Danielle Byrd Thompson would like to see agents and advisors observe Black History Month by working to educate prospects in underserved communities, including Black prospects, about the financial services resources that are out there.
Speaking in a phone interview with ThinkAdvisor, Thompson noted that one of the underserved groups of prospects closest to her heart is Black women who own businesses.
Oprah Winfrey may be the chairman and CEO of the Oprah Winfrey Network, and Arlan Hamilton may have founded her venture capital firm, Backstage Capital, but Thompson sees many Black female business owners are unaware of the gaps in their protection and planning.
"They are not sought-after clients," Thompson said. "They are extremely underserved."
What It Means
For a financial professional, thinking about diversity, equity and inclusion can mean identifying people who have an urgent need for what you have to offer.
The Data
In 2020, the United States was home to 52,374 businesses with employees that were owned by Black women, according to data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau's Annual Business Survey program.
Those businesses employed 420,318 people, accounted for $13 billion in annual payroll and generated about $40 billion in annual revenue. These businesses generated a level of economic activity in 2020 that was roughly comparable to the gross domestic product of Paraguay, Latvia or Bahrain.
Danielle Byrd Thompson
Thompson is a partner at TPS Financial in Falls Church, Virginia, and a financial professional with Equitable Advisors. She has a bachelor's degree and a master's degree in business from Howard University, a historically Black university.
She started out as an advisor at VALIC — a retirement services provider that's now part of Corebridge Financial — then moved to TPS Financial in 2017.
Equitable has been taking active steps to attract more Black financial executives since at least 1968, and it backed efforts to make the services of the Securities Training Corp., an organization that prepares students for the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's Series 7 exam, available at Howard in 2016.
Thompson's Experience
Thompson has a practice that serves a wide range of clients.
She noted that Black women who own businesses are as varied as any other group of prospects.