This week's newsletter is written by CNBC Make It work reporter Morgan Smith. You can follow Morgan on Twitter @thewordsmithm.
Two summers ago, as the Covid-19 pandemic ripped through New York, Niani Tolbert feared she was about to hit rock bottom.
She had lost her job as a tech job recruiter months earlier. "I didn't know how I'd afford to stay in New York City or where my career was going," Tolbert says.
That June, she watched as millions of people took to the streets to protest the police killing of George Floyd — and while she wasn't comfortable joining the crowds and risking exposure to the virus, watching the marches stirred something within her.
The best contribution she could make to the racial justice movement, Tolbert decided, was donating her expertise as a recruiter to help other people of color, like her, who were struggling to find work during the pandemic.
On LinkedIn, she asked if other HR professionals would join her in reviewing the resumes of 19 Black women in honor of Juneteenth. More than 500 people responded – so the 29-year-old turned the initiative, called #HireBlack, into her full-time job, with the goal of getting 10,000 Black women hired or promoted.
Tolbert (who's now CEO) and her team work with top companies such as Amazon, Uber and Disney to recruit and hire Black women.
#HireBlack is also aiming to close the stark pay gap Black women face: Black women working full time, year-round make just 67 cents for every dollar paid to white, non-Hispanic men, the National Women's Law Center reports.
The organization has helped Black women boost their collective earnings by more than $2 million, with some women seeing pay raises as high as $60,000.
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