Beyond the College Fair: How HBCU Alumni Chapters Must Reimagine Recruitment

Timidity does not inspire bold acts. – Dr. Mae Jemison

The college fair model is broken — at least for HBCUs. Here’s how alumni chapters can build a pipeline that starts long before a student ever picks up a brochure. Walk into any college fair in a major American city and you’ll find the same scene: rows of tables draped in school colors, stacks of glossy brochures, and admissions representatives competing for the attention of juniors and seniors who, by that point in their academic journey, have already largely made up their minds. For predominantly white institutions with billion-dollar endowments and national name recognition, the college fair model works well enough. For Historically Black Colleges and Universities, it represents a fundamental misalignment between the urgency of the moment and the passivity of the approach.

HBCU enrollment has seen encouraging upticks in recent years, but the long-term pipeline challenge remains real. Alumni chapters, often the most energized, locally embedded advocates for their institutions are still overwhelmingly operating in reactive mode. They show up to fairs. They host the occasional scholarship gala. They cheer at homecoming. What we are not doing, with nearly enough intentionality, is going to where the students are, years before those students are old enough to apply. That has to change. And the blueprint for changing it is hiding in plain sight.

Imagine walking down a commercial corridor in Atlanta’s West End, Houston’s Third Ward, Baltimore’s Park Heights, the five buroughs in New York, or Chicago’s South Side and seeing a storefront with the colors and seal of a prominent HBCU. Inside, a welcoming space offers something radical in its simplicity: free help.

Help filling out college applications. Help navigating the FAFSA. Tutoring for high school students. Information sessions on academic programs, scholarship opportunities, and campus life. GED preparation for adult learners. GMAT and GRE prep for prospective graduate students. A community room where a kid can sit down after school and do homework, surrounded by images of Black excellence in cap and gown.

This is not a fantasy. It is a strategic infrastructure play that HBCU alumni chapters can begin building right now and the financial logic is stronger than many chapters realize.

Alumni chapters that have built up reserves, or that are willing to pool resources with neighboring chapters, should be actively exploring storefront leases in high-traffic African American neighborhoods. The cost of leasing modest commercial space in many urban corridors, while not trivial, is within reach for chapters with organized fundraising operations. More importantly, this model transforms the alumni chapter from a social organization into a community institution — and community institutions attract donors, partnerships, and long-term sustainability.

For chapters with the financial sophistication and appetite, ownership rather than leasing should be the goal. A storefront property that houses an HBCU recruitment and support center is also a real estate asset. It appreciates. It can be refinanced. It generates community goodwill that translates into alumni donations and corporate sponsorships. Forward-thinking chapters should be thinking about their real estate portfolio the same way a small nonprofit thinks about its balance sheet — as a long-term instrument of mission and sustainability.

But the case for ownership goes well beyond the chapter’s balance sheet. When an HBCU alumni chapter purchases a commercial property in a Black neighborhood, it is making a statement that is felt far beyond the four walls of the building. Vacant storefronts are one of the most visible symptoms of disinvestment in African American communities. They signal to residents, businesses, and young people that nobody believes in the block — that the neighborhood is somewhere to leave, not somewhere to build. An alumni chapter that acquires and activates one of those properties is doing something that no amount of college fair attendance can accomplish: it is demonstrating, physically and permanently, that Black institutional investment is real.

This is the chapter functioning as a community developer — not just a recruiter. The presence of a professionally staffed, well-maintained HBCU center on a commercial corridor raises the standard for the surrounding block. It attracts foot traffic. It gives neighboring businesses a reason to invest in their own storefronts. It signals to prospective residents and entrepreneurs that the community has anchors worth building around. Property values in the immediate vicinity benefit. The narrative of the neighborhood begins to shift.

Alumni chapters that think this way are not simply supporting their alma mater — they are exercising the kind of place-based economic power that Black communities have historically been denied. Every dollar that goes toward acquiring and improving a property in the community stays in the community. The chapter builds equity. The neighborhood builds stability. And the students who walk through that door every day see, in the most tangible terms possible, what organized Black investment looks like. That lesson alone is worth the price of the building.

Chapters that cannot yet afford standalone locations should explore co-location models: shared space with Black-owned businesses, community centers, or even jointly operated centers with two or three HBCU chapters that maintain separate branding but share overhead. A joint Virginia State-Morgan State-Cheyney recruitment center in a major metro is not just a cost-saving measure — it is a statement about the HBCU ecosystem as a unified force.

The single biggest reason community-based recruitment initiatives fail is that they are built on volunteerism alone. Volunteers are essential — but they cannot open the doors at 9 a.m. on a Tuesday, maintain records, follow up with prospective students, or manage institutional partnerships. A storefront that is going to deliver consistent, professional service to the community needs a full-time core team. It does not need to be large. It needs to be right.

The foundation of the storefront operation is the Executive Director / Center Director, a full-time salaried role that carries the weight of the entire operation. This person manages the relationship with the alumni chapter board and the parent institution, oversees staff, builds and maintains community and school district partnerships, and is ultimately responsible for the center’s recruitment numbers and programming outcomes. This is not an entry-level position. The ideal candidate has a background in higher education administration, community organizing, nonprofit management, or some combination of the three — and they are a proud, vocal HBCU product. Salary range: $70,000–$80,000 depending on market and chapter resources.

Supporting the director is a Recruitment and Admissions Counselor, a full-time role dedicated entirely to student-facing work. This person guides prospective students through the entire application process — from first contact to submitted application to financial aid completion. They manage the center’s student database, track pipeline metrics, and are the primary point of contact for high school counselors and community college advisors in the region. A background in college admissions or student affairs is ideal, and again, HBCU alumni status is a meaningful qualification. Salary range: $60,000–$68,000.

The third full-time position is a Financial Aid and Resource Navigator. The financial aid process is where more students fall out of the pipeline than anywhere else — not because they cannot afford college, but because the system is confusing, intimidating, and unforgiving of missed deadlines. This staff member specializes in FAFSA completion, scholarship identification, financial literacy education, and connecting adult learners with workforce funding and employer tuition benefits. They serve every lifecycle stage the center touches. A background in financial aid administration, social work, or community financial services is the right profile. Salary range: $60,000–$68,000.

These three full-time positions form the operational spine of the storefront. Beyond them, part-time staff and alumni volunteers extend the center’s capacity without extending its payroll. A part-time academic tutor or tutoring coordinator — ideally a current graduate student or recently graduated HBCU alumna — can run afternoon and evening tutoring sessions. Alumni volunteers with professional backgrounds in law, medicine, business, and education rotate through the center for workshops, panel discussions, and one-on-one advising sessions. A volunteer coordinator role, which can be managed by the Executive Director in the early stages, ensures that the volunteer corps is organized, scheduled, and recognized for their contributions.

The total full-time annual personnel cost for the storefront, including modest benefits, runs approximately $190,000–$220,000. That is a real number, and chapters should treat it as such when approaching their institution, corporate partners, and grant funders. It is also the number that separates a serious operation from a well-intentioned hobby.

For communities and schools that cannot easily access a storefront location, the chapter must come to them. This is where the concept of the HBCU mobile recruitment unit becomes a game-changer.

Alumni chapters should be looking seriously at purchasing used charter or transit buses and retrofitting them as mobile engagement vehicles. The cost of a used bus is often in the range of $30,000 to $80,000 depending on age and condition, with retrofitting adding additional investment. But the return in community presence, recruitment reach, and alumni chapter identity is enormous.

A properly outfitted mobile unit becomes a rolling admissions office. Equipped with laptops, tablets, printed materials, and onboard programming capability, the bus can park outside middle schools during dismissal, set up at community festivals and church parking lots on weekends, and roll through neighborhoods that college admissions representatives have never set foot in. It can run FAFSA completion workshops at community centers, host financial literacy sessions for parents, and bring the campus — virtually, through screens and presentations directly to families who may have never considered that a college education is within their reach.

A bus without a dedicated crew is a very expensive parking lot ornament. The mobile unit, to function as a true outreach vehicle rather than an occasional showpiece, requires its own committed staffing structure — lean but professional.

The non-negotiable full-time role is the Mobile Outreach Coordinator, who is simultaneously the unit’s program lead and its logistical engine. This person owns the deployment schedule, manages school district and community partner relationships, leads or facilitates on-site programming when the bus is in the field, and tracks every student interaction for follow-up and pipeline reporting. Critically, they serve as the bridge between the bus and the storefront — ensuring that students engaged in the field are handed off cleanly into the center’s formal services. This role requires someone who is equally comfortable presenting to a room of eighth graders, negotiating access with a school principal, and updating a CRM database. Salary range: $55,000–$65,000.

