Black-Owned Brands Get Lift as Big Retail Invests to Help Them Scale

Corporate pledges to direct more dollars to Black-owned businesses after the 2020 murder of George Floyd have resulted in a refreshed mix of products at big-name stores.

Macy’s Inc. says it has quintupled the number of products it sells from Black-owned brands since it signed the Fifteen Percent Pledge, which asks retailers to allocate 15% of their shelf space to such items. Sephora says it has more than doubled its offering of Black-owned labels since it made the same pledge. Target Corp. says it’s in a “strong position” to meet its goal of spending $2 billion with Black-owned businesses by 2025.

These moves and others like them have made Black-owned brands more accessible to millions of shoppers. But a lack of data on retailers’ efforts makes it hard to know how widespread such changes are across consumer brands and whether they have leveled the playing field for Black entrepreneurs in a lasting way.

Executives at the Fifteen Percent Pledge, a nonprofit organization, say companies on average have Black-owned brands as less than 3% of their total when initially joining the pledge. The organization and many of its corporate partners haven’t disclosed specific figures on what progress has been made toward the 15% target.

Meanwhile, some business owners say shoppers’ commitment to the Buy Black movement, which calls on consumers to purchase from Black-owned businesses, appears to be fitful.

As retailers continue to diversify suppliers, some are finding their ambitions held up by a challenge businesspeople and activists have warned about for years: There isn’t a strong pipeline of large-scale Black-owned businesses ready to immediately fulfill big orders from major U.S. chains.

That’s because many Black entrepreneurs have had trouble getting access to funding. Now, large companies are coming “to the realization that these businesses need additional capital and support — not just shelf space,” said Shelley Stewart III, who leads McKinsey & Co.’s Institute for Black Economic Mobility.