitting in front of the vanity getting herself together and my mom did not have an office job, she was getting herself together to work at the post office.” Although the shop closed its doors in 2018, Roxie’s journey in the cosmetics space was far from over. The closure marked not an end, but a pivot — a chance for her to realign her mission with deeper personal connections and greater purpose. She was driven by two profound health challenges that reshaped her outlook on beauty and wellness. The first was her own struggle with alopecia, an autoimmune condition that caused hair...
A movement that was birthed out of the COVID-19 quarantine has raised millions of dollars to support Kamala Harris’ quest as the first Black woman president of the United States. “Win With Black Women” (WWBW) is a mantra and group conceptualized by Jotaka Eaddy, a social impact consultant in politics and technology who founded Full Circle Strategies. She understood the importance of community early on as a high school student looking to attend a conference geared towards those seeking law careers, Fortune reports. Raised in a humble environment in South Carolina, the $3,000 cost for the conference was out of reach for her parents. However, through the support of Black women church-goers she was able to attend. “Black women in my church and in my community sold chicken dinners and held bake sales to raise money to send me to that conference and to put me on an airplane that many of them have still never been on,” Eaddy said, according to Fortune. She went on to make history as the...
Goldman Sachs has added the Currys as two new additional members to help it reach its ambitious goal. As previously reported by AfroTech, Goldman Sachs announced a new initiative back in March that aimed to invest $10 billion in what they called the One Million Black Women (OMBW) initiative — a hefty effort that plans to support Black women over the next 10 years. The original 15-person Advisory Council has now grown to include NBA superstar Steph Curry and his wife Ayesha to assist the company in its grandiose mission to end racial inequity. “Given all that’s happened over the course of the last year, we’ve done a lot of talking at the firm—and even more listening—to help us figure out how we can do more to end the racial inequity and the gaps that have existed in society for well too long,” Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon previously shared in a statement to ESSENCE. “Impact comes with sustained effort over a long period of time. We’re very prepared for that.” According to the...
Goldman Sachs is doing what many are considering “unprecedented.” In a story first featured exclusively in Essence, it was announced that the banking giant is investing a gob-smacking $10 billion into what it’s calling its One Million Black Women (OMBW) initiative. The initiative pledges a $10 billion investment in support of Black women over the next 10 years. “Given all that’s happened over the course of the last year, we’ve done a lot of talking at the firm—and even more listening—to help us figure out how we can do more to end the racial inequity and the gaps that have existed in society for well too long,” said David Solomon, Goldman Sachs CEO, in a statement to Essence. “Impact comes with sustained effort over a long period of time. We’re very prepared for that.” Earlier today, the Goldman Sachs CEO went on CBS This Morning with Margaret Anadu, head of the Urban Investment Group, to talk more about the One Million Black Women initiative. They also addressed how they hope this...