The second essential role is the full-time Commercial Driver / Logistics Coordinator. This is not simply a bus driver. The right person for this role holds a commercial driver’s license (CDL) and also takes ownership of vehicle maintenance scheduling, equipment inventory, and supply logistics for the unit. On deployment days, they are a visible, welcoming presence — often the first face a student or parent sees when approaching the bus. Many alumni chapters will find this person within their own membership: a retired transit worker, a logistics professional, or a veteran with transportation experience who is deeply invested in the mission. Salary range: $45,000–$55,000.

These two full-time positions are the core of the mobile unit. On high-volume deployment days — school visit days, large community events, or multi-stop weekends — part-time Recruitment Ambassadors supplement the crew. These are ideally current HBCU students or recent graduates who can speak authentically to the college experience, assist with application and FAFSA walkthroughs on the bus’s onboard stations, and engage peers in a way that no administrator can replicate. They are paid hourly and scheduled based on the deployment calendar.

The storefront’s Recruitment and Admissions Counselor and Financial Aid Navigator should also rotate onto the bus for targeted events — particularly FAFSA completion drives and high school senior nights — ensuring that students who need deeper guidance get it in the field, not just at a fixed location.

The full-time annual personnel cost for the mobile unit runs approximately $100,000–$140,000, excluding the bus acquisition and retrofit. Chapters that operate both a storefront and a mobile unit under one organizational roof — sharing the Executive Director’s oversight and administrative infrastructure — realize meaningful efficiencies. The combined full-time staff across both operations totals five to six people, with a total annual personnel investment in the range of $300,000–$400,000. That is a community development organization of real consequence, and it should be funded and governed as one.

The most important shift in mindset this article is calling for is one of timeline. HBCU alumni chapters cannot afford to think of recruitment as something that begins in 11th grade. The pipeline has to start much earlier — and it has to serve learners at every stage of life.

Head Start (Ages 0–5): Before a child ever sets foot in a kindergarten classroom, their relationship with learning and with the adults who shepherd it is already being shaped. This is why HBCU alumni chapters must engage Head Start programs, and why that engagement represents one of the highest-leverage opportunities in the entire pipeline.

Head Start is the federal early childhood program serving primarily low-income children ages birth to five, and Black children are among its most significant constituencies. According to the most recent federal program data, 29 percent of Head Start enrollment is Black or African American, non-Hispanic making it one of the largest organized points of contact with Black families in America at the earliest stage of a child’s development. Yet the program is dramatically under-serving the eligible population it is meant to reach: nationally, only 54 percent of eligible Black children are served by Head Start preschool, a gap driven in part by residential segregation and the uneven geographic distribution of Head Start centers.

That gap is itself an opportunity for HBCU alumni chapters. A storefront-based center located in a Black community can serve as a trusted navigator helping families find, apply for, and access Head Start services while simultaneously introducing those same families to the HBCU pipeline that begins long before a child can read.

The engagement strategy at this stage is not academic. It is relational. Head Start programs already operate with a strong family engagement model — approximately 378,000 adults volunteered in their local Head Start programs in a recent program year, of whom 295,000 were parents of Head Start children. Alumni chapters should be plugging into that existing network of engaged parents, not waiting for those parents to find them. Partnering with local Head Start centers to host family nights, read-aloud events, and college aspiration programming for parents creates touchpoints that are warm, community-rooted, and years ahead of any college fair.

The parents of Head Start children are also, frequently, prospective students themselves. Many are in their twenties or early thirties, may have some college credit, and are navigating the competing demands of parenthood and economic insecurity. An HBCU alumni chapter that shows up at a Head Start family event with information about degree completion programs, flexible scheduling, financial aid for adult learners, and the life-changing potential of an HBCU education is not just planting seeds for the next generation — it is recruiting for this one. The storefront’s Financial Aid and Resource Navigator is a natural liaison here, building relationships with Head Start family service coordinators who are already helping parents navigate social services and can add educational pathways to that conversation.

Alumni chapter members who are educators, social workers, pediatricians, or child development professionals should be the face of this engagement. Reading to children at a Head Start center, facilitating a workshop for parents on school readiness and early literacy, or simply being a visible, joyful presence in the community establishes the HBCU brand as one that cares about Black children from the very beginning not just when they are old enough to fill out an application.

Elementary School (K–5): The goal at this stage is not recruitment it is aspiration. But there is a deeper and more urgent reason why HBCU alumni chapters must show up here: elementary school is where the majority of Black boys are lost academically, and the window to intervene is narrow.

The data is unambiguous and devastating. According to the National Assessment of Educational Progress, only about 17 percent of Black fourth-grade students are reading at or above grade-level proficiency. For Black boys specifically, the numbers are worse. Only 13 percent of fourth-grade Black boys scored proficient in reading on the NAEP, compared to 40 percent of fourth-grade White boys. Research from the Annie E. Casey Foundation shows that children who are not reading proficiently by third grade are four times more likely to drop out of high school. And the cliff is steep: schools stop teaching children how to read after third grade and expect them to read to learn — for Black boys who missed early reading milestones, the system rarely slows down to help them catch up.

The academic struggle is compounded by the discipline crisis that runs parallel to it. Black boys represent just 8 percent of total K–12 enrollment but account for 15 percent of students receiving in-school suspensions and 18 percent of those receiving out-of-school suspensions. It starts before kindergarten: Black boys account for 9 percent of preschool enrollment but represent 23 percent of preschool children who received one or more out-of-school suspensions. Every day a Black boy spends outside the classroom is a day the reading gap widens. Black boys lost 132 days of instruction per 100 students enrolled due to out-of-school suspensions — a staggering accumulation of lost learning that trails these students for years. The research also shows that Black boys are markedly less likely to be subjected to exclusionary discipline when taught by Black teachers — a finding that speaks directly to the power of representation, and to what an HBCU alumnus standing in a classroom or community center can mean to a young Black boy who has rarely seen himself reflected in a position of educational authority.

This is why HBCU alumni chapters must be present in elementary schools — not with brochures, but with people. Reading programs, mentorship initiatives, and “college visit days” that introduce young children to the very concept of higher education are not extracurricular niceties; they are interventions. Seeing an HBCU alumnus or alumna in a professional role, wearing their school colors, and speaking with pride about their college experience plants a seed that can survive years of discouragement and doubt and provides a counter-narrative to a system that, by fourth grade, has already written too many Black boys off. Chapters should be cultivating relationships with school principals and PTA organizations to create recurring, sustained programming access. The presence has to be consistent, not occasional. A single visit does not change a trajectory. A relationship does.

Middle School (6th–8th Grade): By middle school, academic identity is forming and peer influence is at its peak. This is the moment to introduce students to HBCU culture, legacy, and opportunity in a way that makes it feel aspirational and cool. Alumni chapters should be running summer enrichment programs, college campus tours, and after-school STEM or arts programming tied to their institution’s academic strengths. Students who visit an HBCU campus at age 13 are far more likely to apply at 17.

High School (9th–12th Grade): This is the traditional recruitment window, but even here the storefront and mobile unit models change the game. Rather than waiting for students to find them at a fair, chapters are already embedded in these students’ communities. The work at this stage is conversion: helping students who are already HBCU-curious move through the application process, understand their financial aid options, and see themselves as belonging on campus. Chapters should have alumni assigned as informal advisors to high school college counselors — a presence that keeps HBCUs top of mind when counselors are guiding students toward school lists.

Adult Learners and Working Professionals: The traditional 18-to-22 pipeline is not the only one that matters. Millions of Black adults in American cities have some college credit but no degree. Alumni chapters that operate storefronts can become hubs for adult learner recruitment — connecting prospective students with their institution’s degree completion programs, online offerings, and evening or weekend formats. The FAFSA is available to adult learners. Institutional scholarships often target this population. Alumni chapters are uniquely positioned to be the trusted intermediary that convinces a 32-year-old with two kids and a job that finishing their degree is still possible.

Transfer Students: Community colleges in major metros serve enormous numbers of Black students who are academically capable of completing a four-year degree. Alumni chapters should have formal relationships with the counseling offices of every community college in their region, providing materials, hosting information sessions, and facilitating articulation agreement information that helps students understand how their credits will transfer to an HBCU.

