Looking to learn more about business and how to successfully operate? Well, no further BLACK ENTERPRISE has selected nine business books that go beyond scratching the surface.
Real talk: this is required reading. These Black authors do a deep dive into the world of business, sharing strategies, successful blueprints and business models to educate about emerging and established entrepreneurs and business owners.
Want your business to lit? Then get into this business lit:
1) Think And Grow Rich: A Black Choice
This is my 6th time reading this book. I advice everyone to check it out. Think and grow rich a black choice #TheEzeWay pic.twitter.com/orOpQE2Pvz
— Eze Okwodu (@Nigeriankenny) January 29, 2021
Written by Napoleon Hill and Dr. Dennis Kimbro, Think Grow Rich: A Black Choice is a classic. This business guide reveals the secrets to success by combining Napoleon Hill’s law of success and Dr. Dennis Kimbro’s in-depth knowledge of business with the success habits of notable Black Americans. Readers will learn how to get through mental setbacks to unlock business and lifestyle dreams.
2) The Power of Broke: How Empty Pockets, A Tight Budget, and A Hunger for Success Can Become Your Greatest Competitive Advantage
The Power of Broke: How Empty Pockets, a Tight Budget, and a Hunger for Success Can Become Your Greatest Competitive Advantage
Looking for this book in Harare. pic.twitter.com/uQ1x5NX24p
— Tanaka Calvin (@TanakaChaza) June 27, 2022
Daymond John, businessman, investor, founder and CEO of FUBU wrote The Power of Broke as a motivational and inspirational book for business entrepreneurs. John tells his story as well as the stories from other entrepreneurs who have had their back against the wall. A key takeaway in the text is that a lack of money can be your greatest circumstance, as desperation can boost creativity and passion.
3) Things Black People Aren’t Taught
Raymond K. Boseman’s new book “Things Black People Aren’t Taught” a tool to help Black Americans financially prepare for retirement https://t.co/B6fg2LUUwi #AfricanAmerican #BlackTwitter #retirementplanning #Financial #FinancialFreedom pic.twitter.com/KY6Ja7CiI9
— George L. Cook III (@AAReports) October 18, 2022
Things Black People Aren’t Taught is written by Raymond Boseman. A US army veteran with over 30 years of service, and bachelors in business, Boseman wrote this book to educate Black people on winning and failing, on investing and financial planning so they can achieve a successful retirement for life after work.
4) Unapologetically Ambitious: Take Risks, Break Barriers, and Create Success On Your Own Terms
We’re looking forward to reading @ShelArchambeau‘s book, “Unapologetically Ambitious: Take Risks, Break Barriers, and Create Success on Your Own Terms.” Join us! https://t.co/eST7Y2nrY9 #gathersc pic.twitter.com/X8rR8PeFhX
— Gather • Bay Area (@GatherBayArea) December 16, 2020
Written by one of the first African American woman CEOs out of Silicon Valley, Shellye Archambeau goes in. Archambeau details her experiences as a Black woman, mother and wife in leadership. She also gets into the risk and strategies she took to overcome obstacles and tests as she deals with professional and personal obligations.
5) Black Faces In High Places: 10 Strategic Actions For Black Professionals To Reach The Top and Stay There
One Hundred: The Ed Gordon Podcast | Black Faces in High Places: 10 Strategic Actions for Black Professionals to Reach the Top and Stay There https://t.co/IUpKdhRm9n pic.twitter.com/CxIBoKNpl3
— “No Comps” (@NewBlackMan) May 11, 2022
Black Faces In High Places was written by Jeffrey Robinson, who has an extensive career in the business sector. This book is a critical guide for Black professionals looking to advance in their organizations and industries, and how to navigate the transitions. Robinson’s text puts the spotlight on remarkable Black people who have achieved such goals.
6) We Should All Be Millionaires
One Hundred: The Ed Gordon Podcast | Black Faces in High Places: 10 Strategic Actions for Black Professionals to Reach the Top and Stay There https://t.co/IUpKdhRm9n pic.twitter.com/CxIBoKNpl3
— “No Comps” (@NewBlackMan) May 11, 2022
Rachel Rodgers, business coach and CEO of Hello Seven Podcast penned this how-to book. We Should All be Millionaires is a step-by-step guide to empowering yourself and creating the plan, support and confidence to build and grow wealth. This leadership book will teach how to make million dollar decisions and strategies to bring in Money.
7) Build the Damn Thing: How to Start a Successful Business If You’re Not a Rich White Guy
Build the Damn Thing: How to Start a Successful Business If You’re Not a Rich White Guy 1BYAVVThttps://t.co/JQWQjcA5Id pic.twitter.com/ENIU0taYD7
— Minerva.Schroeder (@Minerva28190592) December 19, 2022
Build the Damn Thing is written by Kathryn Finney, who is a venture capitalist and pioneering entrepreneur. In this guide Finney details how to start a business from the ground up, from creating a business plan to refining the product and maneuvering in a space not meant for the disenfranchised.
8) Billionaire Branding: How Hip Hop’s Cash Kings Built Their Empires
Billionaire Branding: How Hip Hop’s Cash Kings Built Their Empires CTWV63Ihttps://t.co/jt2Qd5IFBj pic.twitter.com/7oYjQSZA60
— Grant65iYPd (@grant65i) January 1, 2023
Billionaire Branding written by brand consultant and Hip-Hop enthusiast Mr. T Brookshire Harris. This study guide is for people who would like to brand and rebrand themselves by learning branding secrets from three Hip-Hop Icons.
9) The Black Girl’s Guide To Financial Freedom: Build Wealth, Retire Early, and Live The Life Of Your Dreams
Pdf download The Black Girl’s Guide to Financial Freedom: Build Wealth, Retire Early, and Live the Life of Your Dreams Epub pic.twitter.com/uvgQTiTOXz
— raise ronasmainen (@ronasmainen) January 18, 2022
The Black Girl’s Guide to Financial Freedom was written by philanthropist and educator Paris Woods. This Black girls guide teaches how to win financially with a plan—not only meant for Black girls— to avoid common financial traps, and ways to build generational wealth.
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