Breaking Down Barriers

Economic Impact Catalyst

This podcast explores the opportunity to build wealth in local, regional, and national economies through entrepreneurship-led economic development. Episodes feature changemakers with innovative approaches to empowering people to start businesses that create wealth for their families and improve outcomes for their communities. Conversations highlight work being done in communities across the US to break down barriers to entrepreneurial opportunity in underserved and underrepresented communities. In this series, we share authentic stories about the impact that entrepreneurship-led economic development has on the local economy and connect a global network of passionate economic developers. Find out more at economicimpactcatalyst.com/impact

  1. Building From the Ground Up: Entrepreneurship-Led Economic Development with Tarsha Hearns

    قبل ٥ أيام

    Building From the Ground Up: Entrepreneurship-Led Economic Development with Tarsha Hearns

    In honor of National Small Business Week and Economic Development Week 2026, David Ponraj sits down with Tarsha Hearns of Economic Growth Strategies for a candid, practical conversation about what it really means to put entrepreneurs at the center of economic development strategy. Tarsha brings over two decades of ecosystem-building experience in the Dallas-Fort Worth area and beyond, and she doesn't hold back from calling out copy-paste program design to naming the trust problem that quietly fractures ecosystems from the inside. In this episode, we cover: What entrepreneurship-led economic development actually means and how it differs from the traditional playbook of chasing big corporate relocations, including a look at programs and resources dedicated to entrepreneurship-led ED that Tarsha has tapped intoThe Dallas Collaborative for Capital Access and how a JP Morgan Chase-funded initiative brought together CDFIs, city officials, and ESOs to tackle a capital desert in South Dallas without launching yet another loan fundWhy speed of capital matters more than amount or cost and how EIC's Catalyzer platform is implementing automated underwriting to help CDFIs say yes fasterThe "copy-paste" trap and why importing a program that worked in another city without assessing your own ecosystem is a recipe for duplication, not impactThe trust problem nobody talks about—how broken referral loops, siloed data, and lack of follow-through erode confidence across the ecosystem, and what to do about itData collection done right—practical tips for capturing client outcomes at every touchpoint, including how to build incentives into your grant structureRapid-fire advice—what communities should start doing (quarterly convenings), stop doing (operating in silos), and the free C-Cube Toolkit to help get those ecosystem conversations started Resources mentioned: Economic Growth Strategies Ecosystem Assessment — start here to identify gaps in your ecosystem's infrastructure, data strategy, and capital access programsIEDC — the leading professional organization for economic developers, with programs and resources dedicated to entrepreneurship-led economic developmentC-Cube Toolkit — a free resource for starting ecosystem coordination conversationsCalifornia SCALE Network — statewide referral network model connecting SBDCs, CDFIs, chambers, and more

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  2. More Than Metrics: The Human Side of Small Town Economic Development

    ١٢ مايو

    More Than Metrics: The Human Side of Small Town Economic Development

    In this episode of Breaking Down Barriers, host David Ponraj sits down with Erik Reader of Reader Area Development to celebrate National Small Business Week, Economic Development Week, and the 100th anniversary of the International Economic Development Council (IEDC). Erik brings 15+ years of on-the-ground experience in community and economic development— from running a chamber/tourism hybrid organization and leading the Illinois Main Street statewide network, to working with CDFIs and SBA CDCs. He joins David to talk candidly about the state of small towns across America, what it really takes to bring a Main Street back to life, and why the human side of entrepreneurship matters more than any metric. In this episode, you'll hear: Why remote work and post-COVID migration are reshaping small towns and creating new opportunities for communities under 50,000Whether brick-and-mortar businesses on Main Street can still thrive (spoiler: never say never)Erik's AREA framework—Assistance, Retention, Expansion, and Attraction—and why attraction should always come lastDavid's addition to the model: Succession and why protecting existing businesses is more valuable than funding new onesWhat Entrepreneurship Through Acquisition (ETA) is and why it may be the safest path into business ownershipReal-world examples from Havana, Illinois and Geneva, Illinois on what deep community engagement can unlockWhy the best downtowns lean into their quirks instead of copying what worked somewhere elseThe art of community storytelling—from placards and visitor guides to AR/VR preservation (like Dunedin's Kellogg Mansion) Connect with Erik Reader: LinkedIn: Erik ReaderWeb: readerareadevelopment.com

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  3. The $200 Billion Blind Spot: Why Community Lenders Keep Failing Small Business Owners

    ٥ مايو

    The $200 Billion Blind Spot: Why Community Lenders Keep Failing Small Business Owners

    What if the real problem with small business lending isn't the banks, but that nobody's actually built the system around the business owner? In this conversation, David sits down with Charles Kollo, Head of Innovation at BBIF, a Florida-based CDFI (Community Development Financial Institution), for a candid conversation about why the $200 billion community lending ecosystem is ripe for disruption, why CDFIs have been slow to modernize, and what it will actually take to put capital access back in the hands of business owners. Charles brings a rare global lens to the conversation: he's built a digital bank in Sub-Saharan Africa, worked with major banking groups across Côte d'Ivoire, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, and beyond, and now applies those lessons to the U.S. CDFI space. In this episode: Why CDFIs were created (and why they've been slow to innovate)The outdated 1970s credit scoring system that's still running the showWhy high interest rates from alternative lenders are essentially a "laziness fee" (and what accurate risk prediction could change)The real victim in the lending ecosystem: the small business ownerWhat mobile money in Africa can teach us about capital deployment in the U.S.The three ingredients needed to actually solve this problem: clarity of thought, tools, and distributionWhy EIC may be positioned to bridge the gap Links & Resources: Rethinking Capital Access for Small Businesses with Charles KolloLearn more about CDFIs: cdfi.orgLearn more about BBIF: bbif.com

