By Andrea Stevens
AFRO Staff Writer
astevens@afro.com

From holistic health ventures to tech startups, a new wave of Black business owners are proving that entrepreneurship is far from a monolith.ย 

Tonya Pledger, founder of Love Your V by T, represents a growing movement in wellness entrepreneurship that elevates Black womenโ€™s health. Her business, which began in her home, offers holistic yoni steaming and now operates out of three locations in the Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia area.ย 

Tonya Pledger started her entrepreneurship journey because of her personal health experiences, and exploring holistic remedies. (Courtesy photo/ Tonya Pledger

According to the Cleveland Clinic, yoni steaming is an ancient holistic practice where a woman sits or squats over a bowl of steaming water with herbs. Though researchers say there is no concrete evidence of benefits, the act of steaming with herbs is believed to promote healing, improve circulation, ease menstrual discomfort and support reproductive health.ย 

โ€œYoni steaming is a natural way to support womenโ€™s health and healing,โ€ Pledger said. โ€œIt helps you relax physically, mentally and spiritually and it can be a powerful tool for womb wellness.โ€

Her personal experience inspired her to share the benefits of yoni steaming and encourage other women to explore holistic approaches to their health.

โ€œGoing through my own journey has helped me to grow to love and embrace womenโ€™s health and natural wellness,โ€ Pledger said. โ€œOne of the mistakes I made was getting a hysterectomy too soon, not knowing what I know now. If I had been involved in this sooner, I may have saved what God gave us to maintain life.โ€ย 

Pledger transitioned from working full-time to running her business independently, a shift she describes as both spiritual and strategic.

โ€œThe biggest shift for me was realizing that everything fell on meโ€ฆIt was me and God,โ€ she said. โ€œWhen I wrote my vision down and made it clear, everything started to fall together.โ€

Kiante Bush is an entrepreneur with a passion for helping college entrepreneurs at HBCUs get life changing opportunities for their businesses. (Courtesy photo/ Kiante Bush)

On a different end of the entrepreneurial spectrum, Kiante Bush is the founder and CEO of โ€œVenture for Them,โ€ a tech-focused startup accelerator designed to uplift entrepreneurs from historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs). His mission is to connect young Black founders with funding, mentorship and visibility in a tech world that often overlooks them.

โ€œOur main goal is to support early-stage HBCU entrepreneursโ€ฆand connect them to venture capital, C-suite mentors and non-dilutive funding,โ€ Bush said. โ€œI grew up around entrepreneurs, and I wanted to create a space where I could invest in those around me too.โ€

Bush says learning to lead collaboratively was a game changer.ย 

โ€œI had to learn how to let go of controlโ€ฆto let others in on the vision,โ€ he said. โ€œThat helped expand the business significantly.โ€ย 

As Bush and his team grow the venture, theyโ€™ve had to make strategic decisions about who they work with.

โ€œAll money isnโ€™t good money,โ€ he said. โ€œSome partnerships that didnโ€™t work out ended up being protection from organizations that werenโ€™t truly aligned with our mission.โ€

Anatasia Johnson is an entrepreneur whose experience as a college student helped her create the idea for her business.
(Courtesy photo/ Alex Polyakov)
Jenaba Sow is the co-founder of WeNite, an education tech startup that partners with HBCUs to help modernize outdated processes using digital solutions. (Courtesy photo/ Alex Polyakov)

Meanwhile for Anastasia Jackson and Jenaba Sow, co-founders of the education tech startup WeNite, entrepreneurship is about transforming broken systems. Their company partners with HBCUs and emerging research institutions to help modernize outdated processes using digital solutions.ย 

Jacksonโ€™s experience as a transfer student at Howard University โ€” where administrative failures left her temporarily homeless โ€” shaped the companyโ€™s mission.

โ€œThat experience made me realize this was bigger than me,โ€ she said. โ€œTechnology could lift the burden from both students and overworked faculty.โ€

The co-founders said staying grounded in their mission has been their greatest challenge and reward.ย 

โ€œIn the startup space, a lot of people are focused on exitingโ€”not impact,โ€ Sow said. โ€œ For us, itโ€™s always been about building with community and for community.โ€

Together, these founders are reshaping how entrepreneurship looks and feels in Black communities. They are not only solving problemsโ€”they are reimagining systems.

โ€œWeโ€™re building a legacy,โ€ Plegder said. โ€œAnd weโ€™re doing it our way.โ€