



Closing the Equity Gap
Creating Wealth and Fostering Justice in Startup Investing
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4.0 • 1 Rating
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
A social activist and an entrepreneur remake the future of investing and business, offering a win-win road map for creating wealth and addressing inequalities by investing in groundbreaking tech companies that defy assumptions from Silicon Valley to Wall Street.
Companies backed by venture capital drive the U.S. economy, accounting for hundreds of billions of dollars in sales and profits. The problem is that most of the wealth created winds up enriching elites, while the businesses funded by venture capitalists widen economic inequality. Committed to doing things differently, tech venture capitalists Freada Kapor Klein and Mitch Kapor launched Kapor Capital to prove that investing in gap-closing startups—companies whose services or products close opportunity gaps for both communities of color and low-income communities—is good business. Over the past decade, they’ve broadened the definition of success to include profits and accountability for the impacts a business has on employees, communities, and the planet, helping to launch close to two hundred companies engaged in achieving social and economic justice while showing remarkable growth, with many valued in the hundreds of millions or billions of dollars.
Like every VC firm, Kapor Capital has experienced high-profile blowups and total losses. But its investing principles have created a stunning new ecosystem of Black and Latinx entrepreneurs, CEOs, and investors, all devising innovative, effective solutions to address the most pernicious problems afflicting many of America’s poorest communities. In Closing the Equity Gap, Freada and Mitch share their core belief that all companies must make a positive impact and that the obstacles entrepreneurs overcome in life are a far better predictor of long-term success than the schools they attend or investment dollars they raise from friends and family.
Using stories behind some of the most remarkable companies ever launched, they show that the standard investment model doesn’t work, how it can be fixed, and what the future could look like if more investors joined them.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Startup capital should be used to improve the lives of ordinary people, according to this well-meaning if blinkered treatise. Klein (Giving Notice) and her husband Kapor detail how, as founders of the Kapor Capital investment firm, they aim to lessen racial and gendered wealth disparities through investing in startups that "expand economic opportunity" for marginalized communities. They describe businesses their firm has invested in, including BlocPower (which brings Wi-Fi to underserved neighborhoods) and Promise (which offers interest-free payment plans for utilities and parking tickets). Biographical background on the startups' founders uplifts, such as the story of Irma Olguin Jr., a first-generation college graduate who cofounded a company that trains "underrepresented communities for tech jobs." However, the focus on companies the authors helped seed can come across as self-congratulatory, and there's not much consideration given to the difficulties of addressing systemic inequities through for-profit ventures. This tension is most conspicuous in the chapter about Uber (the authors were angel investors), in which Klein and Kapor portray themselves as crusaders against disgraced CEO Travis Kalanick while largely eliding controversies around drivers' low pay and lack of benefits. This modestly convincing case for the benefits of "empathetic tech" nonetheless reveals its limitations.