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The Edge

Victor d'Allant, Jason Clark and Jill Finlayson describe what it takes to live on The Edge. They also share news from the Social Edge community and highlight important ideas and opportunities from the field of social entrepreneurship.

May 04, 2010

To Mama With Love: Make Mother’s Day Meaningful

Filed Under:

10 ways Mamas make the world a better place.

This year, make a Mama proud by recognizing all she has contributed to your life --  by contributing in her honor to programs that are helping mothers make countless lives better.

Here are some ways to celebrate some of the many things mamas do so well:


1.  Mamas make a house into a home.

Mama Lucy has done so much for her students in Tanzania. You may remember her from our discussion on Amplifying Grassroots Voices where she said “even if a person/community is poor, the best way to help is to listen…” Through blogging and tweeting she has been amplifying the voices of her students, and been helping people around the world to hear not only her communities needs but their solutions as well. Now her solution is going beyond giving her students an education, she wants to give them a home. Her kids come from all over and some have to travel a long way to come to school, while others have no home to return to. By building a home, the children will have a supportive environment that enables and strengthens learning.

Take a moment to show a Mama you love her by creating a heartspace to honor all the ways your mama made you feel loved at home. A small donation to Epic Change in honor of your mama will invest in another remarkable mama, Mama Lucy, who dreams of building a home for children in her village. Send a delightful ecard to mama with love and share your heartspace you mother. It will warm her heart.
mamahouses2.jpg

2.  Mamas give life.

Mothers2Mothers helps mothers with HIV turn their lives around, deliver healthy children, and manage their own health. Some mamas go on to become Mentor Mothers teaching others what they have learned and gaining independence and self-sufficiency through careers. “It costs $71 to send flowers that will last a few days, but for only $50 you can save a child's life. A gift of $50 or more to mothers2mothers can support an HIV-positive pregnant woman with education empowerment to give birth to a child who is HIV-free.”

Send a M2M Mother's Day card letting the mama you are honoring know that a very meaningful donation has been made on her behalf. And as a bonus, she can download from iTunes an exclusive music DVD of a song written by 17-year old rising star Rachel Eskenazi-Gold entitled Save An Angel (song mastered and produced by Oscar-winning composer Hans Zimmer).

3.  Mamas support their families.

ARZU, which means “hope” in Dari, helps Afghan women weavers and their families break the cycle of poverty by providing them steady income and access to education and healthcare by sourcing and selling the rugs they weave.  ARZU STUDIO HOPE offers you the chance to celebrate Mother's Day with a gift designed to make a difference. ARZU rugs honor the strength and beauty of mamas worldwide.  

Nominate a mama to win  a limited edition ARZU Achievement Rug woven by Basima Zafar. Read Basima Zafar's story of resilience and courage.  Nominations are open until May 4, 2010.  And take a look at the beautiful artistry of all these talented mamas. With the code "Mothers" you will receive 15% off rug orders.


4.  Mamas love and nurture.

Half the Sky gives you a chance to honor mom by helping a child who does not have a mama. Named for the Chinese adage, "Women hold up half the sky," Half the Sky provides love and family-like nurturing care in the lives of thousands of orphaned children in China who have lost their mamas.  It was founded by an amazing mama, Jenny Bowen, whose adopted daughter, Maya, came from a welfare institution in southern China and had suffered both the trauma of institutionalization and the amazing transforming power of individual attention, love and nurturing through Jenny and her husband. In founding Half the Sky, Mama Bowen has begun to answer the question “What if you could do the same for the many children in China who languish waiting for families — or those who will never be adopted?”

Join “a community of doggedly optimistic hummingbirds” who believe they can eventually bring a family’s loving care to all of China’s orphaned children. Your mama would be proud.

5.  Mamas teach.

CAMFED gives you a chance to thank a mama for everything she has taught you, by sending a girl to school. “When you educate a girl in Africa, everything changes. She’ll be three times less likely to get HIV/AIDS, earn 25 percent more income and have a smaller, healthier family.”  

So in honor of a mama who has changed your life and helped you reach your potential, help a girl grow up to be all that she can be, including down the road, even a strong, healthy mama herself and role model for her own children. Beautiful photos of proud, engaged students are available as ecards.
postcard_mother.jpg

6.  Mamas care about the future.

Another mama making the world a better place for her two teenage children is Mindy Lubber. As President of Ceres, the leading U.S. coalition of investors and environmental leaders working to improve corporate environmental, social and governance practices, she is helping companies recognize that making themselves more sustainable will make them more successful in the 21st century. As she says “The global economy will surely grow, but so must our stewardship of the planet we rely on.

So help take care of Mama Earth and drive toward a culture of sustainability for future Mamas and their children and grandchildren…  


7.  Mamas walk the extra mile for you.

Women disproportionately bear the burden of collecting water and that impacts their health and productivity.  So it is not surprising that mamas play a critical role in Water.org’s efforts to help communities develop sustainable, healthy water solutions.  Water.org is celebrating mothers around the globe for their “incredible strength and courage and for all that they do for their families.”

