BDC boosts commitment to inclusive entrepreneurship and invests $250M
June 19 2024 - 5:00AM
The faces of entrepreneurship are changing. Despite a two-decade
decline in the overall entrepreneur population, the number of
Indigenous and Black-led businesses is growing, counteracting this
trend. To ensure these business creators can thrive, BDC has
created a dedicated Inclusive Entrepreneurship team, is launching a
$50 million financing and training program, and investing $200
million in Indigenous and Black-led businesses.
“Too many underrepresented entrepreneurs continue to face the
same barriers that existed a decade, or even a generation ago,”
said Isabelle Hudon, President and CEO, BDC. “Despite a lot of
positive strides, we just aren’t moving quickly enough. It’s clear
a one-size-fits all approach does not work and, like the
entrepreneurs we serve, we must innovate. The initiatives announced
today are part of BDC’s efforts to drive greater economic impacts
and increase productivity.”
As a development bank, BDC takes on more risk to help
entrepreneurs and grow the economy. The bank identifies market
gaps, and partners with others to create solutions that address the
unique challenges faced by entrepreneurs and that mainstream
lenders can use. Using this same innovative approach, BDC is aiming
to propel more businesses with three key initiatives.
The bank’s new Inclusive Entrepreneurship Team leads with an
inclusion mindset and puts that intention at the centre of every
client experience. They have increased accountability with
measurable targets around business development and entrepreneur
training, and are already testing regional programs with business
centres to better serve entrepreneurs where they are.
Recognizing the barriers are highest, and trust is lowest, among
the smallest and earliest-stage businesses, their first act was
creating a new $50M program that provides loans, plus training, for
businesses that are majority-owned by women, Indigenous and Black
entrepreneurs and have revenues under $3 million.
Lastly, BDC Capital, BDC’s investment arm, is creating two new
$100M platforms to support Indigenous and Black-led businesses.
This will complement the $500M Thrive Platform for Women (launched
in 2022) which also serves Indigenous and Black women
entrepreneurs. The team is currently working to hire key roles from
the Black and Indigenous communities and collaborating with them to
design and set objectives for the platforms. More details will come
later this year.
“A critical driver of creating intergenerational wealth for
Black communities is equitable support for Black-owned businesses,”
said Lise Birikundavyi, Managing Partner, BKR Capital. “With less
than 0.5% of venture capital dollars in North America going towards
Black entrepreneurs, there is a clear gap to fill. Since we started
our fund focused on Black founders, we have seen an incredible
amount of quality opportunities, and we believe it is great news to
see an organization like BDC join forces to create a more
diversified and robust venture capital industry.”
These initiatives expand BDC’s long-standing support for diverse
entrepreneurs. Last year, BDC increased its women and Indigenous
clients by 11% and 22% respectively. To date, BDC has committed
over $8B dollars to underserved business owners directly through
programs like the Indigenous Entrepreneur Loan and Thrive Fund, and
indirectly through partners like Futurpreneur, FACE, NACCA, BKR
Capital, and Raven Capital. Hundreds of free education resources
are also available at bdc.ca.
BDC’s mission is to support Canadian entrepreneurs to build
strong and resilient businesses and, in doing so, contribute to
creating a more prosperous, competitive, and inclusive Canada. Its
corporate values - United for Entrepreneurs, Powered by People, and
Courageously Impactful - are the building blocks of BDC’s corporate
DNA. These values connect what the organization stands for to how
it delivers on its mandate and corporate strategy.
Additional Quotes
“Indigenous Peoples are among the fastest growing populations in
Canada and represent the highest growing segment of entrepreneurs,”
said Althea Wishloff (Gitxsan Nation, Fireweed Clan), General
Partner, Raven Indigenous Capital Partners. “At Raven, we have
learned that taking a platform approach, supporting, and mentoring
founders, while providing equity and equity-like capital in a
culturally sensitive way is of utmost importance. We look forward
to the growth of the ecosystem, new businesses being born and new
co-investors emerging.”
“Women make up half our population and workforce, yet less than
20% are majority owners in Canadian businesses,” said Marwa Abdou,
Senior Research Director, Canadian Chamber of Commerce. “Our most
recent report found progress is moving at a glacial pace in
entrepreneurship and representation and unless radical changes are
made, gender parity is more than a century away. It’s great to see
organizations like BDC continuing to invest new and innovative
approaches like the Thrive Platform which is the world’s largest
venture fund in the world for women.”
About BDC
As Canada’s bank for entrepreneurs, BDC is a partner of choice
for all entrepreneurs looking to access the financing and advice
they need to build their businesses and tackle the big challenges
of our time. Our investment arm, BDC Capital, offers a wide
range of risk capital solutions to help grow the country’s most
innovative firms. We are one of Canada’s Top
100 Employers and Canada’s Best Diversity Employers. BDC was
the first financial institution in Canada to receive the B
Corp certification in 2013 and it is the B
Corp movement’s national partner in Canada. For more
information on BDC’s products and services and to consult free
tools, templates and articles, visit bdc.ca or join BDC
on social media.
For more information
Tara Wood, tara.wood@bdc.ca, 416-301-5724