For a few years, they continued to work in corporate roles—Abbey at Goldman Sachs and PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Samir at LinkedIn—but they kept discussing their families' shared experiences, and the need for a response to financial marginalization. They kept spinning out ideas for financial integration and opportunity. Finally, they were ready to move. In 2018, four years after they met, they launched Esusu—a financial technology company meant to help low‐ to moderate‐income renters use rent payments to build credit, establish a financial history, and make their way into the U.S. economy.
The name of the organization itself offered a look at their motivations and their plans to make change. The word esusu describes a traditional form of informal financing that originated in Nigeria, helping individuals and communities band together in savings and credit associations. The notion is that by working together in partnerships, people without a formal financial identity can help each other live and work in a mutually beneficial way.
That's the idea Abbey and Samir brought to the table when they participated in The Global Good Fund in 2019. The notion was a novel one, but it made sense; millions of people who are low‐income in America make rental payments on time every month for decades without establishing a credit score. Meanwhile, landlords have no way of knowing which tenants are good bets. Esusu brought these communities together, partnering with landlords through a rent reporting service and helping low‐income renters build credit by reporting monthly payments to credit bureaus. The organization even created a rent relief fund to help struggling tenants stay in their homes—a part of the company that quite literally saved lives during the worst days of the COVID‐19 pandemic. Ultimately, the project was good for everyone: for renters, who could build credit; for landlords, who could ensure reliable tenants; and for the United States economy, which gained an influx of participants who could land jobs, pay taxes, and start their own businesses.
Getting Esusu off the ground wasn't easy. As Black and Brown business leaders, Abbey and Samir faced resistance from a venture capital community that overwhelmingly funds nondiverse entrepreneurs. They were forced to grapple with unfair assumptions about their competence and decision‐making, and about the ability of a business focused on the racial wealth gap to survive. But with extraordinary drive and persistence, Abbey and Samir were able to forge their vision into a reality.
Today, Esusu is thriving, drawing investors from The Global Good Fund II to tennis superstar Serena Williams's Serena Ventures. The families that rely on its services are flourishing. Abbey and Samir continue pressing to expand their reach and uplift communities across the country, one rental payment at a time. According to Samir and Abbey, “Where you come from, the color of your skin, and your financial identity should never determine where you end up in life. Today there are over 45 million adults in America with no credit score, the vast majority of whom are immigrants, minorities, and low‐ to moderate‐income households. The benefit of the Esusu platform is that everyone wins. It's a win for renters, property owners, and society at large.”
In many ways, the story of Samir and Abbey is one of improbable success. It is a story of perseverance, hard work, and creativity; of connecting people and ideas in order to promote a cause that serves humanity.
It is the story of citizen statespeople.
The Road Ahead
It can feel difficult to make a difference. That's because it is difficult to make a difference.
The world faces enormous challenges and existential threats. An international health emergency impacts every country on the planet. Climate change causes extreme weather events that claim lives and livelihoods. Wars and violent conflicts spur refugee crises and population shifts. Economic inequality is growing, leaving millions of people in poverty in the shadow of a wealthy few. From proliferation of nuclear weapons to the hardening of political polarization and an increase in racial and social injustice, people in the United States and around the world face a dizzying array of complex and dangerous threats.
These concerns are deeply felt. According to a 2019 Pew Research survey,1 most Americans expect income gaps to widen over the next three decades. Nearly half anticipate that the standard of living in the United States will get worse by 2050, while just 20 percent believe it will improve. Almost 60 percent say the condition of the environment will deteriorate. Nearly two‐thirds of Americans expect political divisions to intensify, making it even more difficult to solve problems together.
Exacerbating these challenges is the fact that, in many cases, people have lost faith in the institutions charged with supporting and guiding us towards progress. According to a series of Gallup polls in 2021, just 38 percent of Americans have “a great deal” or “a lot of” confidence in the presidency. Big business scores lower, at just 18 percent. The media fares just as poorly; only 21 percent of Americans feel confident about newspapers, and 16 percent say the same of television news. Confidence in Congress, meanwhile, sits at just 12 percent.2 Nearly every institution of note in the United States—from our lawmaking bodies to our executive powers to our economic engines and the arbiters of our public forums—is viewed with suspicion and doubt.
These low scores translate into real‐world impacts. When people lose confidence in politics and political institutions, for example, they tend to gravitate towards behaviors and ideologies less likely to lead to cooperation and more likely to create dysfunctional systems. They might decide not to vote at all, producing an electorate unrepresentative of the community as a whole and a government that doesn't take their needs into account. They might drift towards extreme political views offering a scapegoat to blame or a place of refuge for disenchanted individuals. At the furthest end of the spectrum, they could lose faith in democracy as a whole and instead submit to authoritarian individuals or agendas. These results, in turn, breed further alienation and more dysfunctional politics.
The same kind of result is possible in other areas. A lack of confidence in the news media may prompt individuals to avoid learning about current events, or to dismiss facts, or to embrace fringe broadcasters with extreme viewpoints. Distrust of financial institutions or businesses could discourage individuals or communities from meaningfully participating in the economy, calcifying poverty, and walling off populations from economic growth. Over time, our cynicism can contribute to an age of inflamed tensions, widespread division, hypernationalism, and xenophobia—without trust in institutions, we are left with limited avenues for progress. We are regularly confronted by problems, but we don't believe our existing power structures will effectively step in to address them.
That's the bad news.
Here's the good news: even as we grapple with entrenched challenges and deteriorated institutions, we simultaneously live in an age of superpowered and super‐engaged individuals. The Internet and mobile telephony have brought once‐obscure information to our fingertips, enabling people to learn about problems and dig deep into tools for solutions. Technology lowered the barriers to entry for starting a company, supporting a cause, and spurring a social movement. Increased connectivity is making it easier for a person not only to take action in their own community, but to scale their efforts quickly and effectively—allowing good ideas to find larger audiences and create broader global impact.
The intersection of these dynamics is clear:
1 We live in a time where people have lost confidence in traditional institutions of power.
2 We live in an age of the superpowered individual committed to driving change in meaningful and multifaceted ways.
Increasingly, we struggle