

The requirement to practice “racial concealment” in the company of White customers in order to achieve success In addition to identifying the positive aspects of Black entrepreneurship, the book also uses data, research, and anecdotes to highlight the challenges faced by Black entrepreneurs, including:Īn inability to access capital from traditional financial institutions like banks and private equity firms


The book also recognizes and celebrates Black entrepreneurial excellence, as it takes the reader through the stages of entrepreneurship, including ideation, raising capital, growing the company, and taking it public. Successful Black Entrepreneurs is an insightful collection of Harvard Business School case studies about Black entrepreneurs succeeding in a variety of industries and through different routes, including start-ups, franchising, and acquisitions. Roger Stevens and his wife Christine have one daughter.Learn about the successes of Black entrepreneurs through a collection of unique case studies In the real estate investment business, Stevens negotiated many important deals, including the famous 1951 transaction to buy the Empire State Building. Born in Michigan in 1910, Stevens's long and illustrious career spanning business, theater, politics and the arts has made him one of the most accomplished leaders of his time. Thought Stevens thought of himself as "fresh from the haystacks of the Middle West," his extraordinary accomplishments have touched those in every corner of the nation. His roster of board service reads like a registry of the finest American arts institutions: director of the Metropolitan Opera Association director of the Peabody Conservatory, Folder Library and Circle in the Square Theatre chairman of the board of trustees of the American Film Institute cofounder of the American Shakespeare Festival Theatre director of the National Symphony Orchestra Association, and more. During his tenure as the first Chairman of the NEA, the agency helped support many new programs, from literary festivals to grants to inner-city arts projects to artists-in-residence programs that placed visual artists in secondary schools. However, his artistic legacy reaches well beyond Broadway and the Kennedy Center.ĭuring the Johnson administration, Stevens served as Special Assistant on the Arts, establishing the National Council on the Arts which later became the National Endowment for the Arts. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts from 1961, when President Kennedy asked him for his help establishing a National Cultural Center, until the end of his tenure in 1988. Roger Stevens was responsible for envisioning, building and sustaining the John F. A theatrical producer in New York City and London, he produced more than 200 plays, a brought to the stage writers such as Eugene O'Neill, Tennessee Williams, Harold Pinter and T.S. Stevens is undoubtedly one of the greatest forces behind the arts in America.
