Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Social Impact of Pro Bono Consulting

How big firms can change the landscape of philanthropy


A McKinsey study of 196 C-suite nonprofit leaders released in March, 2013 explored today's state of leadership in the social sector to uncover what leaders need to succeed.  The study found that two primary barriers preventing nonprofit leaders from securing the resources they need:
  • ·         A lack of understanding on how to find the right resources; and
  • ·         A feeling that the right resources are inaccessible because they are too expensive.

While this finding is not surprising, it is unfortunate. The social sector needs a lot of pro bono resources in marketing and communications, strategy, HR, technology, board leadership, legal and finance, that can dramatically enhance the effectiveness of their organization’s mission. Professionals from the big fortune 500 firms have the expertise and resources needed to contribute towards the social sector and most of them are willing to make an impact. If this gap can be bridged, Non profits can find right resources and maximize their utility.  Taproot Foundation is one of the nonprofit organizations that make business talent available to organizations working to improve society. Taproot engages the nation’s millions of business professionals in pro bono services by partnering with companies to develop their pro-bono programs.


Taproot is currently working with companies such as Deloitte, Capital One, Wells Fargo, HP, American express, Gap, Chevron etc to avail the pro bono services for the Non-profit sector. But Taproot is not the only one, big consulting firms such as Bain’s and Mckinsey’s of the world are already involved in pro bono projects. Bain is regularly involved in pro bono consulting services for NPOs, including the National Volunteer and Philanthropy Center to refresh their strategy; EEN (Enabling Employers Network) to develop and implement an evaluation system to recognize companies’ efforts in employing PWDs; and United World College South East Asia (UWCSEA) on development of the foundation’s strategies.

Although organizations such as Taproot and big firms with pro bono culture exist, we are yet far away from completely bridging the gap between the availability of right resources and their utilization in the social sector. A huge number of talented professionals who are willing to contribute towards a social cause know no other way than donations or charity. Most of these professionals engage in relief work, while their expertise is in development projects. If all the large firms start encouraging pro bono services with their own industry expertise and partner up with organizations such as taproot or NGO’s, the Non-profit sector can access the right resources inexpensively.  




Monday, May 5, 2014

Social Enterprises and the Future Development of the Amazon


Background


With an area encompassing 2,100,000 sq. mi, the Amazon Rainforest represents over half of the planet’s remaining rainforests and it contains the most biodiverse tropical ecosystem in the world. It covers roughly 40% of South American, or the size of the forty-eight contiguous United States. Its geographic magnitude makes human exploration unavoidable. It is estimated that twenty million people inhabit the Amazon Basin, with the native population representing 1.6 million people across over 300 different languages.   In spite of its abundant natural resources, the area detains some of the lowest Human Development Indexes in the region. High illiteracy rates, incipient health care and an economy based on subsistence agriculture perpetuate the poverty cycle. In addition, the economic growth experienced by countries in the region has expanded the agricultural frontier, making land more expensive and jobs scarcer.

 

Traditional Economic Development

Fishbone
The expansion of the agricultural frontier, fostered by the commodity boom and the economic growth of countries such as Brazil, Peru and Ecuador, intensified the rate of deforestation. Large cattle ranches that use large machinery were responsible for 70-75% of the deforestation. The problem is aggravated by farmers who use fire to clear the land for new fields. The interior of the Amazon is being divided by large roads, energy lines and transport projects that increase the rate of deforestation, in a process known as fishbone. 

Extractive Reserves


To combat this process, the Brazilian government has established Extractive Reserves. These areas, known for their social and environmental potential, are leased via a concession for the sustainable extraction of renewable natural resources.  There are currently fifty Extractive Reserves. After six years of testing and monitoring the activities from this system, it has been proven that this system is feasible and can work in harmony with environmental protection. Monitoring data indicates that the forest in these areas remained the same throughout the project. Biodiversity indicators showed a growth in the number of mammals, although subsistence hunting is allowed.
 

