Close Menu
  • Business
  • Education
    • Science
  • HBCU
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Tech
Featured Stories

Social Security payments land this week with new twist

April 8, 2026

Gmail’s newest update lets you fix your most embarrassing username

April 8, 2026

50 Cent beats out Netflix and Apple for a landmark Hulu docuseries

April 8, 2026
Load More
What's Hot

Social Security payments land this week with new twist

April 8, 2026

Gmail’s newest update lets you fix your most embarrassing username

April 8, 2026

50 Cent beats out Netflix and Apple for a landmark Hulu docuseries

April 8, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Social Security payments land this week with new twist
  • Gmail’s newest update lets you fix your most embarrassing username
  • 50 Cent beats out Netflix and Apple for a landmark Hulu docuseries
  • Shaquille O’Neal’s Dunkman league is coming this summer
  • How Junelle Bromfield achieved her radiant wedding day beauty look
  • Skye P. Marshall inspiring path from survival jobs
  • Emma Grede reveals why so many Black women fear money
  • Kareem Edwards made 1 brave bet on himself
  • Culture
  • Money
  • World
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Black TimesBlack Times
Subscribe
Wednesday, April 8
  • Business
  • Education
    • Science
  • HBCU
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Tech
Black TimesBlack Times
Home»career

Emma Grede reveals why so many Black women fear money

Dorcas OnasaBy Dorcas OnasaApril 8, 2026 career No Comments4 Mins Read
Emma Grede
Courtesy Of Emma Grede
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

It is a Monday and Emma Grede is home in Los Angeles, which almost never happens. For a woman who is a founding partner of SKIMS, co-founder and CEO of Good American, chairwoman of the Fifteen Percent Pledge, a board member of the Obama Foundation, and a mother of four, a quiet weekday at home is practically a foreign concept. She has been traveling for the launch of her debut book, Start With Yourself, out April 14, and the timing feels right not because the world needed another business book, but because this one is something different.

It does not start with a boardroom. It starts with a girl in East London, the eldest of four children raised by a single mother, who figured out early that staying put was not going to take her anywhere. There was love in that neighborhood. Opportunity was a different matter entirely.

The cost of choosing yourself

Leaving wanting more, betting on herself when no one around her was doing the same felt selfish at the time. Like she was stepping over the people she loved to get somewhere they couldn’t follow. Grede has spent years unpacking what that feeling actually was and, more urgently, what it costs women who never give themselves permission to move past it.

She went into the writing process believing she knew exactly what she wanted to say. The business sections came easily. Leadership, brand building, career strategy that part flowed. But when she pushed deeper, she found herself asking why she had been able to do any of it in the first place. That question led somewhere more honest and more useful.

Old thoughts and what they are costing you

A significant portion of the book is devoted to what Grede calls old thoughts the internal narratives that feel like truth because, at one point, they were. For many women, those stories were formed by watching what happened to the people around them when they wanted too much, moved too quickly, or trusted the wrong room. Grede is not here to dismiss the origins of those beliefs. She is here to ask what they are costing you now that the context has changed.

For Black women specifically, that reckoning is more layered. Many of those protective behaviors were built for environments that no longer exist, or for rooms that have since opened. Holding onto them past their usefulness, she argues, is one of the quieter ways women stay stuck.

What most people get wrong about money

Few people in her position talk about money the way Grede does directly, without softening the parts that are uncomfortable. She has watched founders, and Black women in particular, walk into capital raises without fully understanding what they are agreeing to. The expectation attached to outside investment to multiply that money four, ten, or twenty times over often catches founders off guard, because no one in the rooms where that information lives ever thought to share it.

Grede knows those rooms well. She has been building inside them for years, without waiting for an invitation or a validation she never needed. Her focus has always been practical: create something that works, build wealth for herself, build it for her family. The book reflects that same clarity of purpose.

Failure, and what it actually means

She has also failed. More than once and more than the public narrative around her tends to acknowledge. The section of Start With Yourself that addresses failure is among its most direct. A bad business outcome does not make someone a bad businessperson. The two are not the same thing, and conflating them is one of the faster ways a woman talks herself out of trying again.

Too many women, she says, are the first to declare themselves unfit for leadership or incapable of running a company. Her answer to that is blunt: the business may not have worked. That is a different problem with a different solution, and it is one worth solving.

Written for the woman who hasn’t figured it out yet

Start With Yourself was not written for women who already have clarity. It was written for the version of Grede that didn’t and for what she describes as the many women like her, girls who weren’t strong in math, who had learning differences, who grew up in places where entrepreneurship wasn’t something people around them even considered possible.

She kept the chapters short deliberately. Her reader is busy, stretched across multiple responsibilities, and does not have the bandwidth for a dense, 400-page commitment. The design of the book mirrors its message: take it in, apply it, come back, and repeat. That rhythm practical, iterative, and grounded is the whole point.

Start With Yourself is available April 14.

Black women entrepreneurs Emma Grede entrepreneurship Fifteen Percent Pledge Good American money mindset self-help books Skims Start With Yourself wealth building
Dorcas Onasa

Keep Reading

Kareem Edwards made 1 brave bet on himself

Khloé Kardashian’s Easter celebration was wildly over the top

Cardi B explains why she would rather spend at the strip club than blow $60,000 on a private jet

Why Dr. Velma Trayham says you can never be fired from your purpose

Kim Kardashian smiles for fans as she and Lewis Hamilton take Tokyo by storm

Lewis Hamilton’s romance with Kim Kardashian has quietly shifted into something real

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Our Picks
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss

Social Security payments land this week with new twist

Money April 8, 2026

More than 71 million Americans receive Social Security benefits each month, but not all of…

Gmail’s newest update lets you fix your most embarrassing username

April 8, 2026

50 Cent beats out Netflix and Apple for a landmark Hulu docuseries

April 8, 2026

Shaquille O’Neal’s Dunkman league is coming this summer

April 8, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Editors Picks
Latest Posts

Subscribe to News

Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • Culture
  • Money
  • Sports
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

wpDiscuz