Millionaire Mastermind Academy, INC
- Yes
- Connecting small business owners and key stakeholders such as investors, local policymakers, and mentors with the relevant experience to improve coordination, collaboration, and knowledge bases within the small business ecosystem
- Supporting and fostering growth to scale through comprehensive and relevant technical support assistance such as legal aid, fiscal management for sustainability, marketing, and procurement
The two-tiered approach (methods) of the Pioneer Program are business training and mentorship.
Business Training - Training is used to help participants obtain critical information and resources about starting, growing, and managing a successful and sustainable business. Training is delivered both in-person and virtually. The training curriculum includes 12 modules that range from internal motivation and vision, business model development, target audiences and marketing, business operations, implementation and more.
Mentorship - The mentorship approach meets the participant's need for business connections, encouragement, and ongoing guidance in business decisions. The mentorship framework is designed to give participants access to well-experienced business experts that can help them put the training into action. Mentors provide “learning support” so that participants don’t just learn intangible information, but are also empowered to feel confident about using the information to grow their business.
The Millionaire Mindset Academy Entrepreneur Accelerator Program is a 15-week program that equips and empowers minority women to combat poverty through entrepreneurship and take back control of their future and financial situations. This program is designed to give you sustainable entrepreneurial success by providing:
- College-level Business Training
- Access to Business Networks
- An Inclusive Business Environment to Learn
- Networking With Fellow Entrepreneurs
- A Safe Space To Ask Questions & Cultivate Knowledge
Offered only 2 times a year, The Entrepreneur Accelerator Program will give you the knowledge and opportunities to start and scale a business, business development, marketing strategy, effective management, and product design.
Now that the American economy is being negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, low-income women are at an even higher risk of extreme poverty. The International Labor Organization estimates that 195 million jobs could be eliminated globally due to the pandemic, with a majority in sectors predominated by women. The 26% gender gap in labor force participation now seems to be widening further and the U.S. Department of Labor reported in April 2020 that women held 60% of the 700k jobs that have been eliminated in the U.S. so far due to COVID-19. Reports on COVID-19 also indicate that most people working in the informal sector as low-wage workers that are vulnerable to unemployment due to COVID-19 are women.
Low-income women and women of color working in non-essential service industries such as food service, hospitality, and domestic workers are particularly vulnerable to being laid off or exploited for their labor during COVID-19.
The solution is entrepreneurship and creating sustainable small business
As a result of pre and post COVID-19 gender inequalities, there is an increasing need for more women to overcome the pre-existing threat of poverty, combat new challenges presented by recent layoffs, and contribute to the recovery of the economy. The London Business School’s Global Entrepreneurship Monitor has confirmed that entrepreneurship provides jobs, creates new products, advances technology, and increases prospects for those who start, grow, work for, or invest in new ventures. Lives change as entrepreneurs gain experience, confidence, and wealth.
Due to the fact that the challenge puts emphasis on programs that focus on self-help, we view your foundation as a potential strategic partner to guide us through this stage. Therefore, this alignment of purpose makes this challenge a perfect fit for our organization. Our work includes removing systemic barriers to accessing affordable capital, providing access to mentorship, and facilitating college-level business training for small businesses owned by women from minority groups. Additionally, this challenge aligns with our long-term goal of positively impacting our community, and we hope to learn a lot from your foundation's in-depth human capital and network ties since your track record speaks for itself. We want to create a precedent in the support of businesses owned and controlled by women from minority groups, and we believe that your foundation is a pretty good match for that purpose. Moreover, our needs and circumstances at this given point in time make this challenge even more appealing for our organization. We believe that the level of expertise at your foundation can provide immense value to our organization and validate our operations in the state of Georgia. We also hope that this can be done through a collaborative vetting process that brings together a broad assortment of diverse programs that our organizations can handle. Moreover, the strategic value from your project managers will complement our team and ensure that our programs run smoothly and we fulfill. We therefore hope to form long-lasting relationships with this foundation if selected.
Target Population
Our target population cuts across women in America, with emphasis on the poor, women of color/ethnic minorities, single mothers and other economically disadvantaged women.
