IBSA Online Newsletter - Summer 2006
Around The Globe                                 Summer 2006                                    IBSA Online Newsletter

Business Profile:

 

Yolanda Haley Taylor of Heavenly Visions Photography will introduce her book of photographs of Topeka black men at 5 p.m. June 25 at 811 S.W. Buchanan, The Governors Row House..

Her book is "Images 2006 Leaders and Role Models: African American Men in Topeka, Kansas." She has worked for over a year on the book, which looks at 163 people from all walks of life -- educators, ministers, civic leaders, and early workers in the Topeka Fire Department and Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.

Those who plan to attend should RSVP at (785) 608-3291 or email heavenlyvisions@sbcglobal.net.

www.heavenlyvisions.us


23-year old Black CEO of Publicly Traded Company Gives Business Advice

Mendota, Minn (emergingminds.org) -- There's nothing unusual about a 12- year-old who doesn't have enough money to buy a coveted video game. But how many of those kids are clever enough to create their own game, instead? Of those few, how many then find that prospective customers are eager to buy their creation, literally turning the boy-creator into a successful businessman overnight? For Ephren Taylor, that was just the beginning of his meteoric rise. Today, that 12-year-old has grown into the 23-year-old CEO of a publicly traded company.

Taylor, CEO of Amoro Corporation (http://www.AmoroCorp.com) was recently also elected CEO of City Capital Corporation (OTC Bulletin Board: CCCN.OB), a business development corporation in Mendota, Minn. The appointment makes Taylor one of the youngest CEOs of a publicly traded company. Moreover, he has the distinction of being the youngest African-American CEO of a public company.

After Taylor's initial business success at the age of 12, he launched a successful job-search portal for teens and college students that he grew to $3.2 million. It was recognized as the fourth-ranked teen business nationwide (YoungBiz Magazine). Later, he turned his attention to real estate, developing unique investment approaches for local churches, with a special focus on positive urban development. Much of his work over the years has involved his father's church and other churches.

"We aren't put here just to get as much as we can," says Taylor. "I believe we all have a purpose, and an expectation to give back, to help those less fortunate."

His successes have been frequently acknowledged along the way. He was named Kansas Young Entrepreneur of the Year in 2002 by the Kansas Department of Commerce for his investment concepts, which he utilizes in AmoroCorp and City Capital. He still works with churches, as well as private investors and other nonprofits. Most recently, mega-entertainer Snoop Dogg asked AmoroCorp to manage the endowment funds for the Snoop Youth Football League Foundation.

Being 23 and the CEO of a public company turns heads. "I may be young to have such a position," says Taylor, "but I bring a lot of experience and knowledge of what it takes to accomplish our business goals. I'm focused and excited about the possibilities being public provides. There are a lot of cities needing what we do."

 

Are Blacks Really Serious About Economic James ClingmanEmpowerment?

Even when we were in chains and relegated to slave labor, thousands of our ancestors continuously sought and eventually won their freedom, both physical and economic. Even in light of the ominous specter of maiming, torture, mutilation, and murder, many of our ancestors ran for freedom and even fought back, in the face of overwhelming odds, and men who held absolutely no regard for Black life other than how many hours of work they could get from that life. Despite the threats and likelihood of death, there was a Gabriel Prosser, a David Walker, a Harriet Tubman, a Denmark Vesey, and a Nat Turner. And for you white folks who read this, there was a John Brown.

http://www.blackonomics.com/lead.ihtml?id=319


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2005