Prospective Graduate Students: HBCUs are increasingly building out competitive graduate and professional programs. Alumni chapters can serve this market by hosting networking events that connect Black professionals with information about MBA, law, public health, and social work programs at their institution. The storefront model works exceptionally well here: an evening panel of HBCU-credentialed professionals discussing the value of their graduate degree, hosted at a community location, is both a recruitment event and an alumni engagement opportunity.

None of this is free, and alumni chapters should be honest with themselves about the resource requirements. A combined storefront and mobile operation with a full-time staff of five to six people, housed in leased or owned commercial space, represents a total annual operating budget — personnel, facilities, programming, and vehicle costs — likely in the range of $400,000 to $550,000 depending on market. That is a real community development organization, and it needs to be funded like one.

The good news is that the funding landscape is more favorable than many chapters realize — particularly for chapters willing to do the work of building a formal organizational structure, a board of directors, and a documented impact model.

Corporate partners, particularly those with HBCU engagement programs, represent another significant funding channel. Black-owned businesses in the communities where storefronts would operate should be natural co-investors: they benefit from a more educated local workforce and a more vibrant community anchor institution. Faith communities, which often have both facilities and congregational fundraising capacity, are underutilized partners for HBCU alumni chapters in nearly every city.

State and federal workforce development funding including Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act dollars can support adult learner programming and the Financial Aid Navigator role at storefront locations. Chapters with 501(c)(3) status or fiscal sponsorship arrangements can access this funding stream, as well as philanthropic grants from foundations focused on educational equity, Black wealth building, and community development. The mobile unit may also qualify for transportation equity and community access grants available through state education agencies and private foundations.

Here is the harder conversation that most alumni chapters are not having: grants run out, corporate partners change priorities, and institutional support is subject to the whims of university budget cycles. Any operational model built entirely on external funding is one budget cut away from collapse. The chapters that will sustain these operations for decades not just launch them with fanfare are the ones that build their own financial engine.

This means HBCU alumni chapters need to stop thinking of themselves purely as fundraising organizations and start thinking of themselves as investors. The distinction is critical. Fundraising asks others to fund your mission. Investing builds assets that fund your mission in perpetuity.

The first and most immediate step is the establishment of a formal chapter endowment. An endowment is not a reserve fund or a savings account, it is a permanently invested pool of capital whose principal is kept intact while the annual investment income is distributed for operations and programs. Most endowments are designed to keep the principal corpus intact so it can grow over time, while allowing the nonprofit to use the annual investment income for programs and operations. A chapter endowment seeded with $500,000 and professionally managed at a conservative annual return of 5 percent generates $25,000 per year in perpetuity — money that never has to be raised again. Scaled to $2 million, that is $100,000 annually without a single grant application. The endowment is built through major gifts from alumni, planned giving and bequest programs, proceeds from chapter events reinvested rather than consumed, and targeted endowment campaigns run every three to five years.

Beyond the endowment, chapters with the organizational maturity to do so should be seriously exploring the creation of a dedicated investment arm, a separate but affiliated entity structured as a 501(c)(3) foundation or a for-profit LLC depending on the chapter’s strategic goals, whose mandate is to build and manage a diversified portfolio of assets that generates income to fund chapter operations and community programs. Most endowments are set up as separate entities from the nonprofit they support, paying formal grants to the nonprofit, with a structure that requires a separate board of directors, officers, mission statement, and internal policies. This structure gives the investment arm its own governance, its own fiduciary standards, and its own identity while keeping the mission connection to the chapter clear and documented.

What does the portfolio of an HBCU alumni chapter investment arm look like in practice? Good old stocks and bonds to begin with to get the asset train rolling. Real estate comes next as a natural mission-aligned asset class as discussed. The storefront properties this article has already discussed are the starting point but the vision should not stop there. A chapter that owns its storefront, then acquires a second commercial property that it leases to a Black-owned business, then participates as a co-investor in a mixed-use affordable housing development in its target community, is building a real estate portfolio that generates rental income, appreciates in value, and reinforces the chapter’s identity as a community developer. Every property the chapter owns is a statement that Black institutional capital is permanent in this neighborhood.

Beyond real estate, chapter investment arms should be exploring mission-aligned equity investments in Black-owned businesses, HBCU-affiliated startups, and community development financial institutions. Alumni Ventures, a model pioneered in the broader higher education alumni space, has demonstrated that alumni funds can blend community focus with rigorous portfolio construction, leveraging deal flow to ensure quality and diversification. An HBCU alumni chapter investment fund that pools capital from members with minimum investment thresholds accessible to working professionals, not just the wealthy — democratizes wealth-building while directing capital toward enterprises that reflect the community’s values.

The chapters that will build these operations are the ones that stop thinking of themselves as social clubs with a community service component and start thinking of themselves as the community development and wealth-building arm of one of America’s most important institutional legacies. The storefront and the mobile unit are the mission. The endowment and the investment portfolio are what keep the mission alive when the grants run out and the corporate partners move on. Both are necessary. Neither is optional.

Every year that HBCU alumni chapters spend waiting at tables at college fairs is a year that students who could have found their way to a transformative HBCU education do not. The competition for Black students is fierce, well-funded, and increasingly present in the very communities where HBCUs have historically drawn their greatest strength.

The answer is not to compete on those terms. The answer is to go deeper, go earlier, and go to where the community lives. Storefronts and mobile units are not just recruitment tactics they are acts of institutional love and community investment. They say, loudly and visibly, that this HBCU is not waiting for students to find it. It is coming for them in the best possible way.

Alumni chapters have the people, the passion, and increasingly the resources to make this happen. What they need now is the will to think bigger than a folding table and a stack of brochures.


HBCU Money is the leading personal finance and business news platform focused on the HBCU community. To learn more about HBCU financial strategies, alumni engagement, and institutional development, visit hbcumoney.com.

Ideas that extend the physical infrastructure already proposed:

1. HBCU Alumni Chapter Media Studio — A small podcast/video production corner inside the storefront that creates original content: student success stories, “day in the life” campus videos, financial aid explainers, and alumni career spotlights. Content goes directly to YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram and keeps the chapter’s brand alive in the community 24/7 — long after the doors close. It serves as a recruitment tool that never sleeps and costs relatively little to set up.

2. Career and Internship Pipeline Desk — A formalized partnership structure between the storefront and local employers, specifically focused on creating internship and first-job pathways for HBCU students and graduates. The storefront becomes a local talent pipeline desk — something corporate partners can co-fund in exchange for access to HBCU talent. This also keeps alumni coming back after graduation and turns the center into a lifelong resource, not just an admissions office.

3. HBCU Health and Wellness Partnership — Several HBCU alumni alliances already do this. Given that health disparities in Black communities are severe, the storefront can host free health screenings, mental health workshops, and wellness programming co-sponsored by HBCU nursing and public health programs. This embeds the storefront even deeper in community trust and brings in foot traffic from people who may not initially be thinking about college at all — but who are now in the building.

Ideas that use the alumni chapter’s organizational capacity:

4. Returning Citizens / Reentry Pipeline — Formerly incarcerated individuals represent one of the most underserved and educationally motivated populations in Black communities. HBCUs that accept returning citizens and the Pell Grant restoration (reinstated in 2023) make this timely. The storefront is a natural hub for partnering with reentry organizations to connect this population with HBCU degree programs, adult learning pathways, and financial aid navigation.

5. HBCU Alumni Chapter Financial Cooperative — Rather than each chapter independently funding operations, HBCU chapters in a metro area or region could form a financial cooperative or CDFI (Community Development Financial Institution) to pool capital for real estate acquisition, bus purchases, and storefront buildouts. This turns the funding challenge from a per-chapter burden into a shared institutional strategy.

6. “HBCU House” Cultural Programming — Modeled loosely on cultural centers that exist in cities, the storefront runs regular cultural programming — film screenings, lectures, art exhibitions, Juneteenth and Black History Month events — that make it a destination even for community members with no immediate college interest. The goal is sustained foot traffic and community ownership of the space. The people who come for the film screening become the people who bring their kids back for tutoring.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

The Seven (Internal) Barriers to Building Sustainable African American Philanthropic Infrastructure

Philanthropy is not about the money. It’s about using whatever resources you have at your fingertips and applying them to improving the world. — Melinda Gates

The conversation about African American philanthropy often focuses on external barriers: systemic racism, wealth gaps, and institutional discrimination. While these factors are undeniably significant, there exists an equally important yet frequently overlooked challenge—the internal dynamics within the African American community that impede the development of sustainable philanthropic infrastructure. Understanding these challenges requires an honest examination of seven distinct groups whose attitudes and behaviors collectively create obstacles to building the financial institutions necessary for long-term community empowerment.

