Are Korean Distributors Shutting Black Entrepreneurs Out of the Hair Business?

King Poetic

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if u think black people going to stop buying any thing non-black u insane

Black people don't support or respect each other so u think other races will?

There could be a nice black owned grocery store down the street and negros will complain about a dog hanging outside and they not shopping in there

There could be a nice reasonable black healthy run restaurant in the hood and niqqas will passed it up and go straight to mc'donalds.

Black people are so far gone in white culture and way of living there not making a u-turn.. WE GOT TO FIT IN WITH THE MASSES RIGHT
 

intruder

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I consider any black woman a c00n who buy from these Korean stores.

I never even get gas from a Korean or Indian gas station.
Yep, because the white owned stores and gas stations care so much about you right? :leon:


I actually buy my gas from a black family run gas station here in Memphis idiot. :rudy:

Weird to me that ya'll know who owns the station where you buy gas. Maybe it's because i never really buy from one place. i just stop anywhere and fill it up and K.I.M. I dont need to know who

if u think black people going to stop buying any thing non-black u insane

Black people don't support or respect each other so u think other races will?

There could be a nice black owned grocery store down the street and negros will complain about a dog hanging outside and they not shopping in there

There could be a nice reasonable black healthy run restaurant in the hood and niqqas will passed it up and go straight to mc'donalds.

Black people are so far gone in white culture and way of living there not making a u-turn.. WE GOT TO FIT IN WITH THE MASSES RIGHT
Here is my thing with Black businesses: They tend to hire people they KNOW and not necessarily people that will do the best job. A lot of times these employees are unorganized. Sometimes black businesses go out of their way to rep themselves as black businesses but dont respect their black customers while they roll out the red carpet for the token white customer that stops by once out of the blue.


Example: I often go to this vegan restaurant in the West End in Atlanta It's 32 miles from home and 37 miles from work. Just to show you how I go out of my way to go there, right? They serve these delicious spicy kale wraps there which i love. I go there 2 weeks ago. I was just in the area and just decided to stop by.

  • I got there at 1152 but Stayed in the car and waited the 8 minutes because they dont open until 12PM
  • Place my order as soon as I came in
  • I ordered the same thing as the 2 people before me (was the 3rd person in line)
  • Few people come in after me and got their stuff first. No big deal since they ordered things that were different than mine that are faster.
  • White couple comes in around 12:15 and order something. They got thir order, sat, ate, then decided they wanted to try the same thing i ordered at exactly 12:05.

What If i told you It was 1235 and the white couple got their order (of the same thing i ordered) BEFORE i got mine?

I had to wait another 15 minutes for them to make me another and by that time i was pissed. I wouldnt say it's just because they were white because this has hapenned before at the same place with other black customers coming in and getting their shyt before i got mine even tho i was there way before them.

Typically id boycott that place but it is owned by someone I know personally and I know she wouldnt treat people like that. It being a co-owned business I know she doesnt always have direct influence over who's hired and how the place is run.

But this why i dont mind giving my money to a corporation sometimes. Call it what you may but i know the shyt is run efficiently and the little bit thats unorganized is typically transparent to the end customer.

My point is just because you are a black owned business does not mean you get a PASS from me. I have to like your product and YOU better provide good service OR I will find that white, asian, or hispanic business who will.
 

newworldafro

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All you have to do is learn chinese/korean, go there and get the hair yourself.

*has chinese wife that is fluent in Mandarin*

*knows people in china*

I think im going to make an honest living friends. :merchant:

But the hair itself is usually from India though right? or could be from other countries/culture too??
I wonder if there has ever been a study of the DNA of these hair hats?? :whoo:
 

jilla82

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please do tell and share your first or second hand experience
I swear some of yall are just dumb.

This is the biggest trade show in the world...you dont have to know Mandarin to go. I was in China for a month two years ago and had no problem getting around.
http://www.cantonfair.org.cn/en/

and Chinese supplies come to the U.S. for trade shows as well.
shyt is not that hard at all.
People who make excuses are only good at making excuses.
 

Yakno1

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I swear some of yall are just dumb.

This is the biggest trade show in the world...you dont have to know Mandarin to go. I was in China for a month two years ago and had no problem getting around.
http://www.cantonfair.org.cn/en/

and Chinese supplies come to the U.S. for trade shows as well.
shyt is not that hard at all.
People who make excuses are only good at making excuses.

so he just bullshytting below right, it's just easy................



After eight long years of planning, Tyrone Barge is tapping into the Black hair care industry.

Barge has launched the AWNI Collection, a line of hair weaves geared toward women of color. The line of human hair comes in remi silk, mink, yaki and supreme yaki.

His interest in the hair industry first came 13 years ago when he financed the North Philadelphia-based Life Styles beauty salon, where his sister Sheila is a top stylist. After noticing that women who came to the salon for weaves were being steered to Korean-owned beauty supply shops to purchase hair, Barge sought to remove the middleman and access the product directly.

Barge made contact with a Korean distributor of a popular line of hair, only to be told that they don’t sell to Black people wholesale.

