African-American Chamber Survey: 40 Percent of Black Businesses Have Difficulty Finding Trained Staff; 81.8 Percent of Black Firm Employees are African-American
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 12 /PRNewswire/ — In a recent survey of its member-
businesses, the Philadelphia-area African-American Chamber of Commerce (AACC)
found that 40 percent are experiencing difficulty in finding appropriately
trained employees to work in their companies and that targeted training
programs would allow them to hire more people, with greater confidence.
Among the impediments to finding suitable employees, the businesses said,
was “technical skills deficiency,” “insufficient training,” “lack of expertise
in the business’s specialty,” “lack of education,” a “lack of a clean
background” and a “lack of work ethic, professionalism and punctuality.”
The firms, each of which was African-American owned, said that being able
to hire qualified African-Americans is a high priority for their businesses.
On a scale of “1″ to “5,” with “1″ being “most important,” 60 percent of the
respondents rated the issue a “1″ or a “2.” Twenty-five percent were evenly
divided on the issue and only two firms rated hiring black employees a “4″ or
“5″ (least important).
In fact, the responding firms said that their current employee base is
81.8 percent African-American and none of the businesses reported having fewer
than 50 percent African-American employment. Forty-five percent of the
responding black-owned firms reported having White, Hispanic or Asian
employees as part of their staffs. Of those firms with multi-ethnic staffs,
77.7 percent reported having white employees (ranging from 5% to 40% of their
staffs); 55.5 percent reported having Hispanic employees (ranging from 5% to
22%) and 44.4 percent reported having Asian staff members (ranging from 10% to
35%) of all employees.
Among the most important qualities black business owners seek in new hires
are: strong work ethic (”responsibility,” “integrity,” “willingness to work
hard,” “dependability,” “reliability,” “loyalty,” “honesty,” “punctuality,”
“dedication,” “attitude,” “commitment to mission”) skill levels and
communication skills. In fact, of the 21 qualities mentioned by the business
owner-respondents, work ethic-related qualities were cited 61.9 percent of the
time, while skill level was cited in 28.6 percent of the responses and
communications ability (including people skills) was mentioned in just 9.5
percent of the responses.
Clearly, the shortage of productive workforce development assistance is
not unique to black-owned firms, but because such firms tend to be smaller and
to have lesser capital resources, the impact on them is greater, says the
African-American Chamber.
Speaking of the need for more effective training throughout the overall
economy, Edward Lawler, a professor at the University of Southern California’s
Marshall School of Business, said recently, “Today, gaps and deficiencies in
skills and competencies translate into poor performances and an inability to
compete effectively.”
“In the course of our conversation with member businesses, we’ve had
black-owned firms tell us that they were reluctant to seek new contracts
because they were afraid they couldn’t easily find new staff members with the
skill sets they needed,” said A. Bruce Crawley, chairman of the AACC. “It
appears that there is a very tangible need for workforce development training
for the staffs and potential staffs of small and minority firms in the
Philadelphia area. The combination of discrimination in public and private
sector contracting, and the lack of well-trained workforces makes for a very
unsettling business climate for black-owned firms.”
“While there is abundant information that indicates that small and
minority businesses are the largest national contributors to net job growth,”
Crawley added, “traditional workforce development programs have been designed
primarily to benefit large corporate employers. That has to be modified if we
are ever going to realize the full benefit of minority/entrepreneurial
business growth and job growth in our area.”
Apparently, in response to their experience with employee recruitment,
61.9 percent of the African-American businesses responding to the survey,
despite their relatively small size, said they have made a budgetary
commitment to employee training. Nearly 43 percent of the respondents said
they invest two percent or less of their budgets on such training. Another
26.3 percent report investing between 10 percent and 40 percent on training,
with one respondent citing a training cost of $1500 per year, per employee.
It appears that workforce development efforts would also increase hiring
by black firms from among ex-offenders. Given the City’s challenges in trying
to implement effective re-entry programs for ex-offenders, 35 percent of the
responding black business owners said they currently make a practice of hiring
those who have been incarcerated. When the business owners were asked if they
would be willing to hire ex-offenders “who have been screened and received
training,” those interested in hiring from that population jumped to 70
percent.
Seventy percent of the responding businesses were located in Philadelphia.
The balance was based throughout the Delaware Valley, in places such as
Berwyn, Ft. Washington, Wilmington, Delaware and southern New Jersey.
While the businesses were, on average, 15.5 years old, the range was from
one to 58 years; the average number of employees was 12.8 persons. Industry
sectors for the respondents included behavioral health, employee benefits,
construction, optician, finance, real estate, education and training, home
healthcare and mystery shopping.
Founded as the African-American Chamber of Commerce of Philadelphia in
1994, the African-American Chamber of Commerce of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and
Delaware is the leading private sector advocate for black-owned businesses and
African-American economic development in the tri-state area. Headquartered at
1735 Market Street in Center City Philadelphia, the Chamber represents the
interests of such businesses in both public and private sector forums. The
organization also offers management and technical assistance programs to
improve the effectiveness of black-owned businesses in the region. According
to the Census Bureau, there are 16,010 African-American-owned businesses in
southeast Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey and northern Delaware.
SOURCE African-American Chamber of Commerce of Pennsylvania,
Delaware and New Jersey
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January 13th, 2005 at 5:14 pm
I found this in the Journal of Urban Affairs, Vol 19, No 2 (dated 1997):
“The author found that black employers hired a greater percentage of black workers for their firms than white employers matched on the basis of firm size, location, and product produced, but black-owned firms paid lower wages, even though there seemed to be no major differences in skills required for the jobs studied.”
When Johnson owned BET, the talk on the street (in DC) was the employees complaining about being underpaid.
And small black-owned construction companies typically don’t compete for federal jobs because they cannot support the union (prevailing) rates.
December 25th, 2005 at 1:26 am
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April 5th, 2007 at 3:16 am
the real reality is that so-called african-americans must learn to mass produce products from organic produce to affordable clothing instead of unwanted children. today in 21st century america with so many of my people driving their suv’s with expensive rims and diamond earings its hard for many to comprehend this reality. rib shacks..chicken shacks..and christian churches are ok..but we dont hire nobody in this country (let’s keep it real now). barber/beautician profession is is big and still growing but all of us can’t be barbers and beauticians. i think we as people of african descent have come along way in the americas but we have many challenges yet to deal with to move forward. business links with the motherland must become a reality in this everchanging global economy and these are just some thoughts i feel i needed to get across to blackinformant.com. thank you for your time.
September 3rd, 2007 at 10:27 am
Looking to award black minority-owned construction companies contracts to build affordable housing in new program intended to help such companies break into the city’s mainstream real-estate redevelopement industry.