Black Girl Ventures (BGV), a fund, organization, and community I founded and lead, addresses many key challenges of Black founders and provides business and leadership training to catapult women into entrepreneurship as a career or develop a skill that leads to an executive role. The program assesses each entrepreneur’s ESE, a strong predictor of entrepreneurial intentions that can be increased through formal training, education, and experience. Program sprints drive an individual’s confidence in their capability to accomplish a specific set of tasks, improving the rate of entrepreneurial activities through asynchronous learning, mentoring, and coaching from entrepreneurs and corporate mentors.
The force behind our programs of note is the JetPack Curriculum—a fast-paced, rapid result business education experience created to empower founders to grow their entrepreneurial mindset using our tools and framework to help them develop their playbooks for success. JetPack’s ESE-driven learning plans can facilitate the growth of intrapreneurship among current employees, and its learning objectives are closely aligned to critical nascent entrepreneurship behaviors and increasing entrepreneurial actions.
We also provide over $100,000 in entrepreneur programming, education, and financial literacy to start, grow and manage a business. JetPack can play a pivotal role in guiding entrepreneurs through marshaling required resources towards meeting business goals and a strategic vision. Founders surround themselves with the right mix of resources, including people, capital, and partners.
Entrepreneurial self-efficacy is measured across five dimensions:
- Searching: Confidence in developing an idea or identifying opportunities and honing their creative talents and abilities to innovate.
- Planning: Confidence in evaluating an idea or business concept and converting the idea into a workable business plan.
- Marshaling: Confidence in the ability to assemble resources to bring the venture into existence. This includes capital, labor, customers, and suppliers to help the venture sustain itself.
- Implementing People: Confidence in recruiting, managing, and growing employees and sustaining the business past its infancy. Application of good management skills and principles is critical for managing various business relationships with suppliers, customers, employees, and providers of capital.
- Implementing Financial: Confidence in managing the responsibility of growing the business, including all financial tasks.
The measure of all five dimensions allows founders to identify pain points where they are at risk for disengagement or premature abandonment of the business plan. When combined, however, the outcome of these sprints drives the participant’s self-efficacy and perseverance.