Fostering Social Enterprises


Natura, Brazil's largest manufacturer of cosmetics and beauty products, opened an industrial complex in close proximity to an Extractive Reserve in the state of Para. This project, called " Ecopark,” will focus on the processing of natural oils. It is part of Natura’s Programa Amazônia (Amazon Program), which seeks to unite science and the traditional knowledge of extractive communities to generate innovative products, job opportunities and income for families in the region. Natura has sought to create products in harmony with nature in a sustainable socio-economic model. The program’s objective is to increase the use of cosmetic raw materials originated in the region from 11% to 30%, benefiting more than 10,000 families employed in the collection of these natural resources.
Development of Sustainable Businesses in the Amazon
(in Portuguese)
 

Future Challenges


The number of commercial products from the forest will need to be increased. Large distances and poor infrastructure are a great disadvantage. To overcome these, partnerships with private firms that foster innovation and research will be paramount. In addition, it is necessary to monitor the impact of a greater economic development and the improvement in quality of life and the use of sustainable resources. Extractive Reserves are based on a limited number of individuals who harvest a limited area. If this population increases, so will the pressure on natural resources. Finally, this model needs to be self-sustaining in the long run and create more value than traditional cattle ranches and soy plantations.
 
Sources:
Butler, Rhett. "Amazon People." Mongabay.com. N.p., n.d. Web. 05 May 2014.
Dainese, Ivonete. "Natura Inaugura Complexo Industrial Sustentável Na Amazônia." UltimoInstante : Notícias De Hoje. N.p., 13 Feb. 2014. Web. 05 May 2014.
 
Valiante, Jose Otavio. "Producao Sustentavel em Reservas Extrativistas." Universidade Federal de Rondonia. N.p. Web. 05 May 2014
 
Da Silva, Jose Maria Cardoso et al. (2005). "The Fate of the Amazonian Areas of Endemism". Conservation Biology 19 (3): 689–694

 

Saturday, May 3, 2014

WaterCredit: Using Microfinance to Address the Water Crisis

Water is one of the most valuable resources on the plant. However, with drinkable tap water and an abundance of water bottles available, clean water is often taken for granted in developed countries. In contrast, more that 780 million people around the world do not have access to clean water, a number equivalent to more than two and half times the population of the United States. The lack of access to clean water has dire health impacts, with 3.4 million people dying from a water related disease each year.


                                                                                 
Women are particularly impacted by the lack of access to clean water. In many areas, women are responsible for collecting clean water for daily cooking and cleaning activities. When the water source is remote, women spend a disproportionate amount of time traveling to access it. Young female teenagers who help their mothers with these chores are forced to skip school to travel far distances, resulting in them falling behind in their studies and limiting their future career prospects


Many NGOs have attempted to address the water crisis through well and hand pump projects. Unfortunately, while some projects have been successful in bringing access to clean water closer to people, the majority of these projects have failed. Statistics published by the UN Joint Monitoring Program estimates that water projects in Africa have a failure rate as high as 60%. These failures can be attributed to a couple different factors:
  • Locals did not have a sense of pride or ownership of the facility so it would fall out of use
  • People were not trained on maintenance and facility upkeep
  • There was an unreliable supply chain for project parts
  • People had insufficient knowledge of the importance of clean water and hygiene so they did not use the facility 

The non-profit Water.org has taken an innovative new approach in addressing the water crisis by using microfinance tools with their WaterCredit program. Through WaterCredit, financial institutions are connected to families and individuals who are given loans to pay for water connection services. As the loans are paid back, they are given to other people in need, creating a sustainable cycle.

WaterCredit differs from other water projects in that it empowers communities and individuals to be responsible for their own water development and operations. People are involved with the decision making process and thus have a more vested interest in the success of the projects.

The video below gives a brief overview of the water crisis, Water.org, and the WaterCredit program. There is still quite a bit of work before access to clean water is no longer an issue around the world, but innovative programs like WaterCredit create a renewed sense of hope and urgency in addressing the water crisis.
  

Sources:
(2)      Voss Foundation. A look at why water projects fail (when organizations don’t plan sustainably. http://www.vossfoundation.org/a-look-at-why-water-projects-fail/.
(3)      Bornstein, David. (2013 August 21). The Real Future of Clean Water. The New York Times. http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/08/21/the-real-future-of-clean-water/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0.
(4)      http://water.org

New Education for a New Generation

Education has not changed in the last 500 years. The method that has been applied since the industrial revolution of graduating students in “classes” or “production lots” has lost its usefulness and in many situations, it fails to respond to the demanding and changing environment of the global economy we live on now.  On one side employers complaint about finding everyday more difficult to find candidates with the skills they require however unemployment rate has still not recovered from the recent recession and there are thousands of people struggling to find a job some of them even with high education degrees.  Education should be a bridge between employers and students providing companies the talent and skills they require for a changing and dynamic environment and providing students the opportunity to be productive and develop a fulfilling career. Additionally, the current education system is very capital intensive. A vast amount of human capital and physical infrastructure is required to deploy the education, which has caused student debt to rise exponentially in the past years. This trend is not sustainable and the education system requires a major disruption to catch up with the recent social and economic challenges.

