A Conversation with Advocacy Partner: Natalia Urtubey, Eastern Bank Foundation Fellow
“Our vision at MCCI + FBE is to eliminate structural barriers to racial equity, and we do this through ecosystem building and collaborating with partners to innovate for better outcomes.”
We had the opportunity to connect with Natalia Urtubey, Foundation Fellow at Eastern Bank Foundation, who shared the work she is leading to expand access to contracts and opportunities to BIPOC-, Women- and LGBTQ-owned businesses. Read her interview and learn more about MCCI + FBE’s role in supporting these crucial efforts.
Tell us about the efforts that you have led and are leading in advancing equity in our small business ecosystem?
Since joining Eastern Bank Foundation (EBF) in March of 2022, I have been laser focused on creating and beginning to execute a strategic plan that is aimed at helping BIPOC-, Women-, and LGBTQ-owned businesses in Boston and Massachusetts increase their economic mobility by expanding their networking power and the types and quality of contract bids they are aware of and involved in. At the same time, I am collaborating with other change makers to grow these small businesses’ access to capital and the people who manage that capital.
One example is serving as a founding and primary partner in the new CommonWealth Development Compact along with leaders at the Civic Action Project (CAP), Boston Society for Architecture, and Builders of Color Coalition. This Compact is designed to build equity and opportunity for businesses owned by people of color and women in the development and construction industry. To date, the mayors of Boston, Cambridge, Lynn, Salem, and Somerville have signed on to this pilot.
I am also working, in collaboration with leadership from community partners including MCCI + FBE, to establish a business growth task force focused on expanding small businesses through contracting and procurement matchmaking, acquisition, and better visibility for awarded projects to generate awareness and demand. Members of this task force will also share best practices and create shared policy recommendations to expand supplier diversity across the Commonwealth.
Prior to joining EBF, I served as the City of Boston’s Small Business Director, where I was heavily involved in supporting Boston’s small business community, including driving innovative grant programs during the COVID Pandemic. During this time, we distributed nearly $29M to over 6K businesses, we launched Boston’s first small business app B-local, and spearheaded the Reimagine Boston Main Streets initiative. The end goal of all these programs was to help small businesses stay in business and grow by promoting local shopping and supporting our neighborhood commercial districts.
Explain how you see Mill Cities Community Investments (MCCI) + Foundation for Business Equity (FBE) role in support these efforts?
EBF’s partnership and collaboration with the newly merged organization of MCCI + FBE is a strong and dynamic one. Our support started in 2017 with the creation of the FBE. EBF is proud to have incubated this work that has supported more than 100 businesses through their high-touch advisory program, the Business Equity Initiative (BEI). Since FBE’s merger with MCCI, we’ve remained a leading funder, and we have continued to work together closely. For example, MCCI + FBE is playing an important role in EBF’s development of the previously mentioned business growth task force. This task force is aimed at helping diverse BIPOC-, LGBTQ- and Women-run small businesses connect with buyers that are looking to build a more diverse supplier network — and vice versa. Doing this increases mutual awareness, communication, and collaboration that lead to contracts. As part of this Task Force, MCCI + FBE is providing expertise on business support, technical assistance, and capital access to help build a robust pipeline of businesses ready to take on more contracts.
What are the challenges and opportunities?
Procurement and B2B contracting is one of the best growth tactics for businesses. However, even where there is the political and industry good will to diversify supplier pipelines, buyers still struggle to connect with businesses outside their networks. On the flipside, small businesses owned by people color do not always know the key decision makers looking to diversify and can struggle to understand the traditionally closed processes to become vendors and compete for private contracts. As we developed our EBF strategy to advance equity in the small business ecosystem, we realized there was an immense opportunity to bring both the buyer and supplier sides to the table — to together fulfill their mutual interest in business growth and project excellence. We also knew that an important piece of this was to help smaller businesses gain access to more capital so they would be ready to onboard increased opportunity successfully.
What advice do you have for our small business owners?
Invest in your business to help sustain and grow it. This can come through seeking out and hiring experts to work with you that fill your expertise gaps, e.g., accountants or marketing professionals. Think about technology upgrades that increase efficiency and get the right people in to help you think through and execute that plan. It can also mean hiring someone to be solely in-charge of seeking and sourcing contract opportunities. With these investments working in concert, you can help expand your pipeline and be ready for new opportunities. This can seem overwhelming, but please know that you, as a small business owner, do not have to do everything alone. It might seem complicated or expensive but people and organizations like those at MCCI + FBE are available and eager to support you and provide the tools and expertise you need to take things to the next level.
A big thank you to everyone who joined us for Nectar’s official launch in Rhode Island. We’re thrilled to be working in the Ocean State, and engaging with the entrepreneurs, ecosystem partners and other attendees at the event boosted our sense of excitement and community.
Since our founding in Massachusetts in 2008, we’ve made it our mission to invest in community and build generational wealth. We’re continuing that commitment in Rhode Island — today, tomorrow and well into the future. This launch event was only the beginning! We’re looking forward to working together, supporting dedicated small business owners, and collaborating with ecosystem partners to build on their successful efforts throughout the state.
In the transition to clean energy, low- to moderate-income homeowners in Massachusetts have the odds stacked against them. And given that the Commonwealth wants to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, we need to make clean energy improvements possible for every homeowner. We can’t afford to leave anyone behind.So, how do we bridge the gap? Our Executive Director Glynn Lloyd shared some ideas in this op-ed in CommonWealth Beacon — be sure to check it out.
Read the op-ed
Join Nectar Community Investments as our Controller and help drive the financial health of an organization making real impact. In this leadership role, you’ll oversee all aspects of Nectar’s accounting operations, from day-to-day functions like accounts payable, payroll, lending transactions, and grant accounting, to monthly and year-end closings, audits, and financial analysis that informs our strategy and growth. Reporting directly to the CFO, you’ll be a contributor, helping to improve processes, problem solve and implement new finance initiatives. As part of our management team, you’ll play a key role in supporting our mission to build wealth and opportunity in historically disinvested communities.
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