Counseling
and training
The U.S. Small Business Administration leverages
its field
offices, resource partners, and additional partnerships to help
level the playing field for business owners and aspiring entrepreneurs who
historically have lacked access to wealth or business opportunities.
SBA Resource partners
SBA works with independent organizations to provide high-quality
counseling and training to meet the specific needs of new
and existing small businesses. This resource partner network
includes SCORE business mentors, Small Business Development Centers
(SBDCs), Women’s Business Centers (WBCs), and Veterans Business Opportunity
Centers (VBOCs). Several resource partner service centers are located at
Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) across America. SBA
resource partners provide counseling and training to business owners at all
stages.
SBA Emerging Leaders Initiative
The Emerging Leaders Initiative is an
intensive executive-level series intended to accelerate the growth of
high-potential small businesses in America’s underserved cities. The program
provides customized training for C- level executives with
demonstrated business sustainability. Participants create a
three-year strategic growth action plan with benchmarks and performance targets
to help them emerge as self-sustaining businesses creating jobs and
building communities.
Federal partners
The U.S. Department of Commerce operates the Minority Business
Development Agency, which is dedicated to the growth and global
competitiveness of business enterprises owned and operated by African
Americans, Asian Americans, Hasidic Jews, Hispanic Americans, Native Americans,
and Pacific Islanders.
Funding
programs
The federal government does not provide grants to start a
business. However, there are several funding programs to help entrepreneurs
start, expand, or recover from disasters.
You can learn more about funding
options for small business, including those targeted at minority and
underserved communities, and get connected with SBA-approved lenders. SBA
also offers several special COVID-19 relief options and other recovery resources for underserved communities.
SBA
contracting certifications and business development programs
8(a) Business Development program
The 8(a) Business Development program helps socially
and economically disadvantaged small businesses grow
by limiting competition for certain contracts to participating businesses, allowing
them to become solid competitors in the federal marketplace.
Disadvantaged businesses in the 8(a) program can:
o Compete
for set-aside and sole-source contracts in
the program
o Get
a Business Opportunity Specialist to help navigate federal contracting
o Form
joint ventures with established businesses through the
SBA's Mentor-Protégé Program
o Receive
management and technical assistance, including business training, counseling,
marketing assistance, and high-level executive development
o Compete
for contract awards under multiple socio-economic programs, as they apply
Before you can participate in the 8(a) Business
Development program, you must meet certain criteria and be certified.
HUBZone program
The government limits competition for certain contracts
to businesses in historically underutilized business zones. The
program aims to award at least three percent of federal contract
dollars each year to HUBZone-certified companies.
SBA Mentor-Protégé Program
The SBA Mentor-Protégé Program enables eligible
small businesses (protégés) to get valuable business development help and win
government contracts through partnerships with more experienced companies
(mentors).
Additional government contracting programs
SBA offers several additional government contracting certifications and programs.
SBA’s
Office of Diversity, Inclusion and Civil Rights
All SBA programs and services are extended to the public
on a nondiscriminatory basis. You may contact SBA’s Office of Diversity, Inclusion and Civil Rights for
additional information.