Chicago Sun-Times

New ally for Black, Latino and female entreprene­urs

- BY ZAC CLINGENPEE­L, STAFF REPORTER zclingenpe­el@suntimes.com | @ZacharyCli­ngen1

When L. Brian Jenkins earned his master’s degree in theology from Wheaton College in 1993, many of his classmates went on to doctorate programs.

Jenkins, though, wanted to serve his religion in a way that brought change to his local community’s youth.

He started working with Lawndale Christian Developmen­t Corp., a nonprofit that taught young people to own and operate their own businesses. That’s when he decided to leave the world of theology and help Chicago entreprene­urs — even though he had no formal training in business or entreprene­urship; he studied English and religion at the University of Iowa before going to grad school at Wheaton.

“That transition became where I really started to see the impact,” Jenkins said. “I started thinking, ‘Maybe the Lord wants to use me in this,’ even though I didn’t see it right away.”

In the decades since, Jenkins has worked with dozens of Black, Latino and women entreprene­urs to get their small businesses off the ground with workshops, books and his nonprofit businesses Entrenuity and Mox.E.

Jenkins began Entrenuity in 1999. It provides classes, business plan developmen­t and capital investment to entreprene­urs with a focus on Black, Latino and women business owners. Mox.E, which opened in February, provides working spaces for entreprene­urs and small businesses.

Jenkins said he became “infatuated” with entreprene­urship because it “creates freedom” for poor communitie­s. “It has never, never been about money for me,” he said.

Jenkins opened a new location for Mox.E and his coffee shop, Overflow Coffee, at 1449 S. Michigan Ave., on Feb. 19. The building is the previous home to VeeJay Records, which was at one point one of the largest Blackowned record companies in the U.S.

Overflow Coffee is on the first floor; coworking space, with rentable private offices and conference rooms, is on the second.

The building is in Ald. Pat Dowell’s 3rd Ward. Dowell has taken active interest in the new location, helping Jenkins get more involved with South Loop businesses.

“Not only is Entrenuity a Black-owned business,” Dowell said, “but their whole success model is about helping other minority entreprene­urs and small business owners grow and become stronger parts of our community.”

Angela Madaha, Mox.E director of operations, helps to coordinate two business groups — the Chicago Entreprene­urship Operators and the women-led Get Cities Chicago — that help “create funded programs and access points for [business] founders.”

Madaha got involved with Mox.E after working with Jenkins to teach women entreprene­urs.

“I was really attracted to the business model here, which is a nonprofit that works as a social enterprise,” Madaha said. “They don’t depend on funding, but they are self-sustainabl­e.”

Candace Washington credits Jenkins’ Entrenuity with helping her take her business to the next level. Two years ago, Washington worked with Entrenuity to rebrand her career training business, Pivotal Impact Learning, which is geared at helping Black and Brown profession­als develop career skills.

“There is a heart of passion behind everything you see with Overflow, Entrenuity and Mox.E,” Washington said. “It’s all about service and how we can help one another grow, get better and prosper.”

The Chicagolan­d Chamber of Commerce said businesses like Entrenuity “are a critical part of Chicago’s future and our economic recovery.”

Jenkins has written two books about entreprene­urship and business management and has started a third: “Theology of Entreprene­urship: God as Creative Disruptor.”

“My faith has always been my motivator,” Jenkins said. “It has gotten me through tough times as well as good times. It is my core conviction of why I do what I do.”

 ?? ZACHARY CLINGENPEE­L/SUN-TIMES ?? L. Brian Jenkins’ Overflow Coffee is at 1449 S. Michigan Ave., the previous home to VeeJay Records.
ZACHARY CLINGENPEE­L/SUN-TIMES L. Brian Jenkins’ Overflow Coffee is at 1449 S. Michigan Ave., the previous home to VeeJay Records.

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