Before exploring these seven groups, it’s essential to understand what’s at stake. African American philanthropic institutions from educational endowments to community foundations, from cultural preservation organizations to economic development funds face a perpetual funding crisis. While individual acts of giving within the Black community are robust, the institutional infrastructure that could amplify, sustain, and strategically deploy these resources remains underdeveloped compared to other communities. This infrastructure gap isn’t merely about money; it’s about the systems, organizations, and endowments that create generational impact and community resilience.

Group One: The Self-Rejecting

Perhaps the most painful barrier comes from African Americans who harbor deep-seated negativity toward anything associated with Blackness. This group actively opposes, undermines, or refuses to support Black institutions not from ignorance or indifference, but from internalized anti-Blackness. They may have achieved individual success by distancing themselves from Black community spaces, or they may carry unexamined prejudices absorbed from the broader society.

These individuals often channel their resources toward non-African American institutions while viewing Black-focused organizations with suspicion or contempt. Their influence extends beyond their personal giving decisions; they frequently occupy positions of influence where they can discourage others from supporting Black institutional development. This group represents a fundamental breach in community solidarity that no amount of external fundraising can overcome.

Group Two: The Uncommitted

The second group doesn’t harbor hatred toward Black people or institutions, but they fundamentally don’t understand why Black-specific institutions matter. These are often well-meaning individuals who subscribe to a colorblind ideology, believing that supporting non-African American institutions adequately serves everyone, including African Americans. They ask, “Why do we need a Black college fund when there are already scholarship programs?” or “Why create a Black community foundation when established foundations exist?”

This group fails to recognize that non-African American institutions have historically underserved Black communities and that Black-led institutions bring cultural competency, trust, and targeted impact that general-purpose organizations cannot replicate. Critically, they fail to see that what appears “mainstream” or “universal” is often simply another community’s institution presented as neutral. The Evers Institute is clearly perceived as an African American organization, but the Ford Foundation is rarely identified as a European American institution yet both serve their founding communities’ interests and perspectives first. Harvard is seen as an elite university, not as a European American institution, while Howard is marked as a historically Black university. This perceptual gap prevents many African Americans from recognizing that other communities have always built and maintained their own institutional infrastructure, and that supporting Black institutions isn’t separatist it’s simply doing what every thriving community does. Their indifference rooted not in malice but in a failure to understand structural inequality means they direct their philanthropic dollars elsewhere, often to institutions that may never prioritize Black community needs.

Group Three: The Institutionally Unaware

The third group operates in a state of institutional blindness. They don’t actively oppose Black institutions, nor do they question their value—they simply don’t think about institutional development at all. These individuals may support individual causes or give to immediate needs, but they lack awareness of the institutional infrastructure that could sustainably address community challenges.

This group doesn’t realize that African American communities lack equivalents to the well-endowed foundations, think tanks, policy institutes, and cultural institutions that other communities have built over generations. They don’t consider that creating such institutions is even possible or necessary. Their philanthropy, when it exists, tends toward reactive giving—responding to crises rather than investing in the systems that could prevent them. This lack of institutional consciousness represents a failure of vision that keeps the community dependent on external resources and goodwill.

Group Four: The Delegators

The fourth group recognizes the need for African American institutions but believes funding them is someone else’s responsibility. They might think wealthy Black celebrities should handle it, or that government programs should fill the gap, or that white philanthropists should fund Black institutions out of historical obligation. Some in this group pursue alternative approaches to sustainability that avoid the hard work of building financial infrastructure—seeking grants, pursuing partnerships, or relying on in-kind contributions instead of creating independent funding streams.

While these alternative approaches have their place, this group’s fundamental error is abdicating personal responsibility for institutional sustainability. They want the benefits of strong Black institutions without contributing to their financial foundation. This mindset creates institutions that remain perpetually under-resourced and dependent, unable to plan long-term or weather financial storms because their funding base is unreliable and externalized.

Group Five: The Financially Unable

The fifth and largest group encompasses everyone who genuinely cannot afford to support African American institutions financially. The racial wealth gap is real and devastating: the median white family has nearly eight times the wealth of the median Black family. Many African Americans are still recovering from predatory lending, employment discrimination, and the compounding effects of historical wealth extraction. They live paycheck to paycheck, carry substantial debt, and lack disposable income for philanthropic giving.

This group’s inability to give is not a character flaw but a structural reality created by centuries of economic oppression. However, their numerical size means that African American philanthropic infrastructure cannot rely primarily on small donors in the way that some other causes have successfully done. Building sustainable institutions requires cultivating major donors and creating wealth-building strategies within the community that generate philanthropic capacity over time. The challenge lies in building institutional infrastructure while acknowledging that most potential supporters are themselves struggling financially.

Group Six: The Promisers

The sixth group may be the most frustrating for those trying to build sustainable institutions. These are the individuals who express enthusiastic support, make commitments, and promise resources—but then fail to follow through. They attend planning meetings, serve on boards, pledge donations, and create expectations, only to disappear when it’s time to deliver.

Sometimes this happens due to changing circumstances, but often it reflects a lack of serious commitment from the outset. These individuals enjoy the social capital and recognition that comes from appearing philanthropic without making the actual sacrifice of resources. Their broken promises create budgeting nightmares for institutions, forcing organizations to scale back programs, delay initiatives, or scramble for alternative funding. Perhaps worse, they create cynicism and distrust that makes it harder to cultivate genuine supporters in the future.

Group Seven: The Grassroots Purists

The seventh group believes that everything can and should be accomplished through grassroots organizing, volunteer labor, and community sweat equity. They view institutional infrastructure and professional philanthropy with suspicion, seeing it as elitist or as selling out authentic community organizing. While grassroots efforts are vital and have accomplished tremendous things, this group fails to recognize that grassroots approaches alone cannot create the sustained, large-scale infrastructure necessary for generational change.

Building endowments, creating professional organizations, developing real estate holdings, establishing grantmaking foundations—these require capital, expertise, and institutional structures that cannot be crowdsourced or volunteer-run indefinitely. The grassroots purist approach, while rooted in legitimate democratic values and community empowerment principles, inadvertently keeps African American institutions small, informal, and vulnerable. It privileges authenticity over sustainability and fails to recognize that other communities have achieved their institutional strength precisely by moving beyond purely grassroots models.

An African American nonprofit organization’s 990 that highlights the widespread problem where its only revenue is through donations.

The work ahead is challenging, but understanding these seven groups provides a clearer map of the terrain. With that map, those committed to building sustainable African American philanthropic infrastructure can navigate more strategically, building institutions designed to overcome these very human barriers to collective progress.

Recognizing these seven groups is not about assigning blame but about developing strategies that account for these realities. Building sustainable African American philanthropic infrastructure requires addressing each barrier specifically. It means creating cultural interventions that combat internalized anti-Blackness, educational campaigns that explain why Black institutions matter, and consciousness-raising about institutional development. It requires cultivating a culture of personal responsibility for community institutions while simultaneously addressing the structural factors that limit Black wealth.

Most importantly, it means building with the understanding that these barriers exist—creating institutions that can survive and thrive even when significant portions of the potential support base are unavailable, uncommitted, or actively opposed. This isn’t pessimism; it’s realism. And from that realism comes the possibility of building philanthropic infrastructure that can genuinely sustain African American community advancement for generations to come. The path forward demands both clear-eyed acknowledgment of these internal challenges and unwavering commitment to building despite them, creating a foundation strong enough to support not just this generation but those yet to come.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

How Black Communities and HBCUs Are Missing the Boat on Artificial Intelligence — and Why That’s a Dangerous Mistake

Technology is, of course, a double-edged sword. — Alvin Toffler 

History does not wait for consensus. The atomic bomb was built before most of the world understood what splitting an atom meant. Chemical weapons were deployed in World War I before international law had language to prohibit them. Surveillance infrastructure was constructed across American cities before most residents knew it existed. In each case, the people most harmed by these technologies were not the people who built them and their eventual objection to the technology, their absence, their refusal to participate did nothing to slow the construction. A weapon being built does not require your approval. It does not require your involvement. It does not even require your awareness. It only requires that someone, somewhere, with sufficient resources and motivation, decided to build it. That is the context in which Black communities must now reckon with artificial intelligence.

Yet in many Black communities and in particular African American institutions, AI is too often treated as a threat to avoid, a fad to dismiss, or a force that is “not for us.” This hesitation is understandable. Black people have learned through painful history that new systems of power often arrive disguised as progress, only to produce new forms of inequality. But the hard truth is this: AI will move forward with or without Black people. And if we choose not to engage it, we guarantee it will be built without our perspective, without our priorities, and without our protection. Rejecting AI does not prevent harm. It only ensures we have less influence over how that harm is shaped and who it harms most.

