The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Metro area Black entreprene­urs fifind common cause at Ponce City Market

- By Ernie Suggs ernie. suggs@ ajc. com

Lakeysha Hallmon just wanted to watch.

Last Thursday, as masked contractor­s noisily worked on her store at Ponce City Market, she pointed out its features but could barely be heard.

The store, The Village at PCM, is the culminatio­n of four years of helping local Black entreprene­urs make their startups successful.

Today — Black Friday — Hallmon will open the marketplac­e that will bring under one roof 25 local Black business owners and Black brands to sell their apparel, home goods, and items such as clothes, furniture, art, and wellness and beauty products.

“I want to advance and position Black businesses to engage new markets. To engage what is possible,” Hallmon said. “I can’t imagine how we can have an economic impact in Atlanta without advancing and positionin­g black businesses.”

I n 2020, l argely because of the pandemic, Black businesses c ratered. I n August, t he Federal Reserve Bank of New York released a study showing 41% of Black- owned businesses across the

country shut down between February and April, while about 17% of white businesses shut down.

The authors wrote that COVID

19 exacerbate­d existing demographi­c disparitie­s like historic funding gaps and less access to capital, including federal Paycheck Protection Program loans.

On the heels of the study, Hallmon’s Buy Black Campaign helped up- and- coming Black businesses sell $ 1.8 million in goods — on top of $ 2.7 million that Village Market had already generated by pushing and promoting them.

Hallmon had recognized the need in 2016 and began bringing together Black entreprene­urs under t he Village Market banner to showcase t heir work and train hundreds of them in business education and community engagement.

The brick- and- mortar store was the logical next step. The opening of The Village at PCM comes as Ponce City Market adds a half- million square feet of new developmen­t and amenities to the existing 2 million square feet on Atlanta’s Beltline.

“I am not afraid to take a risk in COVID,” Hallmon said. “I am doing the opposite, which is opening a business. Advocacy is another part of my mission, and I want to take away the excuse that we can’t find black businesses.”

In her tiny hometown of Batesville, Miss., Hallmon’s great- grandfathe­r was a farmer and sold his goods to the community. Her grandmothe­r was a seamstress who made dresses for the community. At the same time, her family depended on the community for their goods.

Hallmon said those were her role models. “I didn’t see my family go outside of our community for things they needed. No one taught me that. This is what I saw.”

Following her sister, Yolanda, Hallmon, 38, was the second in her family to attend college and the first to graduate from a historic black college and university, Tougaloo College. She got her doctorate in educa

‘ We have not identified anything by race. It is more about the heart of what The Village Market is. We wanted to create a neutral, modern environmen­t to showcase the brands.’ Melita Issa Owner of Miso Living

tion curriculum and instructio­n from the University of Mississipp­i and moved to Atlanta in 2011.

“I loved Atlanta before I moved here because it exemplifie­d Black excellence. I had to come,” she said. “But numbers mean something to me. And I saw the same ( business) disparitie­s in Atlanta that I saw in Mississipp­i.”

Atlanta is one of the nation’s leaders in income inequality. According to the research firm Prosperity Now, while Black- owned businesses in metro Atlanta have an average value of $ 58,085, the average value of a white- owned business is 11 times higher.

In getting to know Atlanta, Hallmon attended festivals and noticed the lack of vendor diversity. It inspired her to launch The Village Market to empower Black entreprene­urs through education, community engagement and efforts to grow existing Black businesses by exposing them to other Black businesses.

That will carry on through the new shop. Participat­ing businesses have togo through an applicatio­n that includes nomination­s and vetting. Day le Bennett, Hallmon’s long- time friend who has more than 30 years of retail experience, sat down with each vendor to talk through their product to see if it fits the concept of what The Village represents. Yolanda Hallmon will serve as the shop’s manager.

Melita Issa, whose Miso Living brand of curated furniture will be featured in the shop, is also working as the shop’s interior designer.

“For us, it was important that the space looked like anyone belonged here,” Issa said. “We have not identified anything by race. It is more about the heart of what The Village Market is. We wanted to create a neutral, modern environmen­t to showcase the brands.”

Among the businesses ready to move in are Hairbrella, J. Dow Fitness, Abeille Creations, Just Add Honey Tea Company, The Muted Home, World of Unoia and Savoir Faire. “It is beyond having a nice product ,” Hall mon said .“It is also about social responsibi­lity.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ CURTIS. COMPTON@ AJC. COM ?? Lakeysha Hallmon works to open her store, The Village at Ponce City Market in Atlanta, which will include curated artwork from Zucot Gallery for sale. “I want to advance and position Black businesses to engage new markets,” she said.
CURTIS COMPTON/ CURTIS. COMPTON@ AJC. COM Lakeysha Hallmon works to open her store, The Village at Ponce City Market in Atlanta, which will include curated artwork from Zucot Gallery for sale. “I want to advance and position Black businesses to engage new markets,” she said.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ CURTIS. COMPTON@ AJC. COM ?? Entreprene­ur Lakeysha Hallmon discusses the concept of her store, The Village at Ponce City Market, with a large tagline to the community prominentl­y displayed on one of the main walls.
CURTIS COMPTON/ CURTIS. COMPTON@ AJC. COM Entreprene­ur Lakeysha Hallmon discusses the concept of her store, The Village at Ponce City Market, with a large tagline to the community prominentl­y displayed on one of the main walls.

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