Thursday, April 18, 2024

Black Venture Capitalist Sets $36M Fund to Invest in Black Women Founders Only

[videowaywire video_id=”2B52F1D823611FC9″]

Arlan Hamilton
Arlan Hamilton

*A black venture capitalist has decided to do something about the scores of “underestimated” black women founders who see less than 0.2 percent of venture capital funds when trying to launch their businesses.

During the United State of Women Summit in Los Angeles on May 5, Arlan Hamilton, the founder and managing partner of Backstage Capital, announced the launch of a $36 million dollar fund aimed at investing in black women founders like herself.

“.. This has been in the works for several months,” Hamilton told AfroTech. “It had a few iterations, but in the last couple of months, I made the decision that the money would go to funding Black women specifically and $1 million at a time, specifically.”

“It was very intentional and something that … I knew would probably get pushback from some people, but I have the greatest conviction around it,” she continued. “There’s a lot that goes into raising a fund of this size when you have had less than $5 million under management as a new fund manager, but I was up for the challenge.”

Hamilton built her seed-stage investment fund from the ground up. She spent her days pitching investors across the San Francisco Bay area but was also broke and homeless at the time, often sleeping on the floor of the San Francisco International Airport, according to Quartz. Her ultimate goal was to found a venture capital fund “dedicated to minimizing funding disparities in tech by investing in high-potential founders” who are non-white, women and/or LGBTQ.

By 2018, she had accomplished her dream. To date, Backstage Capital has invested in 80 companies across various industries, according to its website. All of the companies have at least one founder who is female, a person or color or member of the LGBTQ community.

Before 2018 ends, Hamilton’s firm plans to invest in two or three companies, the first of which is expected to be announced this summer, AfroTech reported. The entrepreneur said she anticipates funding at least six companies by 2019.

“We are no longer accepting the scraps at the end of the dinner table in venture capital and beyond as Black women,” Hamilton told the news site. “We asked nicely, and now it’s our turn.”

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