Watch videos on two amazing mamas, Bhavani and Valli, who are making a difference not just for their families, but for their entire communities in India. Then imagine it taking you hours to walk from your living room to the kitchen sink - all for a drink of water, and consider a donation to help shorten that journey for mamas and their daughters around the world.   


8.  Mamas lend a hand.

What do mamas want most?  Happy, healthy children. And mothers will do anything to help their family, but sometimes it can be hard to ask for help. 
Rising to the challenge, Tori Tuncan candidly shared her personal story of trying to treat her son's Autism-related disorder, and, recognizing the huge financial burden, started Lend4Health to help mamas facing similar circumstances access person-to-person, interest-free loans to pay for their children’s treatments.   Her program is helping people like 6 year old Christian and his mom. Last Mother's Day, he said "mama" for the first time but has not said it since. Her loan request is for a treatment that she is hoping will help her son be able to say "mama" again. 

So this year, why not turn the tables and lend a mama a hand.  Celebrate Mother’s Day and Cinco de Mayo with Lend4Health’s “Cinco de Linco Day” when everyone is encouraged to try to make a $5 loan on Lend4Health.org  


9.  Mamas leave a legacy.

Queen Rania has said, “Empowering women today is, perhaps, the single greatest legacy we can bestow upon our children.” As global ambassador for Women for Women, she is helping women survivors of war rebuild their lives.  This program helps them regain income and rights, so they can advocate for peace in their communities.  

Make a donation in honor of mamas everywhere who want to keep their children safe, and send a beautiful ecard designed by women in their Rwanda program.     

10.  Mamas [FILL IN THE BLANK].

Comment on this blog post with the things Mamas do best. Then make this Mother’s Day meaningful with a gift that will make your Mama ever so proud. And share your heart while you are at it.  Here is my heartspace.  Now go make one for a mama you love.

Feb 18, 2010

Simple, Powerful Search Tool for Social Entrepreneurs

Bringing together social entrepreneurs for greater impact.

Social Edge is proud to introduce and feature the Social Entrepreneur Search widgets.  In collaboration with Social Actions, Exygy, and the organizations participating in the Social Entrepreneur API – Civic Ventures, Draper Richards Foundation, PopTech, Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship, and Skoll Foundation – we are pleased to present these quick, useful tools for social entrepreneurs, funders, and finders (people who want to learn about and support do-gooders). 

Here is how it works:

Funders, who are known for their successful efforts in finding, researching, and funding social entrepreneurs, have come together to pool the information on all their vetted social entrepreneurs in one place.  This open source database is available to anyone who wishes to query, syndicate, or republish the data on their own websites.  To make it super simple, we have created widgets so anyone can search and add a real-time list of social entrepreneurs to their webpage.  Take your pick of Full Social Entrepreneur Search, Funder Fan Club, or the Instant Social Entrepreneur List.

Why is this a win?

For emerging social entrepreneurs: 
“One stop shopping” through the Social Entrepreneur Search helps them find others in their field, issue, or region so that they may learn from other business models, find ways to collaborate and complement each other, and build coalitions for change. 

For vetted social entrepreneurs included in the database:
Same as above, but additionally, inclusion in the database increases exposure for themselves and their organizations.  Whether being contacted by others working on the same issue, being discovered by journalists, or being funded by family funds or other philanthropists, the database showcases their credibility and helps them be found and gain support so they can do more.

For funders:
Funders are hugely proud of their grantees and are committed to helping them scale their ventures and impact. By including their awardees in the Social Entrepreneur Search, they are helping their folks to be found and funded. Funders also invest heavily in finding and verifying the impact of these social enterprises.  This due diligence effort is hugely valuable to smaller funds and philanthropists who may lack the time or staff to carry out this important work.  Sean Stannard Stockton called it "following the smart money." By participating in the Social Entrepreneur Search, funders are helping strengthen the field of social entrepreneurship, and are also gaining broader recognition for their ability to identify successful social entrepreneurs.

For journalists and other writers:
Whether investigating a story on a major issue facing the world or a region, the social entrepreneurs search allows you to quickly find organizations on the ground that truly understand their issue and community.  The discovered social entrepreneurs can be a source of information and referral.  Including a list of social entrepreneurs alongside an article also gives readers a chance to connect with real people working on solving big problems. They may decide to donate or volunteer, or even become inspired to start their own social venture.

For researchers, corporations, emergency response…
Once data is aggregated in one place, the opportunity for learning is fascinating.  Studying why are there more vetted social entrepreneurs in one country than a neighboring country could be enlightening and identify a gap in needed services.  Corporations with employee giving programs wishing to expand options could add this list of vetted social entrepreneur organizations to their donor choices.  In an emergency, rather than driving all donations to the Red Cross (as amazing as they are), the Social Entrepreneur Search could help interested donors give to social entrepreneurs already on the ground, with a vested in interest in both response and long term recovery of their community that they know so well.

That’s great you say, but could it be better?  Yes!

