Growth sector: 'Social entrepreneurship' is trending

While American entrepreneurship has dipped, 'social entrepreneurs' geared toward melding the ideals of the non-profit sector with for-profit business have been finding traction.

|
Kevin Wolf/AP Images for A Billion + Change/File
Case Foundation CEO Jean Case speaks at the launch of A Billion + Change, a national campaign to mobilize billions of pro bono and skills-based service resources by 2013, at a ceremony on Capitol Hill on Thursday, Nov. 3, 2011 in Washington.

One arena where American start-up firms’ numbers have increased in recent years, rather than shrunk, is the space called “social entrepreneurship” – at the crossroads between profit-based growth and not-for-profit ideals of changing the world for the better.

One face of the trend is Revolution Foods, a company founded by two mothers – Kristin Groos Richmond and Kirsten Saenz Tobey – in 2006. The motive was to give American children access to healthier school lunches and, more broadly, help transform American eating habits. But to achieve that goal they had to deliver at a price schools could afford – while making a profit. By 2012 they had $54 million in annual revenue and 942 employees.

It’s hard to say exactly how many for-profit firms have been founded in recent years by people explicitly putting social good alongside profit as a top objective. But here’s one peripheral indicator: In the database of US newspaper and news wire services collected by the firm Nexis, the phrase “social entrepreneurship” cropped up in only a handful of articles in the early 1990s. That rose to hundreds in the early 2000s, and thousands since 2006.

“It is really a growing trend for ... entrepreneurs to say, ‘Hey, I also want to have social impact,’ ” says Sean Greene, a former entrepreneur who is now with the nonprofit Case Foundation. Part of the reason is that social goals are wired into the mind-set of the Millennial generation, he says.

Mr. Greene, who is helping mobilize more money for these start-ups, estimates that several hundred social-impact investing funds already exist in the United States. One challenge is simply for potential investors to wrap their minds around a relatively new field – and help define it. Are they trying to simply plow in seed money for a good cause and eventually get their money back? Or do they expect returns comparable to what they’d get from any other start-up?

As with traditional business, the social-impact landscape is increasingly global. One American firm, d.light, aims to turn a profit by bringing solar-powered devices to developing nations.

And Greene is part of a National Advisory Board on impact investing in the US, which parallels similar efforts in other Group of Eight countries.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
What is the Monitor difference? Tackling the tough headlines – with humanity. Listening to sources – with respect. Seeing the story that others are missing by reporting what so often gets overlooked: the values that connect us. That’s Monitor reporting – news that changes how you see the world.
QR Code to Growth sector: 'Social entrepreneurship' is trending
Read this article in
https://www.csmonitor.com/Business/2014/0601/Growth-sector-Social-entrepreneurship-is-trending
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
https://www.csmonitor.com/subscribe