U.S. Black Chambers, Inc. Acquires Historic Former BET Campus

Kim Anthony • December 30, 2025

Washington, D.C. — Last week, U.S. Black Chambers, Inc. (USBC) proudly announced the historic acquisition of the former Black Entertainment Television (BET) Campus, a 7.88-acre landmark once home to Robert L. Johnson’s groundbreaking media empire. With an investment of more than $38 million, USBC will transform this iconic site into the USBC Innovation Campus — The Epicenter of Business and Commerce.

This monumental achievement marks a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reimagine the future of Black enterprise. The new campus will serve as a national engine for business growth, innovation, and community impact rooted in Washington, D.C., extending its influence nationwide.

More than a milestone for USBC, the acquisition represents a transformational investment in the city’s economic future. It strengthens Washington, D.C.’s position as a hub for innovation, entrepreneurship, and cultural advancement, driving job creation, small business expansion, and generational wealth for years to come.

For over 16 years, USBC has been the national voice of Black businesses. With this milestone, USBC enters a new era as the global voice of Black enterprise.

Ron Busby Sr., President & CEO of the U.S. Black Chambers, Inc., stated: “When I reflect on the journey of the U.S. Black Chambers over the past 16 years, I see a story of resilience, vision, and progress. This campus is the next chapter of that story — not just a building, but a living symbol of what happens when we claim our space, own our future, and build institutions that outlast us. The USBC Innovation Campus is about more than today’s entrepreneurs; it’s about ensuring that generations to come inherit a place where their ideas, voices, and businesses can thrive.”

Leadership & Vision

The successful acquisition of the historic BET Campus was guided by the strategic leadership of Ron Busby Sr., President & CEO; Antwanye Ford, Vice Chair of the Board of Directors; Necole Parker, CEO of The ELOCEN Group and USBC Board Member; Rashad Jenkins, Chief Operating Officer of The ELOCEN Group; and Alisa Joseph, Chief Operating Officer of the U.S. Black Chambers, Inc. Their collective vision and steadfast commitment united public and private partners to bring this once-in-a-generation investment in Black enterprise to fruition.

The U.S. Black Chambers, Inc. extends its deepest gratitude to its Board of Directors for their steadfast leadership and unwavering support in bringing this historic vision to life. Their guidance and commitment were instrumental in securing the future home of Black business excellence.

Why Now. Why This Campus.

Just blocks from Union Market and surrounded by billions of dollars in new development, the USBC Innovation Campus is uniquely positioned to become the nation’s premier headquarters for business growth and advancement. Designed as a one-of-a-kind destination, the campus will offer:

  • Training & Development — Best-in-class entrepreneurial training centers, learning labs, workshops, and specialized programming that equip business owners with the knowledge, skills, and strategies to achieve long-term success.

  • Business Resources, Incubators & Accelerators — Comprehensive support for startups, small businesses, and chambers of commerce through incubator and accelerator programs, hands-on technical assistance, and resources to help companies navigate today’s economy and scale for the future.

  • Commercial Growth & Flexible Workspaces — Office leasing options are available for small businesses and Fortune 500 companies. Co-working space is available for solopreneurs, students, and emerging enterprises, and there are warehousing and expansion opportunities.

  • Media & Content Creation — State-of-the-art podcast and production studios to amplify creative voices and fuel digital storytelling. The campus will also be the permanent home of NABOB and USBC Media’s production house, creating a national hub for broadcasting and content creation innovation.

  • Dining & Community — From a full-service restaurant for dining and networking to a distinguished cigar lounge for connection and collaboration, the campus will encompass lifestyle spaces fostering community.

  • Workforce Innovation & Development — Job creation and career pipeline initiatives that connect talent to high-quality employment opportunities, while preparing entrepreneurs, students, and professionals to thrive in the future of work.

More than a headquarters, the USBC Innovation Campus will stand as an epicenter of economic development, advocacy, innovation, and culture, a blueprint for the future of commerce, media, and equitable community growth.



More Than a Building. It’s a Movement.