Online education has been thought to be one the most viable solutions however, it hasn’t attracted enough number of students nor generated results that can be compared to the traditional method of education to consider that is the future in education. Nonetheless, a number of prestigious universities have ventured in online education uploading a number of courses and providing all the students who complete them an official certification. EdX for example, is one of the most popular websites providing courses from MIT, Harvard and other Top Tier Universities worldwide. During its launch, a core course in circuits and electronics from MIT was uploaded and 150,000 students from more than 50 different countries enrolled in it. This number is more than 10x the student body of the complete university. The course is hard and only 42,000 students passed it successfully which is in line with the percent of MIT students that passes it regularly. However to understand the scale that online education allows, in order to teach that many students an MIT professor would have to teach for two semester every year for forty years. There is no doubt internet and information technologies allow to scale content at an unimaginable rate. However, a very important element of the education system is the opportunity to connect with peers that have similar interests, listen and learn from professor experiences and build a lasting network. Online education cannot provide the human component that is still highly valuable in education today.


The path seems to be a blend model between the traditional and online education. Combining strengths from both approaches is what is providing the best results lately. Concepts like flipping the classroom in which lectures are video standardized and students are able to go through them at their own pace, pause and replay them and then come to classroom with questions and do homework with teachers are providing encouraging results. The possibilities that internet technology provides are very attractive. The academic content can be communicated through more entertaining and engaging means such as gamification and social media. At the same time, only online content and virtual interaction with tutors have failed to engage students. The human factor is what makes education more comprehensive. With a correct balance between technology and teacher based learning the results in students are more effective and less costly. Technology provides the opportunity to guarantee a high quality and standardized content while it leaves space for teacher to do the more personal aspect of education which is land the concepts learned into a day-to-day practical approach and together with classmates provide the social touch that all students require for a comprehensive development. 

Posted for MBA student and author Carlos Farah

Outcomes Measurement

As an MBA seeking employ in the nonprofit sector, I am somewhat of a rarity. That’s not to say that the nonprofit sector is completely devoid of MBAs, but there are a number of barriers that stop the average MBA from going into the nonprofit sector. Among them are lower pay, and lower perceived prestige—many of the conversations I’ve had with my MBA classmates involve assertions that nonprofits are, on the whole, well-meaning but poorly organized. And at the heart of this assertion is the claim that nonprofits don’t know how to measure their impact, and therefore are often “just throwing spaghetti at the wall and seeing what sticks.”

I have two primary assertions that I’d like to defend in this post:
·         Nonprofits will benefit from becoming better at measuring outcomes (not an earth shattering assertion).
·         For profits aren’t that great at measuring the very things they encourage nonprofits of measuring poorly.



Measurement of outcomes
First, it is important to understand the difference between outputs and outcomes. For the sake of discussion, I will define outputs as things you do and outcomes as the end results of things you do on things you care about.  Outputs sound like this: “120 books given to a local literacy organization;” “100,000 hours of volunteer work provided by our program.” Outputs are helpful tracking numbers, but they are like “inventory” numbers in a for-profit.  Outcomes, on the other hand, answer the question “what did my outputs do?” My 120 books and 100,000 volunteer hours helped move a cohort of students from 15% of students on grade level in reading to 29% (a 14% increase). My work with this workforce development program helped make a 20% in the 5-year recidivism rate of the participants involved.

This highlights a key point—outcomes come in different flavors (namely short, medium, and long-term). K-12 education has recently become a core passion area of mine, so I will take this example. Many education, youth development, and poverty alleviation groups seek to end poverty, both on the individual and generational levels. Here is a progression of metrics that they may engage in:
·         Outputs—Number of students enrolled in school/an after school program
·         Short-term outcomes—Changes in school attendance rates (which is abysmally low in many of the communities these organizations operate in); changes in test scores, reading comprehension, math ability, reasoning ability and critical thinking, etc.
·         Medium-term outcomes—High school graduation rates. (In my admittedly limited experience, it seems that few nonprofits measure and report these outcomes, with education being perhaps an exception; I’ve seen few do this well). I would even put college acceptance rates in this category.
·         Long-term outcomes—College graduation rates; number of students employed soon after college graduation; long-term earning potential of graduates.
·         Very-long-term outcomes—average net worth of area families; average earning potential/employment level of area families.

