Aisha Wadud started her business to help others.
She could use a little help to make that business grow.
Which brought her to the Schulze School of Entrepreneurship at the University of St. Thomas and an innovative new program for entrepreneurs with big dreams and limited means.
Part business incubator, part boot camp, part crash course, the Community Entrepreneurship Program helps people who are trying to start or grow businesses in the face of obstacles that would stop most people from trying. People working two or three jobs on the side. Single parents drafting business plans at the kitchen table after the babies are in bed.
More than 30 entrepreneurs signed on this year, with dreams of their own trucking companies, gyms, fashion houses, beauty shops, bike shops and subscription snack services. There's a women's art collective. A chef who crafted a line of flavorful low-sodium spices after losing too many loved ones to heart disease.
There's Wadud, a massage therapist who opened Nura Holistic Massage & Bodywork in north Minneapolis, on a mission to help her neighbors heal.
"A lot of people have not recovered, really" from the trauma of the past few years of pandemic, unrest, violence and loss, she said. "They're just pushing through and trying to persevere."
The program connects entrepreneurs with mentors, resources and — in this final phase —the enthusiastic consulting services of St. Thomas undergraduate and graduate business students.