introduction to social entrepreneurshi p by – rahul jain
TRANSCRIPT
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Introduction to Social EntrepreneurshipBY – RAHUL JAIN
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Overview Introduction
Fad or Paradigm Shift
New Generational Values
A Model for Social Entrepreneurship and Leadership Development
Role of Education in Developing the Social Entrepreneurial Leaders
Implications and Discussion
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Challenge: Access to Clean Water 1.2 billion people are drinking unsafe water
Problem: transport (retrieval to consumption)
Seeding innovation in the water sector
Acumen Fund, IDEO w/backing from Gates Foundation
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Social Entrepreneurship Defined
A social entrepreneur is someone who recognizes a social problem and uses entrepreneurial principles to organize, create, and manage a venture to make social change….rather than bringing a concept to market to address a consumer problem, social entrepreneurs attempt to bring a concept to market to address a public problem.
(Alex Nicholls, Oxford University’s Skoll Centre)
Social entrepreneurship takes many forms, but at it’s core is characterized by a leaders’ sense of social consciousness and a desire to make a positive impact on society
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…adapted from an ancient Chinese proverb
Philanthropy/Charity
“Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day…”
The NGO/Government Model“…teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime”
Social Entrepreneurship
“Provide him access to capital to create a sustainable fishing business at a fair rate of return and change the world”
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Challenges Understanding of Complex Problems(poverty, access to clean water, healthcare, environmental pollution,sustainability in all its forms)
Taking a A Different Approach to Business
◦ Collaborative effort◦ Triple Bottom Line Thinking◦ Leadership Reframed
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Why a “new” generation of Leaders?What do our students care about?
What inspires this generation?
…the anecdotal evidence
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A New Generation of Business Leaders
“socially aware, globally engaged…”-
--Professor Dave GershonNational Institute for Pharmaco-Economics
and Healthcare Policy Social Venture Incubator
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IBM Global Student Study 2010
Three most important ‘external’ forces over the next three years
◦ Globalization◦ Environment◦ Sustainability
Source: IBM Global Student Study 2010, IBM Global CEO Study 2010
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Representative Comments
“I’ll consider economic performance and societal/environmental performance as two parts of the same process of wealth creation. We need to rethink what wealth means” (student, France)
“Resources are depleting heavily. Govenrments will now take things into their hands and keep their resources in their country so they will last longer.” (student, India)
“Natural resources..are becoming more scarce….there will be a need for collaboration among nations to find solutions to these problems, which means that organizations will be more interconnected.” (student, USA)
“Global thinking is a must for leaders, but it must be associated with a focus on sustainability and integrity, otherwise businesses will be short-lived.” (student, Japan)
Less than 4 in 10 students believe their education has prepared them well to address the new realities of a shared planet
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Insights from the IBM Study
To meet future challenges….◦ Rethink Business Value◦ Create Stronger Global Connections◦ Inspire Creative Leadership
Source: IBM Global Student Study 2010, IBM Global CEO Study 2010
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What’s Needed? “…Collaborative, action-oriented, real-world problem-solving was by far the best strategy to advance knowledge and learning.”
(---reflecting on W. R. Harper’s beliefs about higher education in Benson, et. al. (2005): “Integrating a commitment to the public good into the institutional fabric.”
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Developing Social Entrepreneurs
Teaching Business Valuation from a “Triple Bottom Line” perspective:
3 Ps + 1
◦ People◦ Planet◦ Profit
AND……..Partnerships
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(cont.)Who are most likely to become Social Entrepreneurs?
Innovators –(Psychological attribute)
Achievement oriented –Psych
Independent –Psych
Inner-directed --Psych
Tolerant of risk --Psych
Tolerant of ambiguity --Psych
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Combining Risk Aversion and Innovativeness to Trigger Entrepreneurship
High innovativeness and low risk aversion = Entrepreneur
Non-innovative and low risk aversion = Gambler
High innovativeness and high risk aversion = Dreamer
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Social Entrepreneurship and Leadership characteristics
Social Entrepreneur (SE) recognizes a social problem and all its complexity and binds the problem with a vision that has the potential to reshape the situation directly and change public attitudes that perpetuated the original problem
SE holds significant personal credibility (referent power) which allows them to tap critical resources and actually build the necessary network of participating persons and organizations
SE generates followers’ commitment to a project by framing the project in term of important social values, rather than purely economic terms. This results in a sense of collective purpose between and among the social entrepreneur and those who join the effort.
