Archive for January, 2012

2012: Five Trends That’ll Matter Most

Posted on: January 26th, 2012 by socialventurenetwork No Comments

Written by Raphael Bemporad

Co-Founder & Chief Strategy Officer, BBMG


SVN members know the incredible power of socially responsible enterprise to pioneer more innovative, sustainable business models and empower healthier, happier and more engaged customers who can change the world through the marketplace.

As we mark 25 years of progress at SVN and re-dedicate ourselves to tackling the persistent challenges of the global economy, it’s a tremendous opportunity to lead the way in reshaping the traditional way of doing business—and create a better, smarter, more collaborative economy with shared value for more people across the globe.

Building on 100,000 consumer-generated ideas and insights in our collaboration platform, The Collective, BBMG has done some thinking about the trends that’ll be key in helping socially responsible companies achieve scale while driving positive impact in society. And, as originally noted in our guest blog for Sustainable Brands, we see major opportunities for companies that can effectively address these trends in 2012.

1. A C2C Marketplace

We are experiencing a fundamental paradigm shift from a business-to-consumer (B2C) marketplace to a consumer-to-business (C2B) and consumer-to-consumer (C2C) marketplace—where creating, buying, selling and sharing products and services will increasingly be driven by consumers themselves.

This is happening in the context of radical personalization, collaborative consumption and co-creativity, where brand purchases and experiences are dis-intermediated by traditional brands and retailers and unleashed via new technologies and platforms (from Good Guide to Etsy to Getaround) that firmly place more power in the hands of consumers.

Success now means rethinking sales channels toward more direct interaction and inviting consumers in to imagine, create and extend how our brands live in the world.

2. The Rise of Generation “Why?”

The rise of the C2C marketplace is driven in part by the influence of values-aspirational, practically minded New Consumers looking for brands that deliver total value: products that work well, cost less, last longer and do some good.

Youthful, educated, wired and mostly female, this New Consumer is asking “why” they should care about brands; and, if they can’t find what they’re looking for, “why not” just create the solutions themselves? New Consumers are more practical and more purposeful, and they’re not willing to wait.

And, with billions of these New Consumers entering the marketplace in developing economies, the key question will be whether brands can reach and delight them—beyond just more consumption—to inspire responsible purchases and deeper participation with health, happiness and sustainability in mind.

3. The Race to Relationship

Thanks to Groupon and its countless competitors, 2011’s year of the deal saw virtually every brand category join an unfortunate race to the lowest-price bottom that is destroying brand value, reducing consumers to commodities and undermining our shared, long-term success.

Sure, we dig deals and we always will. Yet by focusing so relentlessly on unsustainable price discounts, we undermine the very potential for our brands to do more and mean more for our customers.

Instead, we believe 2012 will see a race to relationship, where the most successful brands will break free of the lowest-price trap and deliver more value by empowering consumers with better products and experiences and championing their success. ­Patagonia’s disruptive Don’t Buy This Jacket campaign highlights this commitment to creating enduring products and relationships by promising to make “useful gear that lasts a long time” and inviting us to reduce, repair, reuse, recycle and reimagine how and what we consume together.

As one of our favorite clients says, “We don’t want a one-night-stand with our customers. We want long-term love affairs.”

4. The Imperative of Sustainable Brand Innovation

Whether it’s reducing resource risks in supply chains, driving efficiencies into workflows or reaping the rewards of increased transparency and corporate reputation, we believe sustainable brand innovation offers unmatched opportunity for exponential value creation for business, consumers, society and our planet.

In 2012, sustainable brands large and small will increasingly connect consumers, brand teams, suppliers and subject-matter experts in the innovation process to embed sustainability and social purpose into every business strategy, product design and stakeholder relationship.

Creating better brands, products, packaging and platforms, the highest performing companies will integrate practical, environmental and tribal benefits in every new offering—therefore becoming agents of change at a faster speed and larger scale than ever before.

5: The Evolution from Occupy to Engage

If the most emblematic word of 2011 was “occupy,” we believe the word of 2012 will be “engage.”

With an existential howl against the status quo, the global Occupy movement represents a deep yearning for a new way of doing business that replaces short-term, transactional, profit-only thinking with a more responsible, transparent and equitable economy that creates more value for more people in more ways.

In 2012, there is good reason to believe that the SVN community can lead the way.

In states from California to Maryland to New York, B Corporations are engaging policymakers to pass legislation that recognizes (and incentivizes) corporate accountability to all stakeholders: investors, consumers, employees, community members and the environment.

The Harvard Business Review hails the benefits of “The Good Company” that combines financial and social logic into its operations by engaging employees, partners and community institutions in building enduring value and success.

Meanwhile, pioneering brands from Stonyfield to Indigenous Designs to Guayaki are engaging consumers so they can live better and take action on issues that improve our shared future—from promoting sustainable agriculture to protecting endangered habitats to creating more opportunities for the producers of their products around the world.

As we celebrate SVN’s 25th anniversary and imagine the possibilities of the next 25 years, we believe the most successful brands will meet the needs, hopes and aspirations of New Consumers; build more respectful, collaborative and enduring relationships with all stakeholders; and unleash our collective co-creativity to bring better, smarter and more impactful ideas to life in ways that create shared value for all.

