meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Steve Harvey Morning Show

Business Tip: Interview focuses on access to affordable capital to help business owners grow sustainably rather than be crushed by debt.

The Steve Harvey Morning Show

iHeartPodcasts

Society & Culture, Comedy

4.5 • 2.2K Ratings

🗓️ 2 April 2026

⏱️ 22 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Listen and subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadioApple PodcastsSpotify, www.moneymakingconversations.com/subscribe/ or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily.  I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur.  Keep winning!

Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Sahra Halpern.

Title: President & CEO, Business Consortium Fund (BCF) and Triad Investments
Host: Rushion McDonald
Podcast: Money Making Conversations Masterclass

Sahra Halpern explains how Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs)—specifically the Business Consortium Fund—provide patient capital, education, and partnership to minority‑owned, B2B businesses. The interview focuses on access to affordable capital, trust in financial systems, and helping business owners grow sustainably rather than be crushed by debt.


Purpose of the Interview

The interview aims to:

  1. Educate listeners about CDFIs, a little‑known but powerful source of business capital.
  2. Demystify the business lending process, especially for owners who are wary of banks.
  3. Address historical distrust of financial systems in communities of color.
  4. Position BCF as a partner—not just a lender—for minority‑owned businesses.
  5. Encourage business owners to build relationships with lenders before they need money.

Key Themes & Takeaways 1. What Makes a CDFI Different From a Bank

  • BCF is a nonprofit lender and a federally designated Community Development Financial Institution.
  • Unlike traditional banks, CDFIs:
    • Work closely with borrowers throughout the loan lifecycle
    • Do not immediately write off loans when challenges arise
    • Focus on long‑term business success, not short‑term repayment

Key takeaway: CDFIs lend with flexibility, patience, and partnership.


2. A “Best‑Kept Secret” in Finance

  • There are roughly 2,000 CDFIs nationwide, designated by the U.S. Treasury.
  • About half focus on small business lending, and half on affordable housing.
  • They are funded through bank partnerships, philanthropy, and mission‑driven capital.

Insight: Many minority business owners struggle unnecessarily because they don’t know CDFIs exist.


3. Trust Is Central to Capital Access

  • Many BCF clients are engaging with formal finance for the first time, even if they are experienced business owners.
  • Historical discrimination has created deep mistrust of financial institutions.
  • BCF builds trust by being transparent, educational, and relationship‑driven.

Takeaway: Capital follows trust—and trust must be earned.


4. Focus on B2B Businesses and Contracts

  • BCF primarily serves B2B businesses (business‑to‑business).
  • Loans often help businesses:
    • Fulfill contracts with corporations or government entities
    • Hire staff
    • Purchase materials
    • Manage cash flow while waiting for receivables

Key idea: Contracts create opportunity—but only if businesses have working capital to execute.


5. Lending Is Also Education

  • Applicants must provide documentation:
    • Three years of tax returns
    • Credit history
    • Bank statements
    • Cash‑flow details
  • This is intentional—not punitive.
  • BCF’s goal is to ensure debt creates growth, not stress or failure.

Important distinction: BCF is not a predatory lender—it refuses to lend irresponsibly.


6. Affordable Capital Through Partnerships

  • BCF borrows capital from banks at low rates.
  • It adds a modest margin to:
    • Cover operating costs
    • Continue serving the community
  • Rates are designed to be sustainable, not extractive.

Takeaway: Affordable capital is possible when mission comes before profit.


7. Sahra Halpern’s Personal Motivation

  • Her mother immigrated from Trinidad and Tobago, escaping hardship.
  • Sahra learned early that opportunity often depends on who helps you along the way.
  • She worked in human rights, then economic development, and spent 15 years at Charles Schwab, where she helped finance CDFIs—before leading one herself.

Core belief: Economic justice is essential to community well‑being.


8. Three Financial Principles for Business Owners

Sahra offers three practical “financial truths”:

  1. Know the industry you serve
    Understand compliance, insurance, and contract requirements.

  2. Know your credit score—and yourself
    Credit can be improved, but only if you face it honestly.

  3. Don’t take on debt you can’t repay
    Loans should serve growth, not keep you up at night.

Key lesson: Discipline is more important than loan size.


9. Relationships Must Come Before Loans

  • Business owners should engage lenders before they need capital.
  • Opportunities can arise unexpectedly—and preparation matters.
  • CDFIs can help with:
    • Financial planning
    • Budgeting
    • Understanding readiness for funding

Takeaway: Don’t wait for a crisis to build financial relationships.


Notable Quotes

“We are one of the best‑kept secrets—and we should not be a secret anymore.”

“We are not a bank. We are a partner.”

“Put your fear and your self‑doubt aside before you walk in the door.”

“Don’t take on debt that will keep you up at night.”

“You need a relationship before you need financing.”

“We want capital to be a path to growth—not another headache.”


Overall Impact

This interview reframes access to capital as a relationship‑driven process, not a transactional hurdle. Sahra Halpern positions BCF—and CDFIs broadly—as bridges between financial systems and underserved businesses, offering not just loans, but guidance, trust, and accountability.

Final message:
Capital changes communities when it is affordable, patient, and paired with education.


#SHMS #BEST #STRAW #AMI

Support the show: https://www.steveharveyfm.com/

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is an IHeart podcast.

0:02.6

Guaranteed Human.

0:04.3

Welcome to my show.

0:05.6

I'm Rishon McDonnell, the host of Money Making Conversations Masterclass, where we encourage

0:09.8

people to stop reading other people's success stories and start planning your own.

0:14.1

Now, you don't want to miss an episode, so please take a moment right now to follow or

0:18.2

subscribe to Money Making Conversations Masterclass.

0:21.4

It's free.

0:27.0

You can follow me on IHeartRadio app, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcast. New Money Making Conversation Masterclass episodes drop daily. I want to keep you on alert

0:32.9

because my guests provide tips on how you can uplift your community, improve your

0:37.0

financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur. Now, let's get this

0:43.1

podcast start. My guest is Sarah Harbin. She is the president and chief executive officer of

0:48.9

their business consortium fund and triad investments. She has created innovative and responsive

0:53.9

lending programs throughout her career and community development investments. She has created innovative and responsive lending programs throughout her career and community

0:56.6

development finance.

0:58.1

She's responsible for the driving BCF towards greater impact in the communities we serve by

1:03.2

expanding capital reach to business owners of color.

1:06.8

Since 1987, not since she's been there since 1987, BCF has originated $228 million in loans

1:14.0

and finance, 950 minority business enterprises or MBEs. Please welcome to Money Making

1:20.2

Conversation Masterclass Sarah Halpin. How you doing, Sarah? I'm doing great. Thanks for having me.

1:26.1

I'll tell you, I have been waiting on this call.

1:45.6

We met at the Financial Summit, and we hit it off because we were like-minded people, but it was at the end of the day, and we got to start, and you had to fly back, and I said, well, can I get you on my show to talk about what you do? So let's kick it off and just educate my audience on exactly what do you do and your company does at BCF?

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from iHeartPodcasts, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of iHeartPodcasts and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.