Adoption:  We need your help to show "proof of concept”.  By adding a relevant widget to your blog post, Facebook page or website, we can see if inclusion in this database can really help social entrepreneurs and help donors save time and discover organizations they would like to support. We would like to show the value of bringing all the vetted social entrepreneurs into one searchable database, so any anecdotal evidence that discovery, funding, or some other impact (for the social venture or the sector) resulted from the Social Entrepreneur Search would be helpful and welcome.

Expansion:  We would like to add more feeds, fields, analytical tools, and other ways of making the Social Entrepreneur Search useful, while still keeping effort involved in maintaining the database low and efficient.  We will be adding The Tech Laureates and Global Social Benefit Incubator winners shortly and in breaking news: Echoing Green announced they will be adding their Fellows to the Social Entrepreneur Search API.

Other additions we have discussed include adding “finalists” who have been vetted but were not one of the few winners selected due to limitations of funding, fit, or stage of organization. Other field additions may be quite simple, such as representing the number of years the organization has been around, or number of paid staff, which could help investors and donors search for organizations at a specific stage. There is also interest in adding actions that people can take to support social entrepreneurs and giving social entrepreneurs access to updating this information directly.

Innovation:  We would love to have developers start pulling the data directly and creating their own value added layers to the data, such as creating a seamless interface to facilitate donations.  One of our beta-testers is looking at other ways of displaying the data including visual representation on a global map.

Inclusion:  This data specifically leverages the research and vetting done by funding organizations to demonstrate credibility and effectiveness of social entrepreneurs.  However, someone could take the same template used in the Social Entrepreneur Search and create a database of self-identified social entrepreneurs.  They could come up with different ways of demonstrating credibility that could be showcased such as testimonials from beneficiaries, references from board members and influential people linked through social media, as well as credentials such as 501c3 status or independent verification of organization budget, management, and/or impact.

We are very proud of this essential first step in creating a searchable database of social entrepreneurs.  Through thrifty and selfless management by Social Actions, initial support of the Peery Foundation, and the forward thinking participation of Civic Ventures, Draper Richards, PopTech, Schwab, and Skoll, we have created this open source aggregation of social entrepreneurs. The widgets created by Exygy and funded by Skoll Foundation make this data even more accessible. 

But with so much more we would like to do, it does raise the critical question of who funds projects that help the whole.  We are looking for supporters who understand the importance of investing in “actionable knowledge” and want to see this resource grow.   We are ready to build from this substantial accomplishment, but need to find financial support to take the Social Entrepreneur Search to the next level and truly demonstrate the potential of this rather incredible collaboration. If you would like to be part of the visionary leadership that takes the Social Entrepreneur Search and open philanthropic data to the next level in 2010, please contact Social Actions by email or review the funding proposal online.

 

Comment here or join the discussion on the web:

PopTech : The New PopTech Social Innovation Widget
"Happy social innovation searching!"

Skoll Foundation : See the Funder Fan Club widget in action on the Skoll website and their comments on their blog.

Take PartThe Power of Search: New Social Entrepreneur API Encourages Collaboration
"I'm personally invested and interested in innovation in education, and want to find people working in North America. A quick search brings up three... with one more click I can donate ... it's a perfect match."

Echoing Green : Announcement they will be adding their fellows to the Social Entrepreneur Search API -"we’d love nothing more than to see this spread"

Tipping BucketSocial Entrepreneur Search
"The project gets plenty of “cool” points in and of itself, but here are some reasons I find it truly remarkable...collaboration...catalytic capital...the potential to raise the profile of social enterprise..."

"The search may also inadvertantly reinforce what Charles Light calls the social entrepreneurship “cult of personality”..."Still, the search is undeniably a step in the right direction–and may well provide both a solid foundation and a jumping-off point for genuine collaborative efforts that will help expand the field and magnify the impact of social entrepreneurship in this next decade."

Exygy
talks about why they were thrilled to build the Social Entrepreneur Search widgets: “our true passion lies at the intersection of technology and social innovation”

A. Fine Blog by Allison Fine, author of Momentum - Igniting Social Change in the Connected Age says, "A group of funders working together to share their databses of people and organizations in whom they’ve invested is a welcome development. Making the database sharable through the widgets is a great idea. And enabling social entrepreneurs to connect with one another by geography or issue area is an important step in the creation of a more cohesive field."

Share and tweet this post:  http://bit.ly/edgyblog
Go to the widget store: http://bit.ly/SEsearch

Feb 11, 2010

A Great Service to Humanity

Wonderful comment about Social Edge from community member John Piermont Montilla in the The Fetishization of Metrics discussion:


Social edge is an outstanding and unselfish online reference and knowledge sharing center I have ever encountered. It is part of my life as a social entrepreneur and changemaker. Everyday, I should not miss reviewing discussions and blogs and reflecting with other's comments and knowledge sharing as well as updating my participation at the GSBI.

Social edge is my online text book and mentor as I spend almost 16-18 hours a day in my small non-profit office here in southern Philippines. In fact, when I got my brain drained and stressed with my work to the extent of having a burn-out, I just read articles at Social Edge.

