If you want to do business overseas, need a career change or new job, check out the Global Trade & Technology Center (www.gttc.us), Harlem’s gateway to international business. The Center can tra
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Harlem is one of those American neighborhoods that speaks volumes about an era, a culture and a struggle, but stands alone as its own beat. Hell’s Kitchen, the Lower East Side, the West Village–if
BY K. Emily Bond
The Minority Business Hall of Fame and Museum Inc. recognized eight pioneers of minority business development at its inaugural induction ceremony earlier this year. The event, sponsored by PepsiCo Inc
Following a nationwide trend, educating children at home is becoming a popular option for Black Americans as private school costs rise and the reputation of public schools grows worse. According to th
Outsourcing information technology jobs to companies overseas has gone from being an industry trend to a business tactic that’s here to stay, corpora
On the 50th anniversary of Brown vs. Board of Education this year, African-American philanthropist Alphonse Fletcher Jr., chairman and chief executive officer of Fletcher Asset Management Inc., donate
BY Robert Acquaye
After 33 years, the Minority Business Development Agency (www.mbda.gov) is turning its attention to building capacity among companies that already are on their way to becoming big companies. MBDA offi
BY Robert Acquaye
Corporate America’s African-American women elite convened on Wall Street this summer to mull over the state of affairs of women of color in the upper ranks of the corporate workplace. In a discuss
The Minority Business Leadership Council and the powerful Building Trades Employers' Association agreed to work together to ensure a fairer share of New York City construction projects for minority- a
There is a weak pulse at the Harlem-based Black United Fund of New York (BUFNY), but the long-standing charitable organization is perhaps breathing its last. “For all intents and purposes, BUFNY is


