There are people who chase success, and then there are people who redefine what success is supposed to look like. Hector Perdomo belongs firmly in the second category. A husband, father of four, nonprofit founder, and one of the most quietly influential business financing strategists working in the entrepreneurial space today, Perdomo has spent the better part of two decades turning adversity into access — for himself and for the thousands of entrepreneurs and men he now serves.
Born in Lawrence, a small low income city north of Boston, Perdomo didn’t have a roadmap to wealth. Perdomo’s father, wanting to get away from all the negativity in the town, decided to move him at the age of 4 to Florida, to try giving him a better life. At 13, he was already running his own lawn mowing operation. At 16, he was the youngest employee at Champs Sports to sell a $300 pair of sneakers — twice, to the same customer. By 19, he had become a father while simultaneously stepping up to support his mother and younger brother after his own father left the family. These weren’t just character-building moments; they were the foundation of a business philosophy forged entirely in real life.
“Coming from a family of poverty, I saw a life that I did not want,” Perdomo says plainly. “My father tried to provide by going into sales, and I noticed that the true way to live the life you desire is to take a risk on yourself.”
How a Near-Fatal Accident Became a $1.3 Million Turning Point
By his early thirties, Perdomo had already launched a tax office, co-founded a solar energy company, and racked up the kind of lessons that don’t come cheap. In 2021, while navigating a pivotal stretch of his career, he was involved in a devastating car accident, one that took two lives. The driver who hit him had no insurance. Left to shoulder his recovery costs alone, most people would have folded. Perdomo got laser-focused.
Within ten months, he had taken his company from zero to $1.3 million in revenue. It was the kind of turnaround that sounds cinematic until you understand the mechanics behind it: relentless networking, deep investment in mentorship, and the disciplined mindset of a man who had simply refused to stop moving. The experience also exposed a painful truth about his then-business partner — who, Perdomo says, discouraged him from seeking education or mentorship, costing him personally over $300,000 despite the company’s success.
That wake-up call launched the next chapter. He parted ways with his business partner and built Angel Business Inc. from the ground up, this time entirely on his own terms. Visit www.angelbusinessinc.com to learn more about the capital strategies and resources his firm provides to entrepreneurs nationwide.
Today, as CEO of Angel Business Inc. and a recognized business financing strategist, Perdomo has helped entrepreneurs and companies secure hundreds of millions of dollars in capital throughout his career, some going from startup to multi-million dollar revenue in under a year. His network spans private family offices, venture capital firms, hedge funds, and bankers across more than 130 countries. Among his connections: the lender behind the Aston Martin Tower in Miami. That’s the kind of access most founders spend entire careers trying to get near.
Building the 700 Men Club: When Capital Meets Community
In 2022, Perdomo lost a close friend to suicide. The grief didn’t paralyze him, it galvanized him. He launched the 700 Men Club, a registered nonprofit based in Orlando, Florida, dedicated to transforming the lives of men through financial education, mental health resources, and leadership development.
“Access to capital and access to community are not separate conversations,” Perdomo says. “They’re the same one.”
The Club has already hosted its inaugural Men of Tomorrow event, bringing together multi-seven and eight-figure entrepreneurs to educate and empower at-risk youth in the Orlando area, planting seeds of possibility in communities that are too often overlooked. Perdomo serves as a Peace Ambassador for Nations United for Peace, an inter-governmental organization, and has been featured on platforms including the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly. His podcast, Grown Man Talk, brings unfiltered conversation about money, mindset, and purpose to a growing audience of men looking for something real.
His north star, he says, is to convert homeless shelters into full-scale resource centers — places where men in the most forgotten corners of America can find not just a bed, but a blueprint.
Follow Hector’s journey and daily insights on Instagram at @hectorperdomo87.
Now married for nearly eleven years with four children, Perdomo is candid about the cost of the entrepreneurial path. “There is no balance,” he says. “You have to understand that the journey will cause many times of unbalance. But you set micro goals with micro rewards, and that’s what keeps you going, along with having the support of your family.”
His advice to aspiring entrepreneurs is equally grounded: read, meditate, and network your way into mentorship. Find someone who is close enough to where you are that their solutions actually apply to your problems. And measure success not in dollars, but in goals achieved.
“You can never make a shot you don’t take,” he says. “Even when you’re scared, make the decision with all the faith in yourself that it will work, because even if it doesn’t, you still won. You took the chance on yourself.”
From a lawn mower at 13 to a global capital network and a nonprofit movement reshaping men’s lives, Hector Perdomo isn’t just building businesses. He’s building a world he once couldn’t have imagined, and making sure the next generation doesn’t have to start from zero to get there.
Learn more at www.angelbusinessinc.com and www.700menclub.org. Follow Hector on Instagram at @hectorperdomo87.




