It's a relief at the same time increasing my understanding of the intricacies of being a social entrepreneur. My peers too are exposed to social edge but they need the understanding why they should learn.

Knowledge is free and connecting local knowledge to contribute to the global body of wisdom and greater principles of life is indeed a great service to humanity. Great job!

The Edgy Team is blushing!

Feb 08, 2010

Best Innovation Blogs

Social Edge is named one the Best Innovation Blogs on the Web

We are usually quite shy at Social Edge about our accomplishments. We rarely mention our traffic numbers (booming!) or our ego-pleasing nominations, like the Webbies Honoree mention for Global X.

But we couldn't help but blush when Social Edge was named one the Best Innovation Blogs (along with IDEO!) by Five for Friday, an informal roundup of some of the best things on the Web. These are the reason they chose us:


Thinking about starting your own NGO or jetting off to personally end
hunger? Read Social Edge first. [...]

Social Edge furthers innovation among social entrepreneurs through its
collection of blogs, discussions, and resources dedicated to the “pioneers
of innovations that benefit humanity.” No matter what your plan to solve
the world’s problems, you’ll probably find a blog from someone who’s been
there before. [...]

Though lots of members, like Kiva founder Matt Flannery, are well-known and successful, the site is intended to help social entrepreneurs share common experiences, positive or disastrous.

 

Thank you to our community that has been helping Social Edge become the practical, global network for social entrepreneurs.

Jan 08, 2010

10 Reasons to Apply for the GSBI

First Deadline January 15, 2010

In "Twitter-concise" language, here are 10 reasons to apply for the Global Social Benefit Incubator. For more information on the GSBI, you can read the full press release or find the copy in Spanish, Portuguese, and French in our press area.

  • Reason # 10 to apply to #GSBI Scale your impact & change the world faster! http://bit.ly/gsbi10 What is your reason to apply? Let us know. 
  • Reason #9 to apply to #GSBI Special opp for orgs helping communities off the grid or suffering frequent disruptions in their energy supply 
  • Reason #8 to apply to #GSBI Be the next #Kiva. @mattflannery attended along w/other successful #SocEnt frm around world http://bit.ly/5LyokM 
  • Reason #7 to apply to #GSBI Make trusted connections "I now work w/a GSBI participant I met there & have partnered w/another" Matt Flannery 
  • Reason #6 to apply to #GSBI @robertkatz http://bit.ly/7QDEd1 & @fjnoguera @nextbillion think it's a good idea http://bit.ly/5FjJOF 
  • Reason #5 to apply to #GSBI Mentoring by Silicon Valley veterans "help open doors for funding opps..& cont to be avail as a sounding board” 
  • Reason #4 to apply to #GSBI "Typically results in major "ah-ha" moments" "you don't often get chance to step back, look strategically @ org" 
  • Reason #3 to apply to #GSBI It forces you "to step back & assess current market & competitive landscape.." Hardika Shah http://bit/ly/gsbi10 
  • Reason #2 to apply to #GSBI Application has "tremendous value" RT @socentex Global Opps for Active Social Entrepreneurs http://bit.ly/8GUu8N 
  • Reason #1 to apply to #GSBI Incubators are great! Business Week: "triple-bottom-line biz encounter unique challenges" http://bit.ly/5HpYHo


There are many more reasons to apply, but starting right now, you can get free feedback on your Value Proposition. The mentoring will help you explain "Why you" and distill your "mission essence" into a concise statement that will help people understand what you do and how your solution will change the world.

Don't delay. The first deadline is January 15. Then you can get help with defining your target market and business model... and that's just for entering. Can you imagine the value of being one of the 20 selected for a full scholarship to the incubator?!

Dec 08, 2009

Imagine, Connect, Act

Ami Dar wants the world's idealists to work together (seriously)

Life is complicated, says our Idealist friend Ami Dar. He wonders whether we could start looking at the world from a different point of view to "quickly build a network of people and organizations that will allow us to make the most of what each of us has to offer, online and in person."

He just published a vision for this network, a path and a timeline to get there, and an invitation to be part of this movement from the very start.

Will you join them?

Dec 03, 2009

Sally Osberg contributes to Intrepid Philanthropist

Skoll Foundation CEO Sally Osberg is contributing thought-provoking blog posts to the Intrepid Philanthropist blog, a new initiative at the Center for Strategic Philanthropy and Civil Society at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke. You can read those here.

Dec 02, 2009

The Design of Business

Why Design Thinking Is the Next Competitive Advantage

Debra Dunn just wrote a fascinating review of Roger Martin’s new book, The Design of Business (Why Design Thinking Is the Next Competitive Advantage), in the Stanford Social Innovation Review.

As they grow, many organizations tend to become driven by an analytical approach to management that is incompatible with exploration of new and innovative ideas. "This is the crux of the conflict between innovation and scale," writes Debra Dunn.

She adds a personal comment: "As someone who wears the scars of many battles fought for innovation during 22 years at Hewlett-Packard, a company that succumbed to the natural bias toward scale, I’d give most companies poor odds of achieving the balance Martin espouses, but they will be better for trying."