“He told me it would be bad for business if they sold the hair to Black people wholesale because we are their biggest consumers. His insult gave me the motivation to develop my own hair product,” Barge recalled.

According to a documentary titled, “The Korean Takeover of the Black Hair Industry” by Aron Renen, African-American women account for 70 percent of weave hair purchases — which equates to an estimated $15 billion per year.

For Barge, getting into the hair industry was not an easy feat. Eight years ago, he visited China and attempted to purchase hair directly from a manufacturer. Even though he was received favorably, the Chinese would not do business with him. Barge, who is a contractor by trade, had to learn about how the Chinese conducted business.

“I didn’t want to insult my hosts,” he explained.

“So, I came back home and immersed myself in learning about Chinese culture. When I returned to China, I was welcomed with open arms after eating and drinking with my hosts, who agreed to work with me to produce the hair. I struck a deal to import 100 percent human hair from India, and established my own factory in China to produce the hair. It took eight long years of going back and forth, but it was worth it.”

Barge’s sister Sheila, who accompanied him to China, worked with the Chinese manufacturers to ensure that the AWNI Collection would blend with all textures of hair. He leveraged proceeds from the salon and his real estate ventures to set up operations in China.

His efforts paid off, and Barge officially launched the line during a seminar for salon owners and stylists on April 9. More than 200 seminar attendees learned about the potential to make additional revenue by selling the AWNI hair directly to their clients.

Barge says he wants to move hair stylists from just installing weaves to a position of economic empowerment.

“It’s about us making a conscious decision about how we spend our dollars, and taking back control of this industry to reap the benefits. It’s really not a personal thing. I want to show salon owners and stylists how they can make money. I want to empower us economically, and for us to understand the true power of our dollar,” says Barge.

“I believe that there is strength in numbers.”

After doing some research, Barge estimated that based on an average of 10 weave clients per week, African-American salon owners could bring in an extra $2,000 per month if they sold hair for weaves directly to their clients.

He estimates that Life Styles salon has lost about $100,000 in revenue within the past eight years, since they weren’t selling their own hair product.

The AWNI (A Whole New Image) Collection is only sold retail in Black-owned beauty salons. The collection will not be found in beauty supply stores. Barge is also negotiating with the historic Berean Institute to sell the hair retail through their cosmetology program.

His 5-year strategic plan for Philadelphia-based AWNI Enterprises includes establishing a hair factory in a building he owns in North Philadelphia so that he can employ people from the community.

http://www.phillytrib.com/businessa...preneur-claims-weave-industry-for-blacks.html
 

Mr. Somebody

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This is why they say friends have to go international. You cant get good deals without friends in other lands, friends.
 
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I think about it this way; most of these and other consumer products are made in Asian countries. It's about production and wholesaling. Because there's more people, most production and industry has been outsourced over there from companies owned in other countries, and many countries like Korea have stringent or questionable practices in regards to labor (look at China for example). I bet if you look at the majority of the stuff you own, more than 75% of it is made in an Asian country. It goes well beyond supporting their own. And if it were so, why do outsiders and westerners still do business with them. It's not that they won't, it's just that there are many barriers (language barriers and differences in business culture are some of them) that have to be crossed before even trying to venture into doing that type of international business.
 

luckyse7enz

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But the hair itself is usually from India though right? or could be from other countries/culture too??
I wonder if there has ever been a study of the DNA of these hair hats??:whoo:

It's never until I get onto the Coli that I see profound thoughts that make me realize how wild it really is for young women to be rocking the dead hair of other races of young women. It's like soft-core barbarianism..."scalping" young poor Indian broads and rocking their hair. Fleecing chicks like sheep. It's kind of weird. :ld:

I wonder what the feeling would be if chicks that wear weave were put into a situation where they met the person whose hair they were wearing face-to-face. It's not like it's the person that made your sneakers. The hair on this person's head...is the hair on your head...and you can grow hair. shyt's mad creepy. :patrice:
 

Yakno1

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It's never until I get onto the Coli that I see profound thoughts that make me realize how wild it really is for young women to be rocking the dead hair of other races of young women. It's like soft-core barbarianism..."scalping" young poor Indian broads and rocking their hair. Fleecing chicks like sheep. It's kind of weird. :ld:

I wonder what the feeling would be if chicks that wear weave were put into a situation where they met the person whose hair they were wearing face-to-face. It's not like it's the person that made your sneakers. The hair on this person's head...is the hair on your head...and you can grow hair. shyt's mad creepy. :patrice:

that's real shyt right there....maybe they could come to some realization......
 

newworldafro

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It's never until I get onto the Coli that I see profound thoughts that make me realize how wild it really is for young women to be rocking the dead hair of other races of young women. It's like soft-core barbarianism..."scalping" young poor Indian broads and rocking their hair. Fleecing chicks like sheep. It's kind of weird. :ld:

I wonder what the feeling would be if chicks that wear weave were put into a situation where they met the person whose hair they were wearing face-to-face. It's not like it's the person that made your sneakers. The hair on this person's head...is the hair on your head...and you can grow hair. shyt's mad creepy. :patrice:

That reality show would do numbers... :birdman:
 
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