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The Common Good Enterprise – A New Term for an Emerging Sector

Posted on: January 13th, 2012 by socialventurenetwork No Comments

Written by Jim Epstein and Alicia Epstein Korten

As an investment advisor, I (Jim) am often asked to sit on nonprofit boards. I have grown uncomfortable with the term not-for-profit to describe these organizations, which often embrace business principles in their operations. For example, DC Greenworks generates income from government contracts and fees for green roof installations.

In 2002, I (Alicia) had difficulty finding graduate courses that blended business and social values. At a 2009 Net Impact conference, I was overwhelmed by the presence of over 2,000 MBA students interested in the common good.

A new sector is being born that blurs the lines between for-profit and not-for-profit worlds. Business used to be about jobs and profit. Civil society organizations were the avenues to give back beyond job creation and products.

Today, an increasing number of businesses are building healthy communities, living wages and sustainable products into their corporate DNA. And more civil society organizations are embracing business values.

The Private Sector Has a Broader Mission

Four hundred and seventy-six companies with $2.27 billion in annual revenue are certified now as B corporations, a designation given to businesses that meet environmental, governance and social criteria by the not-for-profit B Lab.

Certification has been followed by a tidal wave of state legislation giving such businesses legal jurisdiction. Maryland, Vermont, New Jersey, California, Hawaii, New York and Virginia are front runners. In 2012, Colorado, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan and DC will likely follow.

This legislation is significant. It supersedes a body of law legally interpreted to mean that corporations must consider shareholder value before taking into account other stakeholders—including communities, employees and the planet.

Jim, who played a major role in passing two of these laws, co-founded a company that will become a B corporation called Blue Ridge Produce. The company aggregates locally grown food for sale to grocery stores and institutional buyers in the Washington DC area. With the common good built into its corporate DNA, Blue Ridge Produce aims to maintain a healthy farming community in the region and will:

  • provide secure markets for local farmers;
  • reduce the carbon footprint by keeping food closer to home; and
  • convert conventional growers to organic producers

Business networking organizations like the Social Venture Network (SVN)B LabSocial Enterprise AllianceInvestors’ Circle and the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies (BALLE) are further helping the trend become a global movement.

While the Nonprofit Sector is Adopting Business Principles

Change is also happening within civil society organizations, motivated in part by technology entrepreneurs grounding their philanthropy in business values. The Skoll Foundation funded by eBay mogul Jeffrey Skoll provides grantees funding to develop engines of growth. Called resource engines, some grantees are using funds to build business principles into their non-profit structures.

Created in 2009, the civil society organization Practice Greenhealth receives over half of its annual budget from membership dues paid by health providers like Kaiser Permanent in exchange for services aimed at greening their hospitals. Founder Gary Cohen built this resource engine after talking to entrepreneurs at the Skoll World Forum.

Language Is Powerful

Nothing captures an emerging trend like a name. A name can, in fact, determine whether an idea or product popularizes or stays relegated to a small group of believers. Just look at the dolphin fish. Only when restaurants began using its Hawaiian name Mahi-Mahi did this fish, which has no relation to the dolphin, begin to gain popularity in the United States. After all, who wants to eat Flipper with an apricot glaze?

Social enterprise, mission-driven business and for-benefit corporations are a few of the descriptors for organizations blending business principles with common good aims. We believe the movement can better communicate the power and purpose of this emerging field.

A New Operating System: The Common Good Enterprise

In our search for better lexicon, Jim came across a neglected phrase we would like to bring center stage: “the common good enterprise.” Why that term? Its power is its clarity.

Here’s our definition:

A for-profit or not-for-profit organization whose primary purpose is to promote the well-being of people and/or the planet.  The organization generates at least a percentage of its revenue through the sale of goods and services [adapted from Kevin Lynch (pictured left); Advertising on Higher Ground].

Common comes from the word “commons,” which describes a relationship to the community as a whole. Common good intuitively includes a regard for the planet, respect for individuals’ human rights, and support of communities.

The word “enterprise” is also self-explanatory—and speaks to revenue generated from the sale of goods and services. Common good enterprise is clearer than other terms such as its more popular sibling, “social enterprise.”  Does “social enterprise” exclusively describe businesses? Or non-profits? Does “social” include the planet? Only leaps of the imagination can make the connection.

Conclusion

The labels we use for this new field matter.  Easy-to-grasp language provides a framework to help the public co-create this emerging sector. Clear terms can translate into financial benefit. Why not pass legislation providing government procurement advantages to common good enterprises—whether companies or civil society organizations?  Could such language catalyze new capital pools?

It’s time to embrace “common good enterprise”—a term for organizations using business principles in support of the common good that will help mainstream the movement and make opportunities this field opens up a reality.

Is it time for a rejuvenated nomenclature?