Note that Roger Martin didn't directly address the social entrepreneurship sector in his book, but the ideas are equally applicable.

Nov 25, 2009

Jeff Skoll a Leader in Effective Philanthropy

Barrons' Magazine this week has a cover story on effective philanthropists. The 25 Best Givers doesn't look at just levels of giving by philanthropists, but instead focuses on factors like "innovation, quality of alliances with other groups, the ripple effects of their giving and the extent to which their successful projects can be replicated."

Jeff Skoll is second on the list of 25 (just behind fellow eBay Pierre Omidyar). The article also mentions Jeff's founding of the Skoll Centre at Oxford and his work with Participant Media in making movies that both entertain and inspire people to action on social and environmental issues. Jeff Skoll also launched Social Edge in 2004.

Oct 26, 2009

The 2009 Purpose Prize

Five Social Innovators in Encore Careers Win $100,000 Purpose Prize. Five Other Entrepreneurs Over 60 Win $50,000 Each for Using Creativity, Experience to Solve Long-Standing Social Problems

This year’s winners of The Purpose Prize, a $100,000 award for social innovators in their encore careers, are ordinary people using a new stage of life to do extraordinary things. They include:

* A former telecom executive who helped wire an Appalachian county and brought laid-off factory workers back to profitable farming;

* A professor who invented a way to transform toxic fly ash into green bricks;

* A psychiatrist who helps saves soldiers’ lives by offering free mental health treatment;

* A former NASA exec who works to treat alcoholism in Native American communities by reviving old customs and traditions; and

* A couple who honor their son, killed on 9/11, by helping to bring mental health services to countries ravaged by terrorism, violence and war.

These people – and five other $50,000 winners – are social entrepreneurs over 60 who are using their experience and passion to take on society’s biggest challenges. Now in its fourth year, the six-year, $17 million program is the nation’s only large-scale investment in social innovators in the second half of life.

The Purpose Prize is a program of the Encore Careers campaign run by Civic Ventures, a national think tank on boomers, work and social purpose.

Oct 19, 2009

SXSW panels

First round selections made.

Here are 20 topics that caught my eye...

First Batch of Panel Announced for SXSWi - see all that made the cut http://bit.ly/myGgD

Clay Shirky will be there too.  Which sessions caught your eye?

Oct 07, 2009

ANDE New Grants

Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs Announces New Grants

Fifteen international economic development organizations have received grants in support of their work to expand small and growing businesses in developing countries.

The grants, which total US $447,000, were the first awarded as part of the Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs (ANDE) Capacity Development Fund, a US $1million effort to increase the productivity and effectiveness of organizations that provide investment, training and other resources to small and growing businesses in developing countries.

Funding for the grants was provided by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, The Lemelson Foundation and Shell Foundation.

Sep 29, 2009

BBC World Challenge 2009

Barefoot Women Solar Engineers of Africa are Finalists in the BBC World Challenge 2009

Our friend Bunker Roy at Barefoot College just found out that out of 1,000 entries in the BBC World Challenge 2009, the Barefoot Women Solar Engineers of Africa were selected as one of the 12 finalists.

Help them win by voting today!
 

Sep 15, 2009

Gains & Gaps at SoCap ReCap: Post 3 of 3: Gaps

For-profit SROI metrics, Education, and Uber solutions and databases.

As we look forward to the SoCap10, let's hope in the coming year we can make progress on greater collaboration and sharing of data.  As we seek to hold social enterprises to higher standards, we will need to work together to hold all companies to higher standards, to increase knowledge and awareness among donors and investors alike, and to achieve much greater transparency of data in order to enhance efficiency of the social entrepreneurship sector.  Here are the gaps aka opportunities for the coming year:

For-profit SROI metrics
Much has been said about the heavy metrics focus of SoCap.  Kevin Jones, SoCap09 Convener, said the market for social enterprise needs sizing and he asks “How big is the opportunity? A string of anecdotes is not measurable.” But perhaps lost in the metrics discussion, is now that social enterprise are being held to the same standards as for-profits (indeed they are expected to out-perform not only in financial returns but to have the social returns to boot) – Then the for-profits must be held to the same standards and report their social impact as well as their financial returns. It’s only fair. Then you can really compare and contrast to your heart’s content. After all, the "rules between customer & company are going to be rewritten & this time—caveat venditor” according to the article  Meaning-Driven Business. (Not to mention Virgance who is also driving this home with their CarrotMob concept and other consumer driven power plays to incent businesses to be better and do good.)
 
