Facebook Intends To Buy Up To $100 Million Worth of Invoices From 30,000 Small Minority And Women-Owned Businesses – Black Enterprise
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Facebook Intends To Buy Up To $100 Million Worth of Invoices From 30,000 Small Minority And Women-Owned Businesses

Cropped shot of an attractive young businesswoman sitting alone in her home office and using a tablet

In what could be a game-changing event for businesses owned by minorities and women, tech giant Facebook is coming to the rescue.

CNBC reported that the social networking powerhouse plans to buy up to $100 million in unpaid outstanding invoices from roughly 30,000 small businesses via its Facebook Invoice Fast Track program.

The commitment is a big deal as it means diverse firms that potentially would have had to put gaining such funds from customers on hold for an extended period can get paid.

The pledge comes after Facebook initially launched a smaller form of the program last year. The company reportedly took action after discovering that many suppliers that use its site to boost exposure and reach targeted customers were facing challenges amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to CNBC, firms can submit outstanding invoices of at least $1,000. If they are approved, the invoice will be bought from the small business by Facebook within days. Customers then pay Facebook the outstanding invoices at the same terms they had agreed to with the small business. Racking up nearly $86 billion in 2020  revenue, waiting for payments is not as extreme for Facebook as for small businesses.

Rich Rao, Facebook’s vice president of small business, reflected on the effort to CNBC.

“We just heard first-hand the financial hardships that these suppliers were facing, and it was created really quickly and brought up as an idea and pitched to our CFO to say, ‘Hey, would we be able to help our suppliers with this? It was a very small pilot, but we did see that be very successful.”

The effort is among the most recent by Facebook to build relationships and with small businesses. Ironically, the move comes after the social network apologized for the “unacceptable error” from its artificial intelligence software that labeled Black men as “primates.”

American businesses owned by women and minorities, including members of supplier organizations that serve underrepresented groups, can apply for the new program. That includes the National Minority Supplier Development Council and Women’s Business Enterprise National Council, among others. Facebook also reported it is examining adding more partner groups for the program.

 


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