The USBC Innovation Campus will act as a community staple designed for creators, entrepreneurs, chamber leaders, and innovators alike. Whether through virtual office options, co-working spaces, business incubators, or content creation studios, the campus will serve as a one-stop destination for the future of small businesses.

As part of this historic moment, USBC has launched its “Power the Legacy” Capital Campaign, a multi-year fundraising initiative inviting individuals, corporations, and foundations to partner in building this future. Contributions will fund the development of training centers, technology infrastructure, and community spaces that directly impact thousands of businesses nationwide.

For more information about the USBC Innovation Campus and to support the “Power the Legacy” Campaign, visit https://usblackchambers.org/usbc-campus/.

Never Miss a Story.
SUBSCRIBE

Contact Us

By Kim Anthony January 1, 2026
For years, entrepreneurship praised the founder who could reinvent everything at a moment’s notice. The message was clear: stay flexible, pivot fast, change direction as often as necessary, and somehow the breakthrough would appear. Many people built survival on that skill. They learned to adjust when doors closed, when opportunities weren’t equal, when the plan didn’t work the first time. Reinvention became a way of staying afloat. But as we move through 2026, a different truth is beginning to emerge. The entrepreneurs gaining real traction are no longer the ones constantly starting over. They are the ones who stop scattering their energy and begin refining what already works. Instead of creating new lanes every few months, they choose one, strengthen it, deepen it, and let it mature. They discover that progress doesn’t always mean doing something new — sometimes it means doing something familiar with greater clarity, confidence, and excellence. Pivoting still has its place. Sometimes strategy really must shift. Conditions change, industries evolve, technology resets everything, and adaptation remains necessary. But pivoting as a lifestyle creates instability. When everything is always new, nothing ever has time to root. Every reinvention requires new branding, new storytelling, new systems, new audiences, and new emotional effort. Living in constant restart mode drains momentum. Eventually, the business feels like a collection of beginnings rather than a sustained journey toward mastery. In 2026, wisdom looks different than it once did. It is less about speed and more about steadiness. Instead of running toward every opportunity, focused entrepreneurs slow down long enough to ask whether the opportunity actually belongs to them. They recognize that not every trend deserves their attention. AI tools rise. Digital platforms expand. New marketing tactics promise instant success. And yet, the founders who are growing most meaningfully are not the ones chasing everything — they are the ones staying grounded in the work that truly aligns. Depth has become more powerful than distraction. There is something magnetic about a business that knows who it is and remains faithful to its identity. When a founder shows up consistently in the same lane, people begin to trust them. Over time, reputation forms. Word-of-mouth strengthens. Clients return because they recognize quality and commitment. What once felt narrow reveals itself as strength. The more deeply you plant, the wider your roots spread. This is why focus is not restriction — it is liberation. When you choose direction, your mind quiets. Decisions stop feeling chaotic. Messaging becomes clearer. Operations can finally stabilize. Instead of constantly rewriting your story, you allow your story to mature. Your calendar becomes intentional rather than frantic. Your identity as a business becomes recognizable, not blurry. Focus removes clutter and gives your effort a home. For many entrepreneurs, especially those who have had to operate in survival mode, narrowing feels risky. There is an instinct that says, “If I don’t do everything, I might miss something.” That instinct came from real experience. But 2026 invites a different kind of trust — trust that your work deserves depth, trust that commitment creates growth, and trust that excellence requires time. Mastery is not about doing more; it is about doing what matters with increasing skill and integrity. The future will not reward endless dabbling. It will reward builders — people who stay long enough to refine, improve, and evolve. Focus gives your business the stability needed to build legacy instead of just movement. It turns scattered effort into meaningful direction. It allows clients to recognize your voice, your values, and your contribution. And perhaps most importantly, focus allows you to breathe. When you stop chasing everything, you finally have the space to become who you are meant to be in business — grounded, confident, steady, and ready for the kind of growth that lasts. Because in 2026 and beyond, focus is not limitation. Focus is liberation.
By Kim Anthony January 1, 2026