Education gap
If you are going to bring social ventures up to speed so to speak, then you need education, training, and how-to guides and curriculum materials so that social entrepreneurs can understand these new reporting expectations.  Likewise, whose job is it to educate brokers and clients on the returns and benefits of social investing?  Right now both education efforts are ad hoc and labor intensive. There is an opportunity for an association or group to step up and create the teaching materials, open source them, and assist with rapid dissemination. Check out Sean Stannard-Stockton on transferring knowledge to major donors.  Then read Money and Meaning where an optimistic Nathaniel Whittemore declares "people have capacity to shift their values and recognize gaps between values and action"
      
Uber-solutions and databases
Charles “hipbone” Cameron asks who will step up to make whole social entrepreneurship  sector more efficient rather than solving only part of the problem for only their own organization?  Which brings me back to the Social Entrepreneur API and the Make the Maps, Mind the Gaps, Build the Apps session.  The model that we drafted includes 5 components:  Raw materials (participating organizations that will solve their own problems through the collaborative app), tools (the process for managing the development of the solution), glue (funding – and this is both small amounts of seed funds and/or sweat equity), workers (the expertise to build the database/apps), and riders (the adoption and use of the data by the community). This concept works well, but keep in mind a caveat by Peter Deitz, "participating organizations are not like bricks – designed to fit together” so it takes an effort to bring people together even for their mutual benefit. 

Let me leave you with the three quotes I used to wrap up our session:
Here's "Why It's Smart To Be Optimistic" as a recent BusinessWeek article explained, you need to "Prepare yourself for all possible outcomes, including highly positive ones."  In other words, don't be afraid to start or overthink what could go wrong - instead, think about what could go right.

In the Stanford Social Innovation Review, they introduced the concept Catalytic Philanthropy and the 4 key tennants are: "Take responsibility for results; Create "conditions for collaboration and innovation"; " Use all available tools"; "Create Actionable Knowledge"  Sharing data and building collaborative App solutions, like the Social Entrepreneur API, create knowledge that will benefit many players in the field of social entrepreneurship, and they provide value, often in ways that you did not even anticipate.

And finally Skoll Social Entrepreneur Martin Von Hildebrand in speaking with Global X reminds us “Don’t go in with the answers. Answers need to be built.”  Instead, get your collaborators together and ask right questions.

We look forward to continuing the discussions that were begun at SoCap and hope that many of you will step up and collaborate on Maps and Apps to bridge the Gaps that are slowing down social entrepreneurs.
 
 

Sep 14, 2009

Gains & Gaps at SoCap ReCap: Post 2 of 3: Gains

Government, Tools, and Rapid Iteration

At SoCap09 we did see that gains had been made since last year.  That's not to say we are done and in the home stretch, but rather that new doors are opening.  Here are some of the gains I saw this year:

Government
As Vanessa Kirsch of New Profit said, “Government was not part of our equation.”  In past years, social entrepreneurs deliberately worked around government. Now government is seen as a potential funding source and even partner. Kirsch went on to say that “We (social entrepreneurs) have to change our own behavior. We have to ask ourselves - Do we have a policy team?”

Kirsch is not the only person adjusting to the new government role. Director of the White House Office of Social Innovation Sonal Shah talked about their new innovation strategy  and pointed out that their initiatives "might seem like common sense, but for the government it's a new way of doing business."

And Andrew Wolk of Root Cause reflected on the evolution of the responsibilities for government – what was a role of program developer, became outsourcer, and is now becoming an enabler.  Still to be answered, though, is how government can encourage innovation, reward success, create a conducive environment for social ventures, and foster metrics.


Need for New Tools           
This may be seen as a gap, but in reality, it is a gain – people have gained the realization that it is not enough to work with, bend, and renovate existing rules and tools.  There is a real need to develop new tools and rules.  With this is mind one can understand why some at SoCap could say with a straight face “I would rather give you a grant – it is too risky to give you a loan.”  With the current set of tools, this dichotomy makes perfect sense – if you expect your loan to be repaid with interest in a short term, then the risk is very high that you won’t be repaid.  But if, for example, you can guarantee a low or no interest loan (to make it less risky for the lenders and back it up with a potential grant) then you can do more with less money and foster sustainability.

This requires redefining risk and offering more ways to provide patient capital.  Kim Smith of New Schools Venture Fund pointed out “No-one has the teachers guide" and it’s not going to be easy but we need to innovate completely new tools rather than just continuing to find new ways to adapt the existing ones.  

And Dan Crisafulli of Skoll Foundation emphasized this in his blog post where he said, “Change the rules of the game. … some social entrepreneurs are creatively engaging with business and government to …one day change the equilibrium of how business is done and, in effect, put themselves out of business.” 
 

Measurement and Iteration:
Metrics "were indeed sexy topics throughout the first days of #SoCap09. Believe it," says Jake Samuelson  who added they were "sexy, but contentious."  There is still a way to go in building consensus but advances have been made and there are lots of fascinating tools emerging including Pulse, IRIS and GIIRs to name a few.

Aaron Sklar of IDEO pointed out that “You get what you measure, so measure what you care about.” IDEO also came out with the human-centered design toolkit that promotes prototyping as “a methodology for making solutions tangible in a rapid and low-investment way.  It’s a proven technique for quickly learning how to design an offering right and for accelerating the process of rolling out solutions to the world.” 

