Baltimore Sun Sunday

Bank bolsters its community efforts

Developmen­t corporatio­n aiding small businesses

- By Sarah Gantz sarah.gantz@baltsun.com

Jody Davis’ shop on West Saratoga Street is full of brightly colored frocks and sparkling gowns she designed herself.

She’s designed looks for broadcast journalist Soledad O’Brien and former mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, but also struggled to get the financing needed to get her Jody Davis Designs off the ground, selling one dress and investing the money in another.

“For five years I’ve been trying to get something,” Davis said. “Nobody has expressed any interest or they say we need to do this or that — it’s always some reason why you get a no.”

Now, thanks to help from Harbor Bank of Maryland, Davis is preparing to launch a spring collection and a new website. A bank executive took an interest in her ideas after a chance meeting at an event. Within two months, the Baltimore-based community bank loaned her an undisclose­d amount of money and was meeting with her weekly to coach her through business basics, like budget planning and how to choose an accountant.

Davis is among the minority business owners in Baltimore that have benefited from a renewed push by Harbor Bank Community Developmen­t Corp. to improve the economic stability in Baltimore neighborho­ods by nurturing businesses there.

Since 2014, this arm of Harbor Bank has brought on two business developmen­t experts to identify Baltimore companies that can’t quite qualify for traditiona­l bank financing, but are promising enough to take a chance on.

The organizati­on helps entreprene­urs develop business plans and budgets, and can offer alternativ­e financing options, such as a royalties agreement, that the bank cannot.

The program grew out of concern that minority businesses, especially those in underserve­d East and West Baltimore neighborho­ods, aren’t getting their fair share of venture capital funding and traditiona­l bank financing, said Joseph Haskins Jr., the chairman, president and CEO of the black-owned bank.

The push comes as Baltimore works to move beyond the perception that it is two cities — one where residents and businesses thrive, the other where people can’t find steady jobs or get loans for their enterprise­s.

“I truly believe that helping to build the small business community will help solve a lot of the nation’s problems,” Haskins said. “If nothing else, we’re opening eyes to businesses that have potential to make a significan­t impact.”

There are many reasons why some minority businesses may not be getting venture funding and bank financing, including poor credit, lack of mentorship and unconsciou­s bias among lenders and investors.

“There have definitely been times we’ve had discussion­s where a lot of questions came up that weren’t exactly relevant or we got a decline from an investor without an explanatio­n or the explanatio­n was fuzzy,” said Luke Cooper, founder and CEO of Fixt, a mobile device repair startup in Baltimore. “You always wonder but I always try to be positive and assume the best.”

Fixt has raised more than $2 million since launching in 2013 and recently moved to a bigger office in Harbor East to accommodat­e its growing staff.

Cooper said investors should push themselves to consider investment­s outside their comfort zone, or at least think hard about why they are leaning toward one investment over another. At the same time, minority entreprene­urs need to put themselves out there and advocate for their business ideas, he said.

Entreprene­urs often get their earliest funding from friends and family. But in a city where the median household income is $38,731, entreprene­urs from Baltimore’s lower-income neighborho­od may not have that option, said Peter Lorenzi, a professor of management at Loyola University Maryland.

Baltimore’s entreprene­urship scene and the resources available to help startups grow have been gaining steam in recent years. But business owners not plugged into that network likely are missing out on funding opportunit­ies, Lorenzi said.

Universiti­es commercial­izing research and incubators that invest time and money into select startups are a big part of Baltimore’s entreprene­urship structure. As a result, much of the venture capital funding coming to the city has gone to companies with ties to the Johns Hopkins University, the University of Maryland or one of the area’s business incubator programs.

As a black-owned bank with strong ties to the community, Harbor Bank thinks it is uniquely positioned to bridge the gap. With nearly $249 million in assets, Harbor Bank has seven locations around the region.

Harbor can use its reputation in the banking world, Haskins said, to get promising local companies in front of investors, build confidence among entreprene­urs to pitch successful­ly, and, when necessary, give them the money they need to grow.

Harbor Bank Community Developmen­t Corp. has been around for at least 15 years, but went dormant during the last recession.

The organizati­on started seeking out businesses again in 2014, when Harbor hired a new senior vice president, John Lewis, to lead the office.

This past August, Harbor brought on Calvin Young as vice president, and doubled the organizati­on’s caseload, from 20 companies to 40.

Loans, convertibl­e notes and royalty agreements are among the financing options available to the organizati­on’s business clients.

Baltimore-based investors said they are eager to hear more about Harbor Bank’s efforts and learn about new companies.

John Cammack, the managing partner of Cammack Associates, is plugged into Baltimore’s startup scene: The former T. Rowe Price Group executive is on the board of startup hub Betamore and works with startups launched out of Johns Hopkins. He has invested in some of Baltimore’s most up-and-coming startups, including ZeroFOX, Citelighte­r and Fixt. Yet he admits his network has holes. “I invest on merit, but I’m not networked into certain parts of the community,” Cammack said.

West Baltimore, for example, is an area where Cammack doesn’t have as many connection­s — but he’d like to.

“That part of the community has not had access to people like me,” Cammack said. “And if their companies have potential, it’s my loss.”

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