Russell Tech Business Incubator seeks to grow Black entrepreneurs, businesses in West Louisville

Author : dorianstevens69
Publish Date : 2020-12-24 22:55:50


Russell Tech Business Incubator seeks to grow Black entrepreneurs, businesses in West Louisville

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A new technology business incubator set to open in the Russell neighborhood in early 2021 is seeking to grow Black entrepreneurs by giving them training and resources.

"We are not broken," founder Dave Christopher said. "We don't need fixing. We need resources."

Tech giants is the founder and executive director of the Academy of Music Production and Education, known as AMPED Louisville, which helps children and teenagers, many who live in West Louisville, who have a passion for music.

Now, Christopher is hoping to help Black entrepreneurs through the AMPED Russell Tech Business Incubator, which will be located at the MoLo Village project at 12th and Jefferson.

"I want it to be the place as soon as you walk through the door, you feel your excellence, like you feel how great you are and how much greater you can be," he said.

According to Christopher, the incubator will begin with a cohort of 15 businesses, with several entrepreneurs graduates of AMPED Louisville. He said these businesses will receive training, access to capital and other resources, including access to accountants and attorneys.

"What I'm asking them is are you willing to take the time to learn the foundational things that you need to be a legacy business?" he said.

Christopher said the co-working space will also be available not only to the members of the cohort but to any entrepreneurs who may need access to the available resources. Christopher said this type of program is the only one of its kind in West Louisville. He said the goal of this program is to not just lend these businesses a hand but to teach them to create generational wealth that will help break the cycle of poverty affecting many families.

"It's almost like we have these programs that address the bandage," he said. "So we have really great bandages. What we need to do is heal the wound."

"We're going to learn how to build relationships with banks," Antonio Taylor, one of the members of the first cohort, said. "We're going to learn to build relationships with those professionals who work inside our industry so we know how to use the money that we got."

Taylor, known as T-Made, is the co-founder of Wave FM Online, a Black-owned multimedia company. Taylor said he knew Christopher when he had him on one of his shows a few years ago when he had a show on WLOU and signed onto the program as soon as Christopher approached him about joining.

"This program puts all emphasis on ownership because ownership is the key to generational wealth," Taylor said. "It is the key to closing the wealth gap in America."

Taylor said by the end of the year-long program with the Russell Tech Business Incubator, he hopes to have created a network of contacts that will be able to help fund and promote Wave FM Online and to create a sustainable business model for the future.

Chris Sacca mocks ‘Robinhood bros’ who spurn his investment advice: ‘Stonks never go down!’

Veteran venture investor Chris Sacca has a word of warning for beginner investors who made off like a bandit this year: It’s not you.

In a tweet Tuesday, Sacca dropped this “hard truth” on newbie investors: “You’re not actually that good at it. You just caught a wild bull market,” and advised them it’s time to take some profits.

 

The decade-long bull market has defied all odds and continued to surge this year, despite the economic havoc wrought by the coronavirus pandemic, leading to easy money for some investors, especially in tech, where IPOs boomed and valuations skyrocketed, leading to worries of another bubble. The tech-heavy Nasdaq COMP, +0.26% is up nearly 43% year to date, as opposed to the S&P 500’s SPX, +0.35% nearly 15% rise and the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s DJIA, +0.23% modest gain of almost 6%.

Also see: ‘Holy smokes, I’m a $TSLA-naire!’ Here’s how quickly Tesla’s wild ride has turned modest investments into seven-figure windfalls

While that tweet drew a lot of praise as solid advice, apparently Sacca drew enough backlash — including from Barstool Sports founder and day trader Dave Portnoy, who told Fox Business that Sacca “sounds like a sour loser and an idiot” — that he responded with another tweet Wednesday, this time dripping with sarcasm:

 

(“Stonks,” if you’re not hip to the lingo of kids these days, is an internet meme used to mock bad financial decisions.)

Sacca knows whereof he speaks. He built his first fortune investing during the dot-com boom two decades ago, then went bust when the bubble burst. He went on to found the VC fund Lowercase Capital, and was an early investor in tech companies such as Twitter Inc. TWTR, -0.61%, Instagram and Twilio Inc. TWLO, -0.11%. He retired from the VC game in 2017.

What Will Tech Policy Look Like Under Joe Biden?

Tech giants are the subject of censorship scrutiny, anti-monopoly lawsuits, and international trade tension. President-elect Joe Biden will have a lot to handle.

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