There is a more urgent framing that Black communities must internalize: AI is not merely a tool to be cautious about it is a weapon already being aimed and protest is not a counterattack or defensive strategy. Predictive policing systems profile Black neighborhoods. Hiring algorithms screen out Black applicants. Credit scoring models redline Black borrowers. Facial recognition technology misidentifies Black faces at rates that endanger Black lives. These are not hypothetical risks. They are documented, operational, and expanding. History is clear on what happens when one community monopolizes a powerful weapon while another refuses to pick one up. The answer to a weapon being formed against us is not retreat. It is the development of counterweapons — tools built by us, owned by us, and deployed in the service of our survival and advancement.

This is where the concept of institutional AI ownership becomes essential. Black communities do not simply need AI literacy we need AI proprietorship. We need HBCUs, Black-owned banks, Black medical institutions, Black legal organizations, and Black civic bodies to own the models, the datasets, the patents, and the platforms. Ownership is not the same as access. Millions of Black people access highways they did not design, hospitals that did not include them in clinical trials, and financial systems built to exclude them. Access without ownership is dependency. What this moment demands is that African Americans treat AI the way earlier generations treated land, law, and the ballot as a domain of institutional power that must be claimed, defended, and wielded.

The world is entering a new era of inequality, not one defined by segregation signs or discriminatory laws, but by invisible systems: recommendation engines, automated hiring tools, predictive policing software, medical diagnostic models, financial risk scoring systems, and generative AI. The communities that build these systems set the terms. The communities that merely use them accept them. This is the defining stakes of the AI moment for Black America: not whether to engage, but whether to engage as subjects or as sovereigns.

There is growing sentiment among skeptics that AI is too dangerous to embrace, and some advocate banning or severely limiting it. While a ban is unrealistic, the concerns behind that sentiment deserve to be treated seriously — not mocked, not dismissed, and not ignored. Many Black Americans are concerned that AI is accelerating misinformation and destabilizing trust in public institutions. Deepfakes, AI-generated propaganda, and synthetic news content can manipulate elections and distort civic discourse. For communities that have historically been targeted by voter suppression and political disinformation, this fear is not paranoia it is rational. If AI becomes a weapon of influence, communities already vulnerable to manipulation will be the first casualties. But the problem is not AI itself. The problem is who controls AI and how it is regulated. If Black communities opt out of our own AI development, then AI governance will be decided entirely by other groups with minimal Black representation at the tables where the rules are written. The answer is not simply to lobby for better regulation, though that matters. The deeper answer is to build Black-owned AI systems that are structurally incapable of being weaponized against Black communities because we designed them, we trained them, and we control them. You do not neutralize a weapon aimed at you by asking its owner to be more careful. You build a counterweapon of your own.

Many critics argue that AI encourages intellectual laziness. If students can generate essays instantly and professionals can automate tasks with a click, what happens to discipline, creativity, and hard-earned expertise? This concern is valid. Overdependence on AI can weaken critical thinking, reduce originality, and blur accountability. But it also misses a key historical reality: tools have always replaced certain forms of labor. Calculators did not destroy mathematics. Spellcheck did not destroy writing. The internet did not destroy learning it changed how learning happens. AI is simply the newest tool. The question is not whether AI makes people lazy. The question is whether we are teaching people to wield it with intention. HBCUs must build education models that go beyond productivity training, that teach students not how to use AI as a shortcut, but how to build with it, own it, and direct it toward the problems that matter most to Black communities.

Job displacement is one of the most serious fears in the Black community, and for good reason. Black workers are disproportionately represented in industries vulnerable to automation — retail, transportation, customer service, clerical work, and entry-level administrative jobs. Many of these roles are prime targets for AI replacement. But the response cannot simply be to train Black workers to fill the lower rungs of someone else’s AI economy, to become the new labor class servicing infrastructure we do not own, feeding data into systems we did not build, and executing decisions made by algorithms we cannot audit. That is not advancement. That is a more sophisticated version of the same arrangement. The goal must be ownership: of the companies building AI, of the models being trained, of the intellectual property being filed, of the venture funds writing the checks. HBCUs must orient their graduates not toward employment in the AI industry but toward founding it. The difference between a Black workforce that operates AI and a Black community that owns AI is the difference between wages and wealth and that distinction will compound across generations.

A major criticism of AI is that it consumes enormous energy. But an even less discussed reality is that AI consumes enormous amounts of water. Modern AI runs on massive data centers that require constant cooling to prevent overheating. Many of these facilities rely on water-based cooling systems that consume millions of gallons annually. Researchers estimate that training a single large AI model can consume hundreds of thousands of gallons of water when factoring in data center cooling demands and electricity generation. This is not theoretical. In many regions facing droughts or water restrictions, data centers are consuming water at industrial levels while residents face conservation mandates. But embedded in this crisis is one of the most significant entrepreneurial opportunities of the next two decades. The AI industry desperately needs breakthroughs in energy-efficient computing, low-heat chip architecture, passive and liquid cooling innovation, and renewable-powered data infrastructure. These are not solved problems they are open problems, and open problems are where fortunes and institutions are built. HBCUs are uniquely positioned to lead here. Engineering and computer science programs at HBCUs can orient entire research agendas around sustainable AI infrastructure, competing for federal grants, Defense Department contracts, and private R&D investment. The students and faculty who crack these problems will not simply publish papers they will file patents, spin off companies, and own the solutions the entire AI industry will have to buy. The energy crisis of AI is not just a threat to communities bearing its environmental cost. For those with the vision to pursue it, it is an invitation to build the next generation of technology companies from the inside of an HBCU lab.

Even more troubling is the emerging pattern of where these data centers are being built. Across the U.S., data centers are increasingly constructed in areas that are cheaper to build in, politically weaker, under-resourced, historically undervalued, and disproportionately Black. This mirrors a long-standing trend in America where environmentally burdensome infrastructure — highways, factories, waste facilities gets placed near Black neighborhoods. In effect, this creates what some advocates now call “AI redlining.” The benefits of AI from profits, corporate growth, stock market gains are extracted upward, while the environmental strain gets dumped into communities with the least political power to resist it. The solution is not to reject AI. If Black communities sit out the AI revolution, we won’t stop the environmental cost. We will simply lose the ability to negotiate where that cost is placed and who gets compensated. African American institutions should push for policies requiring mandatory water usage disclosure, environmental impact assessments before zoning approval, sustainability audits, green cooling requirements, and renewable energy sourcing. Communities should demand Community Benefit Agreements requiring data centers to provide infrastructure investment, local hiring pipelines, job training programs, tax revenue reinvestment into local schools, and environmental mitigation funding. HBCUs could also lead the nation in Green AI research, building intellectual property around sustainable computing, energy-efficient AI, and water-saving data center technologies.

The most dangerous thing happening right now is not that Black people fear AI. It is that too many are dismissing it without building anything in its place. Fear without construction is just surrender by another name. If we do not develop our own research institutions, our own datasets, our own models, and our own policy arguments, we cede every seat at every table where AI’s future is being decided. Other communities are not waiting. They are filing patents, training models, lobbying legislatures, and writing the rules. Our absence is not neutrality. It is forfeiture.

Nowhere is that forfeiture more consequential than in healthcare. Black people face notorious disparities in outcomes — maternal mortality, hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, cancer detection delays, and mental health underdiagnosis. AI has the potential to improve diagnostics, predict risk earlier, and increase efficiency. But AI only works equitably if the data used to train it includes accurate representation of Black populations. If Black communities are underrepresented in healthcare datasets, AI tools will misdiagnose and under-detect conditions in Black patients not out of malice, but out of absence. Black maternal mortality runs roughly two to three times higher than that of white women. That gap will not close by using someone else’s model. It will close when Black medical institutions are building their own. HBCUs should establish AI healthcare research centers and partner with Black hospitals and clinics to develop maternal health monitoring tools, diagnostic models trained on Black patient datasets, and predictive systems for chronic disease management. We cannot outsource our survival to someone else’s dataset.

One reason economic inequality persists is because the Black community often lacks robust data infrastructure. We need AI to better analyze Black household wealth gaps, credit access patterns, housing appraisal disparities, small business loan outcomes, and generational income mobility. Without strong data, we cannot make powerful arguments in policy spaces. Decisions get made based on incomplete or misleading statistics. If you cannot measure injustice, you cannot prove it. And if you cannot prove it, you cannot correct it. AI tools can allow Black institutions to build community-level dashboards for employment trends, entrepreneurship activity, housing discrimination patterns, and lending disparities. If we don’t build this infrastructure, we remain dependent on outsiders to define our economic reality.

