The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Local Black-owned firms multiply

Data showing that numbers have boomed after the pandemic.

- By Mirtha Donastorg mirtha.donastorg@ajc.com

For Atlanta-based entreprene­ur David Hailey, the pandemic marked the death of one business and the birth of another.

His first business managed airline inventory using artificial intelligen­ce and computer vision. But when the travel industry tanked, so did his company. He and his business partner went separate ways, but Hailey held on to the idea of using AI to catalog inventory.

In May 2021, he founded Countifi with two part-time employees, taking the concept of his first business but expanding it to also helping hospitals and

universiti­es digitize, organize and tag their inventory through technology.

Hailey is not alone in starting a business in the wake of the pandemic. Between 2020 and 2021, the total number of firms with employees on the payroll in metro Atlanta grew by more than 5,000, according to an analysis by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on of new census data released in the fall. This is the highest year-overyear growth since at least 2017, when the Census changed how it surveyed business owners.

The largest growth rate in that span was among Blackowned employer firms in the metro. They increased by 23.4% — from 8,663 to 10,689 businesses. The total number of

Black-owned employer firms is much smaller than whiteowned ones, but the surge in new starts for Black businesses is eight times the rate at which white-owned businesses grew in that year.

From 2017 to 2021, the rate of new Black-owned employer firms in the metro grew by 57.3%, the most of any racial group.

But employer firms represent just a sliver of Black-owned businesses in metro Atlanta. Ninety-seven percent of Black businesses in the region are sole proprietor­ships, according to the nonprofit Atlanta Wealth Building Initiative (AWBI). It’s unclear how the pandemic affected them because the Census has only released data up to 2019.

Bust, then boom

The new data on the region’s

Black-owned employer firms reflects a bust-then-boom trend seen across the country after the pandemic.

In the first months of COVID19′s spread across the U.S., 41% of Black firms closed between February and April 2020, according to Stanford researcher­s.

But then came a rebound. U.S. Small Business Administra­tor (SBA) Isabel Casillas Guzman told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that we are seeing the highest rate for Black entreprene­urship starts in 30 years.

Experts have different theories about what is behind that growth.

Guzman said the increase could be due to a combinatio­n of people accessing startup capital because of an unpreceden­ted injection of cash from the federal government during the pandemic, like the expanded child tax credits. She also said the job market changed as more people left their jobs during “The Great Resignatio­n.”

“I think the pandemic created a shift that encouraged people to go after their dreams, for sure, but there’s also a great opportunit­y that’s been out there as well,” Guzman said.

Alex Camardelle, vice president of policy research at AWBI, suggested the growth in employer firms could be because the influx of pandemic relief capital allowed businesses to hire for the first time.

He also thinks shifts in the labor market may have made people want to work for a local small business instead of a corporatio­n.

“That may have come as a result of choice, but it also may have come as a result of, ‘Well, my company is closing down doors; I need another opportunit­y,’” he said.

Hailey decided to open a business because he saw an opportunit­y in the medical and education spaces because of changes wrought by COVID-19.

“In the hospital space, there were just a lot more assets, a lot more inventory items to count,” Hailey said. “The universiti­es had an opportunit­y where they were empty and (could) say, ‘Hey, we might have deferred some maintenanc­e, we might have deferred purchasing items.

Is there a way we can get our hands around what we currently have?’”

His clients include Clark Atlanta University, Duke Raleigh Hospital in North Carolina, North Carolina A&T State University and Emirates Airlines, and he also has done some work with his former employer, Delta Air Lines.

He is also helping a local Blackowned e-commerce hub, ECOMSPACES, streamline their receiving process. Through Countifi, they can count the items automatica­lly instead of manually.

But building a business while the world came out of the pandemic has not been easy for Hailey. “It’s been a roller-coaster ride, truthfully,” he said. “But we’re making it.”

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/AJC ?? Atlanta entreprene­ur David Hailey, founder of AI warehouse organizing software Countifi, saw one business die during the pandemic, but another has blossomed in its wake. It helps hopsitals and universiti­es catalog their inventory through technology.
ARVIN TEMKAR/AJC Atlanta entreprene­ur David Hailey, founder of AI warehouse organizing software Countifi, saw one business die during the pandemic, but another has blossomed in its wake. It helps hopsitals and universiti­es catalog their inventory through technology.
 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/AJC ?? A display of Countifi’s inventory management system at ECOMSPACES’ warehouse in Atlanta. Countifi was founded in May 2021 by David Hailey, who had two part-time employees.
ARVIN TEMKAR/AJC A display of Countifi’s inventory management system at ECOMSPACES’ warehouse in Atlanta. Countifi was founded in May 2021 by David Hailey, who had two part-time employees.

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