- Women constituted more than 51 percent of the American population and nearly 47 percent of the labor force in 2004.
- Of women in the United States, 14.5 percent were in poverty in 2004. The poverty rate among unemployed women was more than double the rate among women overall, at 31.8 percent.
- Nearly one in four families, or more than 8.3 million, was headed by a single mother caring for her own children younger than 18. Families headed by single fathers numbered 2.3 million.
- In 2002, women-owned 6.5 million or 28.2 percent of nonfarm U.S. firms. More than 14 percent of these women-owned firms were employers, with 7.1 million workers and $173.7 billion in annual payroll.
- Women-owned firms accounted for 6.5 percent of total employment in U.S. firms in 2002 and 4.2 percent of total receipts.
- Almost 80 percent of women-owned firms had receipts totaling less than $50,000 in both 1997 and 2002. Total receipts for firms in this under-$50,000 group constituted about 6 percent of total women-owned business receipts in both years.
Current Numbers for Firms Owned by Women of Color
As of 2017, minorities accounted for 46% of all women-owned businesses (an estimated 5,400,100, employing 2,105,900 people and generating $361 billion in revenues).
- Yes
Florida & Georgia
Our accelerator programs offer a whole range of management and business development skills to help minority women in Georgia and Florida grow their respective social and business ventures. These education programs have helped businesses thrive and have allowed our minority women-led entrepreneurs to become the true drivers of future employment. Although state colleges have made significant educational investments, they have not yet delved deeply into the business educational options like real estate education that foster entrepreneurship like we have. We have been able to use our effective data collection and analysis skills to research and develop strategies that have led to the creation of innovative products and services for our programs. Our research data analysis on these businesses led by minorities in these two states has provided a well-studied course of action plan that seeks to improve operations and establish better business acceleration programs.
Millionaire Mastermind Academy offers programs that help to launch small businesses and offers advanced programs that help to sustain and scale.
The mission of Millionaire Mastermind Academy is to educate and support the growth of women-owned businesses, thereby strengthening their impact on the economy and mitigating the problems presented by poverty.
Our main focus is to ensure that small businesses get access to funding and technology. Moreover, with the right policies, our mission is to enable a more diverse mix of funding options for these businesses. We strive to empower these small businesses by offering management consultancy, legal counseling, marketing, financial and enterprise planning, and business development. We offer these services through training, coaching, and mentoring programs since they are pivotal to women entrepreneurs in minority communities. Our strategic benefit of deploying these programs to launch businesses is the basis for our sustainable competitive advantage.
Through the creation of entrepreneurial initiatives and programs that help address the inequality gap in all forms, but specifically with education and economics, we can help address and solve our disparity because of a couple of factors.
- Innovation is inherent to all people, however, some communities have more resources to see it come to fruition and commercialize it than others.
- By exposing and sharing these programs of innovation embedded with social impact on minorities and women of color people we can give them the opportunity to create a better world tomorrow and rectify our missteps today.
- When we cultivate more minority businesses to be innovators, entrepreneurs, and inventors they can own their intellectual property and capitalize on it. When they can build the wealth they will scale companies and invest back in their communities.
- When these communities are invested we will see an increase in the quality of education and wealth aggregation as a whole.
- When the economic wealth of a community increases so will the health of that community, and thus their lifespan increases.
- When people live longer lives they create more stable and dependable families where knowledge is passed down and that leads to creating generational wealth.
- Because there is an impending demographic shift in the next twenty-five years in our country, it is imperative that we invest in what are currently considered minority communities because we will depend on them to help lead our country forward.
- When our communities create economic prosperity our states and country benefit and it reflects not only in our Gross Domestic Product but also in our Social Progress Index and Happiness Index globally.
- When a country has these high levels of index rankings it has been shown that they have a more stable, thriving, and equitable government and peaceful society.
- When societies are free to think, explore and experiment without the fear of survival they help humanity advance forward because inherently humans are all creators and innovators.
- Growth: an established product, service, or business model that is sustainable through proven effectiveness and is poised for further growth into additional communities.
- Growth: A registered 501(c)(3) with an established product, service, or business model in one or several communities, which is poised for further growth. Organizations should have a proven track record with an annual operating budget.