Black students face disparities in standardized testing, school funding, disciplinary action, access to advanced coursework, and teacher turnover rates. AI has the potential to identify patterns that human analysis often misses. AI models can detect whether certain districts disproportionately suspend Black students or deny gifted program access but this only happens if someone is collecting and analyzing the data. HBCUs can create AI education labs focused on predictive models for dropout prevention, tutoring systems for underserved schools, bias detection in school disciplinary systems, and literacy and math intervention tools.

The ownership imperative extends beyond economics into culture, politics, and identity itself. AI is being trained on datasets that misinterpret Black culture, Black dialect, and Black history. Systems routinely fail to understand African-American Vernacular English and mislabel it as incorrect or unprofessional. If Black people are not involved in building the systems that process human language, cultural misrepresentation does not just persist it gets automated, scaled, and encoded as objective truth. Politically, AI will increasingly govern voter outreach, campaign strategy, political advertising, and law enforcement surveillance. A community without ownership in those systems is a community being governed by algorithms it cannot see, challenge, or correct. And economically, the greatest wealth-building opportunities of the next 20 years will flow from AI ownership — patents, startups, data assets, and proprietary platforms. The next generation of billionaires will not come from oil. They will come from algorithms. The question is whether any of them will come from HBCUs.

One of the most clarifying facts in this debate is this: HBCU students are not rejecting AI. They are already using it. Surveys show AI adoption among HBCU students above 90% in some reports. The problem is not resistance. The problem is that students are using AI as a consumer product while their institutions have not yet equipped them to build, own, or direct it. There is no AI curriculum grounded in Black ownership. There are no research labs generating Black-controlled intellectual property. There are no institutional frameworks teaching students that the goal is not to get a job at an AI company it is to found one. We are handing students a weapon and teaching them to hand it back.

The solution is not to shame dissenters or pretend AI is harmless. The solution is to build a structured response that combines caution with action. AI should be taught at HBCUs not as an elective but as a foundational literacy, like writing or math. Rather than each HBCU fighting alone, they could form a national consortium to share computing infrastructure, datasets, research funding, and faculty development programs. HBCUs should expand incubators focused on AI startups, fintech and credit access tools, healthcare AI apps, education platforms, and legal justice tools. Black communities should lead in shaping ethical AI laws requiring bias audits, explainability standards, civil rights protections, and anti-surveillance restrictions. And the community must prioritize ownership of data, because data is the oil of the AI economy. If Black communities do not own their datasets, they will never fully control the systems built from them.

If HBCUs want to remain relevant not just historically, but economically and politically in the next 50 years they must move aggressively on a clear ownership agenda. In the first 12 months, every student regardless of major should graduate with AI literacy training, prompt engineering fundamentals, AI ethics coursework, and data verification and misinformation training. Each institution should form an internal AI Ethics Board including faculty, students, alumni in tech, legal experts, and community leaders to oversee how AI is adopted on campus and how students are trained to deploy it with intention. A required AI Skills Certificate open to all majors should cover Python basics, data analytics, machine learning foundations, and the fundamentals of building and launching AI-powered ventures. Over the following two years, HBCUs should build a shared computing consortium that supports AI research, student projects, and community-owned datasets — infrastructure that belongs to the network of Black institutions, not to any outside vendor. Every HBCU should prioritize building pipelines into Black-owned and Black-led technology ventures first feeding talent back into institutions the community controls. Where partnerships with larger tech companies, healthcare systems, federal research agencies, and defense and cybersecurity programs are pursued, they must be negotiated on terms that preserve IP ownership, protect student data, and create reciprocal investment in HBCU infrastructure not simply pipelines that funnel Black talent into someone else’s institution and call it progress. Each school should develop a startup incubator focused on AI healthcare tools, fintech solutions, education technology, environmental AI monitoring, and civil rights auditing software — companies built to be owned, not just to be acquired.

Over the longer horizon of three to ten years, HBCUs must focus on patents, proprietary research, and scalable tools — not just academic publications. They should become national voices shaping AI governance, civil rights protections, workplace automation policy, data center zoning laws, and environmental justice in AI infrastructure. And by partnering with alumni and Black-owned banks to create a venture fund investing in student startups, faculty innovations, and Black AI entrepreneurs, HBCUs can ensure that the wealth generated by AI does not pass Black communities by entirely.

The Black community has every right to be skeptical of new systems of power. History proves that skepticism is justified. But skepticism is not a strategy and caution is not a counterforce. If a weapon is being formed against us, and the evidence is overwhelming that it is, then we are obligated to form counterweapons. We are obligated to build AI systems that protect Black neighborhoods from surveillance overreach, that audit algorithms for racial bias, that train on Black medical data to save Black lives, that document economic discrimination and place it irrefutably before courts and legislatures. We are obligated to claim institutional ownership of this technology not as guests in someone else’s ecosystem, but as architects of our own. AI will shape the future of medicine, education, business, culture, and governance. The most dangerous outcome is not that AI exists. The most dangerous outcome is that it exists without us and for others to use against us. The future is being coded right now. We must be on the playing field. We must hold the pen.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

The Institutional Imperative: Moving Beyond Individual Black Wealth Narratives

I would rather earn 1% off a 100 people’s efforts than 100% of my own efforts. – John D. Rockefeller

The contrast is stark and telling. On one screen, a promotional poster for a docuseries about Black wealth features accomplished individuals—entrepreneurs, entertainers, and personal finance influencers. On another, the Bloomberg Invest conference lineup showcases representatives from Goldman Sachs, BlackRock, sovereign wealth funds, and central banks. This visual juxtaposition reveals a fundamental problem in how African American wealth building is conceived, discussed, and ultimately constrained in America: we’re having an individual conversation while everyone else is having an institutional one.

When African American wealth is discussed in mainstream media and even within our own communities, the focus overwhelmingly centers on individual achievement and personal financial literacy. The narrative typically revolves around budgeting tips, entrepreneurship stories, side hustles, and the importance of “building your own.” While these elements certainly matter, they represent only a fraction of how wealth is actually created, preserved, and transferred across generations in America.

Compare this to how other communities approach wealth building. Bloomberg conferences don’t feature panels on how to save money or start a small business. Instead, they convene institutional investors managing trillions of dollars, central bankers who set monetary policy, executives from asset management firms overseeing pension funds, and sovereign wealth fund managers representing entire nations’ financial interests. The conversation isn’t about individual wealth accumulation it’s about institutional capital allocation, market infrastructure, regulatory frameworks, and systemic wealth generation. This isn’t merely a difference in scale; it’s a difference in kind. Individual wealth building, no matter how successful, operates within a system. Institutional wealth building shapes that system.

The economic implications of this gap are staggering. Consider the arithmetic presented in the text message exchange: if approximately 95% of African American debt is held by non-Black institutions, and that debt carries an average interest rate of 8%, African American households collectively transfer roughly $120 billion annually in interest payments to institutions that have no vested interest in Black wealth creation or community reinvestment. This figure isn’t just large it’s transformative. To put it in perspective, $120 billion annually exceeds the GDP of many nations. That likely at least 10% of African America’s $2.1 trillion in buying power is leaving the community for interest before a single bill is paid or single investment can be made. It represents capital that flows out of Black communities without generating corresponding wealth-building infrastructure within those communities. This is the cost of institutional absence.

When communities lack their own lending institutions, investment banks, insurance companies, and asset management firms, they become permanent capital exporters. Every mortgage payment, every car loan, every credit card balance becomes a wealth transfer rather than a wealth circulation mechanism. Other communities long ago recognized this dynamic and built institutional frameworks to capture, recycle, and multiply capital within their own ecosystems.

Institutional wealth building operates on fundamentally different principles than individual wealth accumulation. It involves capital pooling and deployment, where institutions aggregate capital from thousands or millions of sources and deploy it strategically for returns that benefit the collective. Pension funds, for instance, don’t teach their beneficiaries how to pick stocks they hire professional managers to generate returns that secure retirements for entire workforces. Large institutions don’t just participate in markets; they shape them. They influence interest rates, capital flows, regulatory frameworks, and investment trends. When BlackRock or Vanguard shifts their investment thesis, entire sectors respond.

