Daniella Pierson is the youngest Latina self-made millionaire in the U.S. today. Her female-focused newsletter The Newsette and mental health startup Wondermind — where she is a co-founder alongside actor Selena Gomez — make up the $220 million of her net worth.
At 27, Pierson has defied the odds that many entrepreneurs, especially Latinas, face.
Although Latino entrepreneurs in the United States are starting more businesses per capita than any other racial group, according to a McKinsey study, they receive less than their white counterparts on all types of business-related funding.
Latina founders run nearly 2 million businesses across the country, but receive less than 2 percent of venture capital funds. Yet, they are the fastest growing cohort of entrepreneurs, according to McKinsey.
The lack of startup funds, access to key networks and trouble scaling are just some of the barriers that cap most Latina founders from growth. According to one report from Stanford Business, among the 3 percent of scaled Latino-owned firms (making $1 million or more), only 30 percent are owned by women. Latina-owned firms tend to start small and stay small.
Pierson was one of several Latina entrepreneurs speaking in New York City on Friday at a breakfast for investors and members of the media (disclosure: This reporter was one of the moderators).
The event was sponsored by Palladium Equity Capital, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America. Focused on funding opportunities for women of color, Pierson and others discussed their trajectories on raising capital, scaling up their businesses and achieving significant revenues.
One of the other Latina entrepreneurs who discussed her experience starting a business was Karla Gallardo, the founder of Cuyana, a highly successful lifestyle brand known for its sustainably sourced and premium leather accessories and apparel.
Gallardo said she has broken the cycle that caps business growth by “starting with a product and a supply chain that supports scaling the business.” She started with making one hat, sourcing the best suppliers around the world and having an in-house distribution center. Her supply model allows her to “perfect one product and then build on it.”
Instead of placing several months’ worth of orders at a time, Cuyana orders one month at a time. This makes orders “predictable and profitable — we’re able to make them more efficiently and with less capital investment,” she noted.
Babba Rivera, founder of the beauty brand Ceremonia — a clean haircare brand rooted and inspired by her heritage (her parents are Chilean) — is another entrepreneur who has been able to successfully scale up her business. Rivera, who has worked for corporate brands such as Uber and Away, felt that before she started her own business, she had to shave off parts of her identity to find inclusion.









