Jhaelynn Elam is the kind of social workhorse who befriends strangers at the grocery store and organizes happy hours just to bring people together. “I make people be my friends,” she says.
Yet she knows many other transplants to the Twin Cities are shyer and quieter, still trying to find their footing in a place that is often described as insular. In Elam’s mind, we need an ecosystem that would serve up a constant buffet of outings for people to connect, so newcomers to the area can more easily meet their future mentors, friends and village.
That’s why Elam is working hard to build up the social fabric of Black professionals in the Twin Cities. Her business, the B Suite, hosts monthly informal gatherings in downtown Minneapolis, as well as yoga classes and panel discussions (a recent chat featured HR professionals who dispensed advice on how to ask for a raise).
With many offices no longer bustling 40 hours a week like they were before COVID, new arrivals to the Twin Cities are arguably less likely to develop deep friendships in the cube farm. Groups like B Suite are filling the gap for social connection among transplants of color, providing options for the 5-to-9 once the 9-to-5 is done.
“You move here and you have this great job,” she said. “How do you go below the surface with people that are like-minded? If your family’s all the way in Florida, who can you call when the holidays come around? How are you able to build community more thoughtfully and intentionally? Because it’s not at work.”

Elam, 31, is an Ohio native who moved to Minnesota three years ago after General Mills lured her with a job offer as a food scientist. She said she initially turned down the opportunity twice, not interested in relocating to the place of George Floyd’s murder.
But she gave Minnesota a shot after hearing mildly encouraging reviews from other Black friends who had moved to the region for their careers. Over time, Elam’s passion for food science waned, and she no longer works for a Fortune 500 company in a land rich with them. But she’s still here, driven by a sense of purpose to smooth the road to lasting friendships for other transplants like herself.
Greater MSP, the regional economic development partnership, said these efforts are vital. Its study of newcomers to Minneapolis-St. Paul published in 2019 found that the region has improved in retaining people relative to out-of-state migration, but it performs poorly among highly educated people of color.