Institutions are designed to outlive individuals. They create mechanisms for wealth transfer that transcend personal mortality, ensuring that capital accumulates across generations rather than dispersing with each estate. By pooling resources, institutions can absorb risks that would devastate individuals, enabling them to pursue longer-term, higher-return strategies that individuals cannot access. Perhaps most importantly, institutional capital commands political attention and shapes policy in ways that individual wealth, however substantial, simply cannot.

The current institutional deficit in African American communities isn’t accidental it’s the product of deliberate historical forces. During the early 20th century, Black communities did build impressive institutional infrastructure. Black Wall Street in Tulsa, thriving business districts in Rosewood, Florida, and numerous Black-owned banks, insurance companies, and investment firms represented genuine institutional wealth building. These were systematically destroyed sometimes literally, as in the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921, and sometimes through discriminatory policies, denial of business licenses, exclusion from capital markets, and targeted regulatory enforcement. The institutions that survived faced existential challenges during desegregation, as the most affluent Black customers gained access to white institutions that had previously excluded them. The result is that African Americans today face a unique challenge: rebuilding institutional infrastructure in a mature capitalist economy where the institutional landscape is already dominated by established players with centuries of accumulated capital, networks, and political influence.

Given this context, why does African American wealth discourse remain so focused on individual action? Several factors contribute to this pattern. American culture celebrates individual achievement and self-made success. This narrative is particularly seductive for African Americans seeking to overcome discrimination through personal excellence. However, it obscures the reality that most substantial wealth in America is institutional, not individual. Teaching people to budget or start a business is concrete and actionable. Discussing the need for African American-owned asset management firms managing hundreds of billions in capital is abstract and seemingly impossible for most people to influence. Individual success stories make compelling content. Institutional finance is complex, technical, and doesn’t generate the emotional engagement that drives social media metrics and television ratings.

Institutional finance is deliberately exclusionary, with high barriers to entry, specialized knowledge requirements, and established networks that are difficult to penetrate. This makes it harder for diverse voices to participate in and shape these conversations. Moreover, focusing on individual responsibility can deflect attention from systemic inequalities and the need for institutional reform. If wealth gaps are framed as the result of individual choices rather than institutional access, the solution becomes personal change rather than structural change.

The problem is that individual wealth building, while important, simply cannot close the wealth gap or address the capital hemorrhage happening through institutional absence. You cannot budget your way to institutional power. You cannot side-hustle your way to sovereign wealth fund influence. Closing the institutional gap would require coordinated action across multiple domains. This means growing and creating Black-owned banks, credit unions, insurance companies, asset management firms, and investment banks capable of competing at scale—institutions managing not millions but billions and eventually trillions in assets.

It requires ensuring that the substantial capital in public pension funds, university endowments, and foundation assets that serve African American communities is managed with intentionality about wealth creation within those communities. Building investment funds that can provide growth capital to Black-owned businesses beyond the startup phase, enabling them to scale to institutional size, becomes essential. Creating institutions that can acquire, develop, and manage commercial and residential real estate at scale, capturing appreciation and rental income for community benefit, must be prioritized. Developing institutional voices that can effectively advocate for policies that support Black wealth building, from community reinvestment requirements to procurement set-asides to tax structures that favor long-term capital formation, is critical.

This isn’t a call to abandon individual financial responsibility or entrepreneurship both remain important. Rather, it’s a recognition that these individual efforts need institutional infrastructure to support them, multiply their effects, and prevent the constant capital drain that currently undermines them. The Bloomberg conference model reveals what serious wealth building conversations look like among communities that already possess institutional power. The participants aren’t there to learn how to balance their personal checking accounts they’re there to discuss macroeconomic trends, regulatory changes, emerging markets, and trillion-dollar capital allocation decisions.

African American communities need forums that operate at the same level of institutional sophistication. This means convening the leaders of Black-owned financial institutions, pension fund managers, university endowment chiefs, foundation presidents, private equity partners, and policymakers to discuss not individual wealth tips but institutional strategy. It means asking questions like: How do we coordinate capital deployment across Black-owned financial institutions to maximize community impact? How do we leverage public pension fund capital to support Black wealth building without sacrificing returns? What regulatory changes would most effectively support Black institutional development? How do we build the pipeline of talent needed to manage billions in institutional capital?

The real challenge can be distilled into three interconnected imperatives: individually Black people must get wealthier, there must be an increase in Black institutional investing, and the overall wealth of Black people as a whole must increase. All three are important, yet the current discourse focuses almost exclusively on the first element while neglecting the second and third. The reality is that without institutional infrastructure, individual wealth gains will continue to leak out of the community rather than accumulating into collective wealth.

A fundamental truth that much of African American wealth discourse has yet to fully internalize is that wealth is created through institutions. There exists a critical misalignment between how wealth is actually built and how we talk about building it. We prioritize individual wealth accumulation without recognizing that the causality runs in the opposite direction—institutional infrastructure creates the conditions for sustainable individual and collective wealth building, not the other way around. We can celebrate individual achievement, teach financial literacy, promote entrepreneurship, and encourage personal responsibility all we want. But until African American communities build and control institutions that can pool capital, shape markets, influence policy, and deploy resources strategically across generations, the wealth gap will persist and likely widen.

A docuseries about successful individuals may be inspiring. But inspiration without infrastructure leads nowhere. Other communities learned this lesson generations ago (from us) and built accordingly. A critical question cuts to the heart of the matter: Who in these wealth-building conversations is representing an African American institution? When wealth dialogues feature only individuals representing themselves or individual brands rather than institutions representing collective capital and community interests, we’re having the wrong conversation at the wrong altitude.

It’s time for African American wealth conversations to graduate from the individual focus to the institutional imperative. The Bloomberg model isn’t just for other people it’s a template for how serious wealth building actually works. The question isn’t whether African Americans can produce individually wealthy people we’ve proven that repeatedly. The question is whether we can build the institutional infrastructure that turns individual success into collective, multigenerational wealth. That’s the conversation we should be having, and it needs to happen at the same level of sophistication and institutional focus that other communities take for granted. Until then, we’re simply rearranging deck chairs while hundreds of billions if not trillions flow out of our communities annually, enriching institutions that have no stake in our collective prosperity.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

HBCUs Must Build Their Own Supercomputer: A Blueprint for Computational Sovereignty

We will always have STEM with us. Some things will drop out of the public eye and will go away, but there will always be science, engineering, and technology. And there will always, always be mathematics. – Katherine Johnson

The same institutions that trained Katherine Johnson to calculate trajectories that put Americans on the moon now find themselves locked out of the computational infrastructure powering the next generation of scientific discovery. While Historically Black Colleges and Universities have long punched above their weight in producing Black STEM graduates, they remain systematically excluded from the high-performance computing resources that define cutting-edge research in the new era of AI, quantum computing, and supercomputers. It’s time for HBCUs to stop asking for access and start building their own.

The case for a Pan-HBCU supercomputer and quantum computing initiative is about survival, sovereignty, and strategic positioning in an economy where computational power increasingly determines who owns the future and who rents access to it.

Today’s research landscape is brutally simple: no supercomputer, no competitive research. Climate modeling, drug discovery, materials science, artificial intelligence, genomics, and aerospace engineering all require computational resources that most HBCUs simply cannot access at scale. While predominantly white institutions boast partnerships with national laboratories and billion-dollar computing centers, HBCU researchers often wait in lengthy queues for limited time on shared systems—if they can access them at all.

The numbers tell a stark story. According to the National Science Foundation, the top 50 research universities in computing infrastructure investment include zero HBCUs. Meanwhile, institutions like MIT, Stanford, and Carnegie Mellon operate dedicated supercomputing facilities that give their researchers 24/7 access to the tools that generate patents, publications, and licensing revenue.

This isn’t an accident. It’s the architecture of exclusion, and it’s costing African America billions in lost patents, forfeited breakthroughs, and surrendered market position. Every HBCU chemistry professor who can’t run molecular dynamics simulations is a drug that won’t be discovered. Every computer science department that can’t train large language models is an AI company that won’t be founded. Every physics researcher who can’t process particle collision data is a technology that someone else will own. This is about power—economic power, technological power, the power to shape industries rather than simply participate in them.

If the supercomputing gap is concerning, the emerging quantum divide is existential. Quantum computing represents a fundamental shift in computational paradigms with implications for cryptography, drug design, optimization problems, and artificial intelligence. Nations and corporations are investing billions to establish quantum supremacy, and the institutions that control this technology will own the intellectual property, set the standards, and capture the economic value of the next century of innovation.

