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Why Supporting Black Businesses Is Everyone’s Business

By Mark S. Lee
Michigan Chronicle
https://michiganchronicle.com/

Detroit is a city of innovators, and entrepreneurs. It’s dynamic and has been and still is a national leader and home to an array of businesses, particularly Black-owned businesses.

And it’s not just about supporting and celebrating them during Black History Month, but 365 days a year.

Supporting Black-owned businesses is often framed as a cultural or community issue. But at its core, it’s also a powerful economic strategy—one that strengthens local neighborhoods, expands opportunity, and builds a more resilient regional economy.

They are the backbone of local and national economies.

With an estimated 50k small businesses, Detroit’s small businesses are diverse, collectively powerful, and more than storefronts. They’re job creators, community anchors, and engines of innovation. When we talk about supporting Black businesses, we’re talking about expanding the base of entrepreneurs who contribute to the tax base, hire locally, reinvest in neighborhoods, and build generational wealth. That matters to all of us—regardless of background—because stronger local business ecosystems create stronger local economies.

Black businesses help close economic gaps—through growth

One of the most important reasons to support Black-owned businesses is that entrepreneurship has long been one of the most reliable paths to wealth creation in America. A successful business doesn’t just create income for its owner—it creates assets, stability, and the ability to pass something meaningful to the next generation.

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But the reality is Black entrepreneurs have historically faced steeper barriers: less access to startup capital, fewer financial networks, lower approval rates for traditional lending, and often less visibility in mainstream business circles. Supporting Black businesses helps level the playing field—not through charity, but through commerce. It’s an investment in talent that has too often been overlooked.

Local dollars circulate and multiply

When you buy from a local Black-owned business, your dollars tend to stay closer to home. That business is more likely to hire locally, use local vendors, purchase from nearby suppliers, and reinvest in the community. This creates what economists call a multiplier effect: the same dollar can generate additional economic activity as it circulates.

It’s why a thriving corridor of small businesses can transform a neighborhood. It reduces vacancies, increases foot traffic, boosts property values, and improves public safety. That’s not theory—it’s what happens when business ownership is broad and inclusive.

Supporting Black businesses expands innovation

Entrepreneurship is one of America’s greatest competitive advantages. When more people have access to business ownership, we get more ideas, more products, more services, and more competition—which ultimately benefits consumers.

Black-owned businesses are thriving across industries: tech, logistics, professional services, retail, construction, health and wellness, food, creative industries, and more. Supporting them strengthens the innovation pipeline. It ensures the marketplace reflects the full range of customer needs and cultural insights.

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It’s not just what you buy—it’s who gets the opportunity

A key part of supporting Black businesses goes beyond individual shopping decisions. It also includes how corporations, nonprofits, schools, and governments spend money.

Supplier diversity programs matter. Contracting opportunities matter. Including Black-owned firms in bid processes matters. If a business is qualified and competitive, it should be in the room. Too often, networks and relationships—not performance—determine who gets the contract. Expanding opportunity expands economic growth.

What supporting Black businesses can look like

Supporting Black businesses doesn’t have to be complicated:

  • Buy intentionally: Make Black-owned businesses part of your regular routine—not just during special months.
  • Refer and review: Word-of-mouth is priceless. So are online reviews.
  • Partner and collaborate: If you’re a business owner, look for ways to subcontract, co-market, or share resources.
  • Invest: Consider mentorship, sponsorship, or even direct investment when appropriate.
  • Expand procurement: If you lead an organization, diversify your vendor list.

Bottom line

Supporting Black-owned businesses is not simply about doing what’s right—it’s about doing what works. It strengthens the economy, creates jobs, grows the tax base, and builds communities where more people can thrive.


And when Black businesses thrive, Detroit thrives. The region and economy thrive. And ultimately, we all benefit.

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We invite readers, business owners, and future entrepreneurs to follow along, ask questions, and engage. If you have story ideas or questions you can email Lee at mark@leegroupinnovation.com or visit leegroupinnovation.com.  

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