For years, entrepreneurship was framed almost entirely through the lens of tactics. If you had the right software, the right plan, the right strategy, the right advisor, the right funnel — you were told success would follow. The story was simple: outwork everyone, optimize everything, and eventually life would reward your persistence. But as we move through 2026, that narrative is showing cracks. Many founders did everything “right” and still found themselves exhausted, discouraged, and unsure how to keep going. That shift forced a deeper question: what if the missing ingredient isn’t another tool or tactic — but the strength to remain steady when everything feels uncertain? Because the reality is this: the market is unpredictable. Technology moves so quickly that what felt cutting-edge two years ago can feel outdated now. Customers change, industries shift, opportunities arrive and disappear, and sometimes circumstances outside your control apply pressure you didn’t ask for — economy, health, family obligations, or structural barriers others never have to think about. When that pressure hits, strategies alone cannot hold you. Something internal must steady you — something rooted not in hustle, but in resilience. In 2026, emotional steadiness is no longer being viewed as a bonus trait for entrepreneurs. It is becoming part of the operational blueprint. If cash flow dips, if a partnership fails, if a launch falls flat, or if life disrupts the plan, resilience determines whether you collapse or recalibrate. It is the difference between seeing a setback as proof you aren’t capable — versus seeing it as data, feedback, and an invitation to adapt. Resilience, at its core, is not pretending nothing hurts. It is learning to be honest about the disappointment without being consumed by it. It is acknowledging pressure and choosing presence anyway. It is understanding that emotional regulation — the ability to breathe, reflect, and respond instead of react — is not weakness. It is leadership. Entrepreneurs especially need this kind of strength when they are carrying more than a personal dream. Some are building because families are counting on them. Communities are watching. Younger generations are looking for proof that new paths are possible. When the mission feels deeply personal, the weight grows heavier — and the temptation to push beyond healthy limits becomes stronger. Without resilience, the mission becomes a burden. With resilience, the mission becomes fuel. What’s changing in 2026 is the relationship founders have with themselves. Instead of glorifying burnout, many are finally allowing rest to count as strategy. They are recognizing that crossing the line into chronic exhaustion leads to poor decision-making, short tempers, financial mistakes, strained relationships, and lost passion. A burned-out leader cannot steward vision well. They react instead of discern. They chase survival instead of guiding from purpose. Resilient entrepreneurs are choosing a different approach. They are building rhythms of care into their routines — quiet time, movement, therapy, prayer, journaling, coaching, or anything that grounds them. They are surrounding themselves with people they don’t have to impress. They are learning that asking for help does not shrink authority — it protects it. They are redefining strength from “I can handle everything” to “I don’t have to carry this alone.” And slowly, something beautiful happens. The fear-driven tension softens. Decisions become clearer. Creativity returns. Perspective widens. Instead of clinging to every opportunity, founders begin choosing better ones. Instead of operating from scarcity, they begin to operate from stability. That shift changes everything — revenue, relationships, team culture, even health. Resilience also reframes failure. In older entrepreneurial culture, failure carried shame. Today, resilient leaders interpret failure as refinement. They ask different questions: What is this teaching me? What isn’t aligned? What can be improved? Where am I called to grow? They understand that progress is not linear, and endurance often matters more than perfection. At its deepest level, resilience is about protecting the person who is doing the building. Business can be rebuilt. Programs can be redesigned. Offers can evolve. But if the founder collapses under pressure, the entire vision collapses with them. Emotional resilience ensures the vision has a future — not because things never go wrong, but because you’ve learned how to stay grounded when they do. That’s why, in 2026, resilience is being recognized not as soft inspiration, but as structural support. Just as businesses invest in insurance, financial systems, and technology infrastructure, wise founders are now investing in the stability of their own inner lives. They are choosing therapy over silent suffering. Boundaries over burnout. Rest over guilt. Community over isolation. Reflection over constant reaction. The truth is simple and sobering: some of the most brilliant ideas never failed because they lacked potential. They faded because the person carrying them ran out of emotional strength. Resilience gives brilliance room to breathe. It buys time. It creates space for breakthroughs. It keeps you standing long enough to see opportunity again. This is the mindset shift of 2026: success is not just measured by revenue, expansion, or accolades. It is also measured by whether you remain healthy, mentally steady, spiritually anchored, and emotionally available to your life beyond business. The goal isn’t simply to build something impressive — it is to still be present, alive, and whole enough to enjoy it. And that, more than any algorithm or strategy, determines lasting impact.