HBCUs cannot afford to be spectators in this revolution. The breakthroughs that quantum-accelerated research could deliver everything from targeted therapies for diseases that disproportionately affect Black Americans to predictive models for climate impacts on Southern and coastal Black communities represent billions in economic value. More importantly, they represent the difference between being technology consumers and technology owners. Between licensing other people’s patents and collecting royalties on your own. But only if HBCUs control their own infrastructure. Or better yet, build it collectively.

Imagine a single, HBCU-owned computational facility, a crown jewel of Black academic infrastructure rivaling Los Alamos or Oak Ridge. Not distributed nodes competing for resources, but a unified campus where HBCUs collectively own land, buildings, and the machines that will mint the next generation of Black technological wealth. This is the computational arm of the HBCU Exploration Institute: a physical place where supercomputers hum, quantum processors compute, and HBCU researchers control access rather than beg for it.

The location matters. This facility needs to be somewhere politically friendly to ambitious Black institution-building, with favorable tax treatment, low energy costs, and infrastructure support. Four locations stand out:

New Mexico: Adjacent to Los Alamos and Sandia National Laboratories, with existing fiber infrastructure, favorable renewable energy costs, and a state government actively recruiting research facilities. New Mexico offers technical talent spillover, dry climate ideal for precision equipment, and proximity to Native American sovereign nations experienced in building independent institutions.

Puerto Rico: Tax incentives under Acts 20 and 22 (now Act 60) make it the Caribbean’s premier location for high-tech operations. Abundant renewable energy potential, especially solar, combined with federal research dollars without federal income tax on certain operations. Added benefit: positions HBCUs as bridge between U.S. and Caribbean research ecosystems.

Maine: Northern climate perfect for cooling systems, cheap hydroelectric power, and a state government hungry for high-tech economic development. Access to Canadian research partnerships, Atlantic subsea cable landing stations for data connectivity, and political environment favorable to institutional autonomy.

U.S. Virgin Islands: Caribbean location with full U.S. federal research funding access, generous tax incentives, and positioning as gateway to African and Caribbean collaborations. Year-round operation of field stations and research vessels, with computational infrastructure supporting the marine and atmospheric research missions.

The model is straightforward but transformative. HBCUs contribute capital to the HBCU Exploration Institute to purchase 200-500 acres outright. The land becomes HBCU property that is collectively owned, governed by an HBCU board, generating wealth for HBCU institutions in perpetuity. This isn’t leasing. This is ownership. A single state-of-the-art facility would house exascale supercomputers, quantum processors, AI training clusters, and massive data storage. Economies of scale mean more computing power per dollar than distributed nodes. Concentrated talent means better recruitment and retention. One campus means one set of operating costs, one power bill, one maintenance team.

HBCUs buy in based on their research needs and financial capacity. Larger contributors get more computational allocation and board representation, but every participating HBCU gets guaranteed access. Small institutions pool resources to punch above their weight. Research allocation follows ownership stakes, but the baseline ensures even small HBCUs can run competitive projects. Beyond serving HBCU research, the facility operates as a commercial venture. Lease computational time to corporations, government agencies, and international research collaborations. Host corporate AI training runs. Provide data center services. Every dollar generated flows back to participating HBCUs as dividends proportional to ownership stakes.

Adjacent to the computing facility, housing for rotating cohorts of HBCU researchers, graduate students, and undergraduate fellows creates a research village. Three-month to one-year residencies allow HBCU talent to work on computationally intensive projects while building networks across institutions. This becomes the intellectual hub of HBCU computational science, a place where collaborations form, startups launch, and the next generation of Black tech founders cut their teeth.

The sticker shock of supercomputing infrastructure is real but so is the cost of exclusion. A competitive supercomputing facility costs between $100-200 million to build and $10-30 million annually to operate, depending on scale and capability. Quantum computing infrastructure is still evolving, but meaningful access could require $50-75 million in initial investment. These aren’t small numbers, but they’re achievable through a combination of federal investment, private philanthropy, and strategic partnerships.

The first call should be to African American and Diaspora wealth both domestic and international. High-net-worth Black individuals, African tech billionaires, Caribbean family offices, and Diaspora investment networks represent untapped capital that understands the long-term value of Black institutional ownership. These are investors and philanthropists who won’t demand the same strings or ideological alignment tests that mainstream foundations impose. Traditional foundations like Mellon and Gates may follow once momentum builds, but Diaspora capital should lead. This ensures the vision remains accountable to Black communities rather than foundation program officers.

The priority for corporate partnerships should be African American and Diaspora-owned tech companies and investors who understand the strategic value of Black computational sovereignty. Seek partnerships with Black-led private equity firms, African tech entrepreneurs, and Caribbean technology investors before approaching mainstream tech giants. When engaging with companies like Microsoft, Google, IBM, and NVIDIA, structure deals that provide HBCUs with hardware, software, and expertise in exchange for joint research projects and equity participation but ensure HBCUs retain majority control and IP ownership. The goal is capital and resources, not dependence.

Federal funding streams exist like the CHIPS and Science Act, NSF Major Research Instrumentation grants, Department of Energy computing initiatives, and NASA research infrastructure programs though the current political environment makes federal support uncertain at best. HBCUs should build relationships and develop proposals now, but plan for a future administration more committed to research equity. In the meantime, the strategy must center on private capital and revenue generation that doesn’t depend on federal goodwill. Once operational, the facility could generate substantial revenue through commercial computing services, corporate research partnerships, and federal agency contracts. The University of Texas at Austin’s Texas Advanced Computing Center generates tens of millions annually through exactly this model, money that flows back into research capacity and student support. An HBCU-owned facility would channel those revenues directly to participating institutions as dividends proportional to ownership stakes.

The real value of HBCU-owned computational infrastructure goes far beyond the machines themselves. It’s about training the next generation of computational scientists, quantum engineers, and AI researchers who don’t just work for tech companies but found them, own them, and profit from them. Students at HBCUs with robust computing facilities wouldn’t just learn about supercomputers in textbooks they’d gain hands-on experience optimizing code for parallel processing, debugging quantum algorithms, and managing large-scale computational workflows. These aren’t abstract skills; they’re the exact expertise that tech companies and national laboratories desperately need and are willing to pay premium salaries to acquire. More importantly, they’re the skills that enable students to launch their own computational startups rather than simply joining someone else’s.

Faculty recruitment and retention would transform overnight. Try recruiting a top-tier computational chemist or AI researcher to an institution where they’ll spend half their time begging for computing time elsewhere. Now imagine recruiting that same researcher with the promise of dedicated access to world-class computing infrastructure and a path to commercialize their discoveries. The competitive landscape shifts dramatically.

This proposal aligns seamlessly with emerging initiatives like the HBCU Exploration Institute and the Coleman-McNair HBCU Air & Space Program outlined in recent strategic planning documents. These ambitious programs envision HBCUs leading research expeditions, operating research vessels and aircraft, and conducting aerospace missions. None of this is possible without serious computational infrastructure. Climate modeling for polar expeditions, satellite data processing, aerospace engineering simulations, deep-sea mapping analysis—these all require supercomputing resources. Want to analyze genomic data from newly discovered marine species? Process atmospheric measurements from research aircraft? Model propulsion systems for small satellites? You need computational power, and lots of it.

A Pan-HBCU Computing Consortium wouldn’t just support these exploration initiatives it would accelerate them, turning HBCUs into genuine leaders in exploratory science rather than junior partners dependent on others’ computational generosity. And every discovery, every patent, every breakthrough would belong to HBCU institutions and their researchers.

The window for building this capacity is closing. As quantum computing matures and AI systems become more computationally intensive, the institutions with infrastructure will accelerate away from those without. The gap between computational haves and have-nots will become unbridgeable, and HBCUs will be permanently relegated to second-tier research status which means second-tier revenue, second-tier patents, and second-tier wealth creation.

But it doesn’t have to be this way. The HBCU community has something that other institutions don’t: a shared mission, deep trust networks, and a history of collective action in the face of systemic exclusion. These institutions didn’t wait for permission to educate Black students when others wouldn’t. They didn’t wait for invitations to produce world-class scientists and engineers. They built their own institutions and proved the doubters wrong.

The same spirit that created HBCUs in the first place, the audacious belief that Black excellence could not be contained or denied must now be channeled into building the computational infrastructure these institutions need to compete and win in the 21st century. The question isn’t whether HBCUs can afford to build their own supercomputer and quantum computing infrastructure. The question is whether they can afford not to. In a world where computational power increasingly determines who shapes the future and who profits from it, HBCUs must choose between dependence and ownership.

The choice should be obvious. It’s time to build.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.