 

And in a joint project of IDEO and Acumen called the Ripple Effect, Sangeeta Chowdhry explained two additional keys to success: 1. A short deadline (2 months) prompted participants to start and complete projects in what would have taken over a year and 2. Rapid iteration led to both faster & better solutions.  Learn more about seeding Innovation and the Ripple Effect

Check out my next post for GAPS remaining despite measurable gains.       

 

 

Sep 13, 2009

Gains & Gaps at SoCap ReCap: Post 1 of 3: Social Entrepreneur API

Make the Maps, Mind the Gaps, Build the Apps

Gaps are on my mind having just led the session “Make the Maps, Mind the Gaps, Build the Apps” at SoCap09.  Our session, which included insights from Curtis LeFrandt – a BYU graduate student who is writing his thesis on mapping the field of social entrepreneurship, and Peter Deitz of Social Actions and Social Entepreneur API fame, was a buzz-worthy favorite that also sparked and contributed to a number of follow-on conversations on the final day of the Social Capital conference.

How do social entrepreneurs journey from idea to break-through ventures?  What routes work? What routes should be avoided? What is slowing social entrepreneurs down?  We discussed the barriers to growth, and then talked about the collaborative apps that could be built to reduce friction. As an example of apps to bridge gaps, we introduced the Social Entrepreneur API http://socialentrepreneurapi.org , the first open source database of vetted entrepreneurs. This tool helps social entrepreneurs find each other, helps funders and the media find social entrepreneurs, and helps more people discover the innovative solutions of successful social entrepreneurs. The press release launching the public beta was released at SoCap.

Check it out http://search.socialentrepreneurapi.org – play around with it – search for “water and Africa” or “youth in Cambodia” and you will quickly see the social entrepreneurs working in those areas and the innovative model they are using.  This is early days but you can already see how hugely valuable and time saving it is to have one search engine for vetted social entrepreneurs from several different funders. We’re working on widgets so you will be able to “drop” lists of relevant social entrepreneurs onto your site. Please let us know how you might use the social entrepreneur data so we can build the tools to make it possible.

And then check out our map of the field, possible filters, and model for building collective apps like the Social Entrepreneur API.

Gaps were seen at more than just our session, though.  Check out my next two posts on on take-aways from SoCap – featuring three gains made and three gaps remaining.

 

Sep 10, 2009

Notes on How to Design a Conference

Paula Goldman, reflecting on the aftermath of Momentum.
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"I would never say that."  This was the response of Drummond Pike, CEO and Founder of Tides, when I asked him if he saw the Momentum Conference becoming an institution like the TED conference.  It was my last question of our interview.  He smiled wryly and was rushed off to his next appointment.
 
Fair response, of course, but also a fair question.  In fact one could see the influence of the TED aesthetic at play at the Momentum conference-- especially in the theatrical staging of presentations, and the relatively sophisticated use of multimedia enhancements... and indeed, even in the clean visual branding of the conference itself.
 
But this was no cheap TED imitation.  Other aspects of Momentum gave it its own unique -- and very effective-- style.  First was the choice of speakers.  A few big names, but a lot of people many have never heard of-- some because they're up and coming, and some because they're simply concerned with doing the good work and not with spotlighting oneself for its own sake.  The result: for the most part, really compelling presentations by people really out there in the trenches of social change-- accessible, provocative, and powerful.
 
The other big difference was the collaborative spaces created by the conference designers-- which all in all nearly equaled the time allotted to official presentations.  Sign up to give your own mini discussion; sign up to get a group together for dinner; mingle in one of the after-hours parties.  In most conferences, I leave with the sense I'm being patronized.  Organizers may say they want to create room for lateral participation, but it usually feels like it's more an after-thought, or an add-on.  Definitely not the case here.
 
The conference ended yesterday.  The litmus test is always about what you remember, days, months, and years later.   I will remember Mimi Charakova's incredibly compelling (and depressing) videos and photos about sex trafficking.  I have worked on this issue myself quite a lot and thought I'd reached the point of media saturation, but her presentation opened the sheer outrage of the issue afresh, yet again.   I'll remember Kevin Bales' tangible, convincing plan about how we can really end modern slavery, now.
 
And perhaps most poignantly, I'll remember Phaedra Ellis-Lamkins, CEO of Green for All, and her message about asserting power to create new pathways for underserved communities.  It wasn't just what she said that was inspiring; it was how she said it.  It was the way her presence filled up the entire room-- the way her own demeanor mirrored the message, a message about being powerful, rather than seeking to be powerful. 
 
As I watched her command the audience's attention and respect, it struck me that she was likely about my age.  I wondered what, if anything, held me back in my own work from presenting myself in the same effective way.  
 
Such is the nature of inspiration.  We learn from each other's styles and small actions almost as much as from the larger frameworks and strategies for change itself.   Momentum made it possible to learn from both.
 

Social activism vs. social entrepreneurship revisited

From Tides Momentum Conference - Lloyd Nimetz on the divide in the social changemaking community

Last week was the SOCAP09 conference attracting social entrepreneurs from all over the world.  This week was the MOMENTUM conference attracting the leading activists from all over the world.  Interestingly there were only a small handfull of overlap in the attendees.   Is there a divide between these two camps?  The civil society is already fragmented enough. If there is a growing divide between the social entrepreneurship and activist camps then surely the greater good would call for us to bridge the gap.
  