By Kim Anthony January 1, 2026
Branding in 2026 is no longer just about design or clever taglines. It has evolved into identity, credibility, relationship, and opportunity. For many founders who have had to push harder to be recognized and taken seriously, branding has become a true strategic advantage. Customers are paying attention in new ways — not only to what businesses sell, but to who leads them, what they believe, and how consistently they show up. They are craving authenticity, alignment, and meaning. 1. Founder visibility moves center stage. More than ever, people want to see the human being behind the brand. They want to understand the “why,” the values, and the journey. Entrepreneurs who share their stories, speak publicly, write, teach, and invite others into behind-the-scenes moments develop deeper trust. In a skeptical marketplace, a real, relatable presence becomes one of the strongest branding tools available. 2. Small communities become more powerful than big audiences. Instead of chasing viral moments or massive follower counts, more founders are building intentional spaces — memberships, masterminds, close-knit email lists, and digital communities where conversations feel personal. These communities foster resilience, referrals, support systems, and shared opportunity, creating stronger brands than social feeds alone ever could. 3. Cultural storytelling becomes strategic advantage. Brands that are rooted in lived experience, heritage, neighborhood, and authentic personal history stand out. Whether through food, fashion, wellness, education, or media, stories anchored in truth create connection. Real stories are no longer optional — they are becoming the heartbeat of strong brands. 4. AI becomes a creative partner instead of a replacement. Technology is accelerating branding, especially through AI tools that help with brainstorming, research, writing, and design. But the brands that rise to the top pair technology with humanity — adding nuance, emotion, and voice. Leaders who use AI thoughtfully gain efficiency without losing authenticity. 5. Trust and credibility become the new currency. With so much noise online, people naturally ask why they should believe what they see. Certifications, media features, speaking appearances, testimonials, awards, published content, and strong partnerships all serve as signals that a brand is real, reliable, and capable. These credibility markers open doors that talent alone cannot. 6. Alignment matters more than aesthetics. A beautiful logo or sleek website cannot compensate for misalignment. When messaging, visuals, pricing, customer experience, and leadership behavior match, trust deepens. When they don’t, audiences feel the disconnect and quietly disengage. Alignment is becoming one of the quiet superpowers of strong brands. 7. Thought leadership becomes a growth engine. Consumers no longer want only products — they want perspective. Entrepreneurs who share insights, create frameworks, challenge assumptions, and lead meaningful conversations become recognized as authorities. Their businesses grow because their thinking helps people make sense of their world. 8. Collaboration replaces competition as the default strategy. More entrepreneurs are choosing to partner instead of compete. Co-branded events, shared offers, podcast swaps, cross-promotions, and ecosystem partnerships allow brands to multiply visibility and impact. Collaboration signals confidence and creates opportunities none of the partners could access alone. 9. Purpose-driven branding rises to the forefront. Customers increasingly want to know what a business stands for — who it serves, why it matters, and how it contributes to something larger than profit. When purpose is authentic and clearly communicated, it attracts loyalty and deeper engagement. Purpose provides clarity, and clarity attracts the right people. 10. The health of the leader shapes the health of the brand. There is growing recognition that burnout shows up everywhere — in messaging, marketing, customer experiences, and decision-making. Rest, boundaries, mentorship, team support, and sustainable systems are now part of serious branding conversations. A grounded leader creates a grounded brand. In 2026, branding is not about shrinking to fit someone else’s expectations. It is about honoring your story, your excellence, and your voice — and allowing your business to reflect that truth. When entrepreneurs build brands with clarity, courage, and alignment, they don’t just compete. They create legacies.
Show More