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  4. From First Pitch to $100K: How STartUP Northshore Built the Gulf South's Biggest Community Competition

    ٢٨ أبريل

    From First Pitch to $100K: How STartUP Northshore Built the Gulf South's Biggest Community Competition

    What does it actually take to build a pitch competition that changes lives and keeps founders in their hometown? In this episode, Molly King, VP of Clients at Economic Impact Catalyst, sits down with Cenzo Caronna and Shivang Thakor of STartUP Northshore to pull back the curtain on the Inspire Startup Slam, one of the Gulf South's largest pitch competitions, running out of a 100-year-old theater in Hammond, Louisiana. Cenzo and Shiv share how they've built a $100K prize ecosystem (combining $50K in non-dilutive grant cash with in-kind services) serving a three-parish rural region north of New Orleans, and why the event they designed for "the person who got dragged there" has become the cornerstone of their startup ecosystem. In this episode: How STartUP Northshore came together across St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, and Washington Parishes, and why trust-building in rural communities requires a boots-on-the-ground, not broadcast, approachThe full founder journey: from the ID Institute 12-week accelerator → Launchpad ($5K competition) → Inspire Startup Slam ($50K)Why they scrapped winner-take-all after year one and what they changedThe six judging criteria, including one most competitions miss: commitment to and potential impact for the North ShoreHow they built a $100K prize pool starting with their own money, a Chevron partnership, and a cold call from Capital OneThe pro tip that saved them $28,000 (hint: book a theater, not a conference room)Why in-kind services like accountants, marketing firms, and coworking space may matter more than the cash prizeLeading vs. lagging indicators: why business formation is a "vanity metric" and what STartUP Northshore actually tracksPractical advice for other program managers: expect the unexpected, do non-scalable things, and text your founders This year's winner didn't make the finals the previous year. He kept building with STartUP Northshore's support and came back to win the whole thing. Guests: Cenzo Caronna, Executive Director, STartUP NorthshoreShivang Thakor, Program Manager, STartUP Northshore Host: Molly King, VP of Clients, Economic Impact Catalyst

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  5. California's SCALE Network: Building a Unified Ecosystem for Small Business Success

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    California's SCALE Network: Building a Unified Ecosystem for Small Business Success

    What happens when you create a comprehensive support network that serves nearly 4.3 million small businesses across an entire state? In this insightful episode of "Breaking Down Barriers," host David Ponraj interviews Dr. Tara Lynn Gray, Director of the California Office of the Small Business Advocate, about the remarkable impact of California's SCALE network—a groundbreaking mesh network approach to small business support. SCALE (Success, Capital Access and Leadership for Entrepreneurs) was created by the California Office of the Small Business Advocate (CalOSBA) to help California's diverse small businesses across the state access more resources to start up, grow, and create jobs. This innovative program transforms the traditional hub-and-spoke model into a connected mesh network that places small businesses at the center, allowing them to access support from multiple points across the network. Dr. Gray reveals the strategic vision behind this unified ecosystem and explains how California has built the most robust small business support network in the country. The conversation explores how SCALE transitions from a traditional hub-and-spoke model to a connected mesh network, providing redundancy and resilience by allowing small businesses to access support from multiple points across the network. The episode also delves into the network's data-driven approach to measuring success, ensuring accountability, and building the case for sustained funding to serve California's 4.3 million small businesses. Key Topics Discussed The philosophy behind meeting businesses "where they are"How California's mesh network model creates resilience by connecting all stakeholders—investors, educators, technical experts—around one goal: small business successThe importance of unified data models for tracking real-world impactBreaking down barriers to capital for BIPOC-owned businesses who are denied capital at disproportionate ratesStrategies for advocating for long-term program fundingBuilding interconnected pathways rather than siloed support systemsThe $25.3 million program funded through the U.S. Treasury's State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI) and American Rescue Plan Act California's Small Business Support Network: Seven Years of Measurable Impact The numbers tell a powerful story of entrepreneurial support across California's extensive network: Businesses & Training 845,185 small businesses served34,788 training events completed13,900 new businesses launched Economic Impact 84,437 jobs created781,050 jobs retained68,730 new contracts secured Capital Access $2.9 billion in lending capital approved$3.6 billion in equity raised Program Impact & Funding Funding for this $25.3 million program comes from the U.S. Treasury's State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI), which was created by the U.S. Congress in 2010 and reauthorized through the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. Additionally, it will support the deployment of $1.1 billion in federal funding separately approved for capital support programs, with lenders across the state expected to leverage this into $18 billion in new loans for small businesses. Resources & Links SCALE Network Information: https://calosba.ca.gov/for-small-businesses-and-non-profits/small-business-centers/ California Office of the Small Business Advocate: https://calosba.ca.gov/

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This podcast explores the opportunity to build wealth in local, regional, and national economies through entrepreneurship-led economic development. Episodes feature changemakers with innovative approaches to empowering people to start businesses that create wealth for their families and improve outcomes for their communities. Conversations highlight work being done in communities across the US to break down barriers to entrepreneurial opportunity in underserved and underrepresented communities. In this series, we share authentic stories about the impact that entrepreneurship-led economic development has on the local economy and connect a global network of passionate economic developers. Find out more at economicimpactcatalyst.com/impact

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