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Common ‘Myths’ about Social and Commercial Entrepreneurship
SEs are anti-business – rather collaboration for alignment and mutual benefit
Difference between SE and Commercial Entrepreneurship (CE) is ‘GREED’ – many SEs are also CEs.
SEs run non-profits – social entrepreneurship process can occur in any sector and with any legal status
(continued on next slide)
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(Continued ) - Common ‘Myths’
SEs are born, not made – people can grow and learn to be comfortable with risk and ambiguity, as well as have their level of community awareness elevated. Ethical maturity, following Kolb’s theory of moral development, can be instrumental in SE creation.
SEs are misfits – They value different goals, but certainly are anything but
SEs usually fail – while slightly less than 50% of CEs actually fail, an even smaller percentage of SEs actually fail (<30%)[Cordes, et.al., 2001].
SEs love risk – there is little empirical evidence for this claim, rather all successful entrepreneurs utilize “well thought out risk taking. By thinking, analyzing, and planning well, they mitigate risk and function under calculated risk paradigm.
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Social Entrepreneurship Today
Two excellent, creative examples of Social Entrepreneurship in action can be found at the following web sites: http://www.path.org/ and http://www.DonorsChoose.org/ .
Both can be used by students to gain a “feel” of Social Entrepreneurship in the real world.
[email protected] or [email protected] for more information!
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A Model for Social Entrepreneurs
Source: Alex Nichols, Oxford University,Skoll Centre
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Leadership Qualities (LPI)
Leadership Practices◦ Challenge the Process◦ Inspire Shared Vision◦ Model the Way◦ Enable Others to Act◦ Encourage the Heart
Source: Kouses & Posner, The Leadership Challenge
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Leadership from a Global Perspective: GELI
Visioning Empowering Energizing Designing and Aligning Rewarding and Feedback Team Building
Outside Orientation Global Mindset Tenacity Emotional Intelligence Life Balance Resilience to Stress
Source: DeVries, Global Executive Leadership Inventory
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Where Can These Behaviors Be Developed?
Education Experience Practice
◦ All focused on ◦ People◦ Planet◦ Profit◦ Partnership
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Leveraging Education Experiential Learning: Service Learning and Internships
An approach to Mission, Purpose and Making Education Relevant
A Strategy for Community Engagement
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Skoll Foundation Vision: live in a sustainable world of peace and prosperity.
Mission: drives large-scale change by investing in, connecting, and celebrating social entrepreneurs and other innovators dedicated to solving the world’s most pressing problems.
Example: Funding Root Capital and the Starbucks connection
http://www.skollfoundation.org/nytimes-fixes-filling-the-gap-between-farm-an
d-fair-trade/#more-3679
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Business: The VC Community
Good Capital QuickTime™ and a decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
investment firm that increases the flow of capital to innovative ventures creating market-based solutions to inequality and poverty….invests in the most promising social enterprises and give them the tools and guidance they need to succeed. In addition,Good Capital actively leads the development of the emerging social capital market. …shares a deep commitment to the creation of a new,
I informed, and passionate world of investing that strategically moves more capital to good.
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Alliance Relationship
Observations and Reflections
Formation of abstract Concepts and
Generalizations cultivatesCreativity & Innovation
Experiential Learning
Cycle
Testing implications of concepts in new
situations
The Experiential Learning ModelApplied to Strategic Alliances in Social Ventures
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Implications and Discussion
Identifying opportunities for innovation that address social concerns
Enabling a generation to gain experience with social enterprises
Reframing how we define stakeholder interest and what it takes to maximize shareholder value
Incremental Change versus Game-Changing--Need this be an either/or proposition?
Questions?