If your goal is to end cycles of poverty in an area, it is going to take a long time to see those effects come to fruition. But if you are measuring progress against a BHAG (Big, Hairy, Audacious Goal) like ending generational poverty, it is not enough to simply improve the test scores of 2nd graders. Those second graders need to grow into high school graduates who thrive in college and find gainful employment. College attendance (and graduation) needs to become the norm in a low-income community, rather than an oddity. Only when these things happen is the mission truly being accomplished.

Why nonprofits benefit from measuring
Nonprofits benefit from measuring predominantly because the words “proven effective” are very effective in attracting the top two resources nonprofits need—talented people and money. Simply put, people are more attracted to working for a nonprofit that is effectively accomplishing its mission than one that simply doesn’t know how it’s doing. And people are much more willing to invest in such nonprofits.

Turns out it didn’t take much to support that assertion.

Why traditional business are actually not that great at this
My MBA friends often seem to believe in the superior measuring ability of for profits. Businesses are much clearer about their (economic) bottom line than nonprofits are about their (social) bottom line. But note two things:

1)      Nonprofits are actually pretty good at measuring their economic bottom lines as well (I say this facetiously, as they submit yearly audited financial statements, so they are equally as good as their for profit counterparts).
2)      For profits seem to do a poor job measuring anything but short-term economic outcomes—namely profit, revenue, and market share (market share could be argued as medium term, depending on the context). The fact of the matter is that corporations, even ones with great CSR departments, do not seem to have an overall handle of the environmental and social effects they create in any given year. And they definitely don’t track the long-term effect they have on the earning potential of an area, or on poverty, or literacy, or anything of the sort. In fact, many businesses don’t even measure their own market share—they typically buy data from companies like Nielsen or Kantar to do that.

The fact of the matter is that social impact is much harder to measure than profit. That does not excuse nonprofits from measuring, but is simply to say that neither sector is good at social measurement yet.

The moral of the story
This world needs top talent in highly effective nonprofits. Nonprofits need to measure their outcomes, not just their outputs, to figure out what is working and to draw that talent (and the resources to pay them) into the organization. MBAs need to realize that measuring profit is easy, and that if their company needed to measure social impact, it would be pretty horrific at it. And everyone needs to start identifying what their long- and very-long term social impact metrics might look like, and start working towards those outcomes.

Photo from www.ouropendoors.com

Friday, May 2, 2014

The Art of Social Enterprise


John Adams once said, I must study politics and war, that our sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. Our sons ought to study mathematics and philosophy, geography, natural history and naval architecture, navigation, commerce and agriculture in order to give their children a right to study painting, poetry, music, architecture, statuary, tapestry and porcelain.”


Like John Adams, most people traditionally view artistic pursuits as a pursuit solely of the privileged. It is rarely seen as a pursuit of the marginalized, the underrepresented or the vulnerable. And oftentimes, this perception is true. When one lacks basic necessities, the needs of the body take precedence over the needs of the creative mind. A hungry mouth tells few stories.  


Recently, however, individuals and enterprises have begun to bring art, in all its various forms, to groups who either have no access to it or who have surprising need of it. These organizations are bringing film, stories, art all over the world, from the veterans of California to the children of Syria and the slums of Africa.


David’s shredded and repurposed uniform depicts him with “his buddy,” a young Iraqi boy. Photo courtesy of David Keefe - See more at: http://truthatlas.com

The Combat Paper Project is an initiative based in San Francisco, California. Veterans suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress use various forms of paper-based storytelling to claim their own stories and identities. In a symbolic journey, participants deconstruct their military uniforms into pulp, which is later turned into paper. This blank sheet of paper is used a medium for them to paint, draw, design or write their vision of their own post-combat future. The Combat Paper Project has traveled to Canada, England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Kosovo.




Safa Faki lives in Athmeh, Syria, a town of 4,000 people which became home to 30,000 due to refugees of war. As a trained artist Safa saw the children in the camps and thought only of the power of art. She started visiting the camp and offering drawing lessons, both to relieve the children’s boredom and to help them process the trauma they were enduring. She then uses their artwork in exhibitions to non-violently raise awareness over the war and its effect on the generation of children who must grow up in the midst of it.