Sure enough during a Tuesday evening cocktail networking at the Tides Momentum Conference, I oversaw Ellen Friedman (ED of Tides and the host of this conference) at a table with Kevin Jones and Rosa Lee Harden (the co-founders of the SOCAP conference last week among other important endeavors).  It was as if both gang leaders team were huddling up in a dark alley to decide the fate of civil society, or so i thought melodramatically. I was intrigued and so I interviewed them the next day.   

Friedman mentioned that they did discuss this divide and are keen on beginning a dialogue to start bridging the gap.  In fact, Freeman suggested that one important outcome from the conference might be this very dialogue.  She intends to 'keep the conversations going'.  I met with Kevin and Rose Lee separately and they confirmed their interest in strengthening the dialogue and start to build bridges.  So keep an eye out and start pressuring from your end.   All those with the passion to drive social progress need to find a way to stay united. 

I also asked their opinion on the difference between activism and social entrepreneurship.  There was consensus that entrepreneurship is about creating something new while activism is about taking action of any kind so you can indeed be both an activist and a social entrepreneur.  Ellen gave Kevin Bales and Willie Smits as examples.  Both changemakers spoke eloquently in the Momentum conference about their work.  Kevin's mission is to end slavery over the next 25 years while Willie's is to curb global warming, save local fauna & flora while simultaneously developing local jobs in Borneo, Indonesia.  Both individuals are creating something new and innovative but are required to influence government and others in positions of power as part of their important work.  As Ellen eloquently put it, 'often you need to build a movement and a market'. 

Most social entrepreneurs, like me, don't identify with activism, but, like corporate managers have understood long ago, we mustn't overlook the fact that influencing those critical non-market actors in positions of power is often a critical part of our work as well.  One can influence non-market actors in two ways: with votes or with dollars.  Most social entrepreneurs don't have the deep pockets of the corporate world, so they will have to follow the path blazed by the activists: build political leverage with votes.  On the other hand, activists should also start to recognize that their work will only be enhanced by learning from a new wave of changemakers who want to go beyond the traditional activism born out of the 60s to incorporate principles of the market and best practices of management and private industry to achieve the same goals.  The millenials, particularly in the US, don't identify as activists but will usually need to incorporate incorporate their best practices for the purposes of movement formation and advocacy.

Do you think the activist community and the social entrepreneur community are divided?  Should that divide enough of a concern to be seriously addressed now?

 

by Lloyd Nimetz

Crowdsourced journalism

From yesterday's Tides Momentum Conference - Lloyd Nimetz on the future of journalism

At the Tides Momentum conference, I spotted a social entrepreneur among the activists.  David Cohn is betting on his crowd-funded initiative Spot.us to be the future model for professional journalism.  He calls it 'community funded reporting'.  If you want an article written, you can submit a story idea and see if the crowd funds the story.  Spot.us has a team of freelance reporters on stand-by ready to work on stories that receive sufficient funding to cover the corresponding costs of investigative reporting.  It's like Donorschoose but instead of funding school teachers, you are funding articles.  It's a fascinating model and experiment that makes a lot of sense although will inevitably have many nay-sayers who don't believe the general public or those with more disposable income should be able to influence reporting - a legitimate charge but not much different from the corporate marketing budgets influencing newspapers and magazines today.

Spot.us has great potential, but I think the class of professional journalism overall is dying a slow death.  Don't fret; we will still get the news.  What's dying is not journalism but professional journalism, supported by traditional newspaper business models; you, me and advertisers aren't willing to pay anymore like they used to.  Some people will continue to pay for some professional journalism but a new form of amateur journalism is slowly taking over.  I compare this to what happened hundreds of years ago with the end of a different professional class called 'the scribe'.  We don't mourn their demise now because we know that with better education and new technology -- the advent of the pencil, pen and later the computer -- we can all be amateur scribes!  (aside: Now with computers my handwriting is such crap that I might need a scribe again!)   The same is happening in the field of journalism.  Just like some scribes still exist even today, some professional journalists will continue to be demanded, but more and more news will be produced by you and me and more complex filtering mechanisms built on top of websites like Twitter, Facebook, Blogspot/Wordpress and Google will do the work of sorting through the mess to deliver to your smartphone, computer or e-pad the news you want, packaged as you want it.

What do you think is the future of journalism?

 

by Lloyd Nimetz

Sep 09, 2009

Snippet: Kevin Bales on the Cost of Ending Modern Slavery

Paula Goldman, Live from the Momentum Conference

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An amazing plenary this morning on the notion of rights.  Here's an interesting tidbit from Kevin Bales, head of Free the Slaves, and a tremendously convincing speaker.

Fact: There are roughly 20 million slaves in the world today.

Fact: The estimated cost of finally wiping slavery off the face of the earth: 10.8 billion dollars, the equivalent of Intel's 4th quarter profits.