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Gather With SVN to Celebrate Fancy Foods & Emerging Entrepreneurs

Posted on: January 11th, 2012 by socialventurenetwork No Comments

Written by Jessica Young

In 2011, SVN launched a new partnership with the Hitachi Foundation, to bring new emerging and innovative entrepreneurs into the fold of the SVN community.  The Hitachi Foundation has generously sponsored its Yoshiyama Young Entrepreneurs with SVN membership, and we were thrilled to have many of the awardees join us at our Fall Conference, including 2011 SVN Innovation Award winner Jason Aramburu.

The Yoshiyama Young Entrepreneurs Program identifies and supports inspiring young entrepreneurs who are operating businesses that create greater economic opportunity and help to improve the lives of low-wealth individuals in America.  Awardees who have recently joined SVN include: Jason Aramburu, re:char; Caleb Zigas and Leticia Landa, La Cocina, Inc.; Rohan Mathew and Joseph Shure, The Intersect Fund; Jessamyn Rodriguez, Hot Bread Kitchen; Andrew Butcher, GTECH; Alex Velez and Nikhil Arora, BTTR Ventures; Blaine Mickens, Young Picasso Painting; Garrett Neiman, SEE College Prep; Tyler Gage and Dan MacCombie, Runa; Lacy Asbill and Elana Metz, Moving Forward Education; and Andy Posner, Capital Good Fund.

To partner with one of our newest members and promote their incredible work, we’ll be serving delicious food from La Cocina at our next San Francisco Local Gathering.  La Cocina is a non-profit incubator kitchen providing affordable commercial kitchen space and technical assistance to low-income and immigrant female entrepreneurs who are launching, growing and formalizing food businesses.  Its services help entrepreneurs break down barriers to entry in the highly regulated and competitive food industry, turning informal restaurants into sustainable and thriving legal businesses.  The incubator is home to over 30 rising business, and many more graduates, that serve diverse flavors from around the world.

My introduction to La Cocina came at the San Francisco Street Food Festival, an annual event thrown by the non-profit.  Inventive (and delectable) fare sampled included moth larvae tacos from Mónica Martínez’s Don Bugito snackeria.  While our Local Gathering menu will be less adventurous, their tamales have received rave reviews as well.

It’s only fitting that the local gathering of culinary treats follow the Winter Fancy Food Show where SVN members will showcase their local, fair trade and organic food products, and SVN’s Deb Nelson will lead the keynote address with Greg Steltenpohl, founder of Odwalla Juices.  Our Local Gathering, sponsored by B-Lab, will follow on January 17th at the Hub San Francisco.  To complement La Cocina’s food, we’ll be serving drinks and dessert from two B Corps, Mendocino Wine and Fearless Chocolate.  SVN members, B Corps and prospective SVN members are invited to join and connect with like-minded peers.  To review membership guidelines for prospective members, visit www.svn.org/guidelines, or contact Erin Roach at erinr@svn.org.

Find out more and register here.

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Being Socially Responsible Prepared Rhiza for Fast Growth

Posted on: January 4th, 2012 by socialventurenetwork No Comments

Written by Jennifer Neutel, Axiom News

Web-based software company Rhiza Labs is experiencing tremendous growth, and being socially responsible has helped the company be prepared for the heightened demand, says CEO Josh Knauer.

He says being socially responsible is “just in our DNA.”

Rhiza Labs has seen double-digit percentage growth from 2010-2011, says Josh.

Josh Knauer

“(Our) experience in trying to do other things intentionally as a company in terms of the social and environmental and sustainability aspects of what we do has prepared us for this moment,” Josh tells Axiom News.

“If people have to work, which right now how our society is structured that is the case, then business I think is the driving force behind trying to make that work experience more productive and more pleasant and more palatable.”

He says businesses that understand the value of content employees and feel good about what they are doing are building better companies.

Companies that realize being socially responsible and sustainable is good business are helping to further that agenda in the world, he adds.

“(I hope) all businesses realize that by being more sustainable, by treating workers well, that is the right way to do business — it’s not a sustainable way to do business, it’s just the only way to do business,” says Josh.

One of the company’s practices is to get to know each of its customers really well, says Josh. While it might seem like this would be hard to scale, he says being intentional about customer relations is part of the challenge.

Rhiza’s customers include government agencies, non-profit organizations, foundations and corporations.

Rhiza builds user interfaces to help businesses collect data and bring meaning to the data through visualization and analysis. The data is used to help make better decisions, bring understanding to complex issues and collaborate with others.

For example, Rhiza is working on a project with the Chesapeake Bay Funders Network, a group of 25 foundations that fund most of the non-profit watershed production activities in the Chesapeake watershed.

Josh says the project is dealing with massive volumes of data that are being collected and aggregated by watershed groups collecting water quality sample data.

Data coming in from governments around industry, pollution and soil quality is for the first time going into a common information ecosystem that is available through the web so constituents can access it and make better decisions around quality, says Josh.

Based in Pittsburgh, PA, Rhiza announced Dec. 5 it will be opening a west coast office in Seattle in January.

Josh is a member and board member of the Social Venture Network.

Read more about Rhiza’s impact through its recent collaboration with the Tides Foundation.  SVN member Irene Kao shares how Rhiza’s digital mapping technology helped Tides analyze its grant-making activities to improve US school systems.

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