The Kibera Film School in Kenya, Africa is the only comprehensive production training center in the slums of East Africa. Founded by Nathan Collett, it comes from the belief that people should be able their own stories, regardless of their circumstance. With a grant from the Oscars, the Film School empowers talented storytellers from the slums to craft and share their own movies with the world.  



Socially Responsible Investing

Socially Responsible Investing (SRI) is the practice of investing with both a financial and a social goal. It is sometimes referred to as sustainable, socially conscious, mission, green, or ethical investing[1]. SRI is in many ways is a means of social activism. Investors reflect their interests, social concerns, and politics through their investments. SRI continues to grow as demand rises from socially conscious investors. Clients are particularly galvanized around issues of human rights, weapons and tobacco.  In 1995, SRI investments in the United States were $639 billion compared with $3.74 trillion in 2012. Firms are incentivized to promote SRI because it is good PR and there is little performance tradeoff between SRI strategies and traditional strategies[2].

Many socially responsible investors manage their funds through screening companies, counties and municipalities for certain positive or negative policies[3]. Screens can be characterized three ways:
  • Negative Screen- the practice of not investing in companies whose products and business practices to not meet those investors’ standards (morally, ethically, environmentally, etc.)[4].
  • Positive Screen- the practice of selecting companies with strong corporate social responsibility platforms to invest in[5].
  • Restricted Screen – the practice of incorporating companies into a portfolio who may have questionable practices only if those practices are deemed to be “not that bad.[6]
Through these screens fund managers can assemble portfolios which match the ethical and moral outlook of investors. Investing becomes a means to support the firms which do good and “punish” those firms that do not. In the same way that Investing is a method of activism. So is divestment. The best example of this was the campaign to divest from apartheid South Africa. In an international campaign, which lasted from the mid-1960s through the late 1980s, activist’s targeted companies with operations in or relationships with South Africa. Paired with traditional methods of activism (workshops, film showings, picket lines and consumer boycotts), divestment caused billions of rand to leave South Africa adding to the pressure to end apartheid[8].

Clearly SRI has a role to play in promoting social good and activism. This being said I have personally found some limitations to SRI. These include:
  1.  Lack of public information regarding a company’s social and environmental practices. Regulations concerning the disclosure of social and environmental impact are hard to come by. Many companies have corporate social responsibility reports, but with no regulation around what should be included in these reports it is hard for an investor to know if they are getting the full picture. On the bright side, more and more guidelines are coming out around sustainability accounting and reporting, so investors will definitely have a better picture moving forward.
  2. Difficulty monitoring changes in company policy. Companies change policies all the time. Depending on how often an investor monitors his or her portfolio, it can be difficult to keep track of whether or not the companies in their portfolio still pass their screens.  
  3. Limited opportunities to practice shareholder advocacy. One of the benefits of owning equity stocks is the ability to participate in shareholder advocacy. But unfortunately, if an investor does not own a significant portion of the business there are limitations to how they can direct the overall vision, strategy and operations of a firm.




[1] Chamberlin, Micheal. (2013 April 23). Socially Responsible Investing: What You Need to Know. Forbes. Retrieved from http://www.forbes.com/sites/feeonlyplanner/2013/04/24/socially-responsible-investing-what-you-need-to-know/.
[2] BNY Mellon: Invested in Market Integrity. (2013 June 12). What’s Driving the Growth in Socially Responsible Investing?. 3bl Media. Retrieved from http://3blmedia.com/News/CSR/Whats-Driving-Growth-Socially-Responsible-Investing.
[3] Chamberlin
[4] http://www.sriconference.com/d/SRIC14GlossaryofTerms20140410.pdf
[5] http://www.sriconference.com/d/SRIC14GlossaryofTerms20140410.pdf
[6] Hodes, Jocelyn Black. (2013 June 2). What is Socially Responsible Investing?. Yahoo Finance. Retrieved from http://finance.yahoo.com/news/socially-responsible-investing-000000182.html.  
[8] Counts, Cecelie. (2013 January 27). Just One Weapon in Battle Against Apartheid. The New York Times. Retrived From http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2013/01/27/is-divestment-an-effective-means-of-protest/divestment-was-just-one-weapon-in-battle-against-apartheid