PATHFINDER Chats with Canadian Radio Show

We chatted with radio show host Frankie Picasso on the Mission Unstoppable show on TogiNet Radio live last week.

It was an exciting experience and opportunity to discuss PATHFINDER’s story, awesome projects and way forward!

Check out the interview here!

We’re live Tomorrow on TogiNet Radio

Tune in Tomorrow!

Our radio interview with Frankie Picasso is live on Mission Unstoppable on TogiNet Radio tomorrow from 1:00 to 2:00 pm EST.

Go to www.toginet.com and click on the ‘LISTEN LIVE’ button on the upper right corner to tune in during the live broadcast and listen either from  www.thegoodradionetwork.com, or 48 hours later from itunes.com.

We can’t wait to connect with Frankie Picasso and chat about PATHFINDER’s journey, current projects and way forward!

Trend Report: Impact Investing & Social Entrepreneurship in 2016

By Shivani Singh

Joel Solomon

A while ago, I had the distinct opportunity to speak with Mr. Joel Solomon, Renewal Funds Chair & Cofounder, and Hollyhock Chair. He had been so generous with his time and advice for PATHFINDER. Imagine my excitement when he accepted my recent request for a more detailed follow-up interview.

A quick note first: I cannot overstate the importance of the information here, certainly for investors and entrepreneurs alike, but also for various leaders, influencers and for impending decisions that will shape the future of our world.

What are the greater trends?

Is more money being diverted to socially driven businesses? Are people catching on to the benefits of investing for social impact alongside financial gain? Are financiers looking into the feasibility of creative new models?

In general, we are now past vision, invention, and seeding of these ideas. We are in early growth stage. Awareness still remains largely limited to those who are directly involved. However, social entrepreneurship, enlightened investors, the questioning of conventional wealth management assumptions, and emergence of a new generation of values are combining in a powerful formula. This formula is gaining momentum, credibility, proof of concept and initial mainstream acceptance.

There is tremendous opportunity for emerging entrepreneurs to benefit financially from creating ways for people to align their money closely with their values.

Wealth managers are the first to feel the trend via pressure from clients. They’ve struggled to provide comprehensive, satisfactory solutions. Firms are repackaging solutions to highlight their efforts in these directions. New products are being launched. Wealth management firms that understand this demand, its value to the world, and how to relate to clients are gaining strength and growing.

In fact, we are now at an inflection point and cannot be stopped. Socially conscious business and economic practices are to become a given.

Where are the Biggest opportunities?

What areas are investors most excited about? Clean energy has had a lot of the focus thus far. Is that to remain the case for now, or are financiers starting to notice other parts of the industry?

The “Clean Money Revolution”

Every sector of the economy, indeed of how people live on the planet, needs overhaul. Yes, clean energy will be massive.

But so will clean transportation, clean buildings, clean water, clean air, clean food, clean mining, logging, clothing…

Take organic food for example. Decades of early adopters persevered with businesses that grew, processed, manufactured, distributed and retailed organic foods. They worked in virtual obscurity. Only a small committed consumer helped this early stage. Organic food began to show up on grocery shelves. For several decades, organics outgrew conventional food by multiples of sales. Growth steadily picked up velocity. In the last decade it has become a major industry. And yet, in 2015, organic food remains under 10% of the North American food sales. It may be under 2% globally.

Organic food is now unstoppable. The common sense is too compelling. Health, worker safety, chemical runoff into water systems, depleted soil, and an entire system of damaging practices are now facing the threat to reform or die.

The same cycle is steadily evident in renewable energy, efficient transportation, green buildings, carbon pricing, local production, regulations to protect the commons, worker’s rights, taxation and many more systems. Every part of the economy will shift.

Essentially, all solutions that lend to responsible, sustainable living while generating profits?

Yes, exactly.

What are the Biggest hurdles?

Is seed capital likely to remain limited and competitive?

Seed capital will likely always remain competitive. If it were in easy supply, the demand for it would only grow.

Do financiers remain nervous about the risk associated with models in this industry? What advice might best help overcome?

Investors are always nervous about risk. Two things are slowly changing that dynamic. One, wealth holders are learning to ask themselves, “How much is enough?” The other is that the marketplace of socially relevant products and services is getting bigger and smarter.

My advice is to practice reflective inquiry as a first step. Find the meaning of ones’ life. Use a little money for basic security and the rest as a tool for doing good in the world.

What is your best guess for when the concepts of Impact Investing and Social Entrepreneurship will become the mainstream trends everyone wants to get in on?

I do see money rapidly aligning with core values and high purpose. The signs are showing up everywhere and picking up velocity. Smart people are seeing how post-WW2 industrial values were naive and unsustainable. New experimentations are underway around the world, more than that can be tracked, in fact. Demand for sustainability degrees in universities is beating supply. Socially driven businesses are proliferating and expanding. Capital sources that seek these businesses are growing. People who want these products and services are growing even faster.

The visionary, early-adopting risk takers are often the originators of major changes. These are the people who transform the conversation from “it’s impossible” into “that was obvious.” If we can find our way to fair taxation, carbon pricing, regulations to protect the commons, universal health care, education, welfare for those in need, livable minimum wages, responsibility in manufacturing, recycling all waste, protecting natural systems, and terminating machinery that pushes rabid consumption, we may, just may become the ancestors who turned trends towards caring for our future generations.

Ten years from now, we won’t have this conversation. It will all seem redundant. That’s how social change works. Once enough people accept a premise, it is hard to remember how things were ever done differently.

Joel Solomon is President of Renewal Partners and Chairman of Renewal Funds, he is also the co-author, with Tyee Bridge, of the upcoming book by New Society Publishers.

A Great Start to a New Year!

2016 is already off to a great start for PATHFINDER!

We’re signing on with some amazing organizations and working on exciting solutions. Lots of fantastic conversations are happening…All we need now is seed capital to get our own projects off the ground!

Help us spread the word with ‪#‎ImpactInvestors‬ and ‪#‎CSR‬ through our Fundable Campaign!

Thanks for your support! Together we will make our 2016 goals a reality!

-Jess & Shivani

 

New York’s first Impact Innovation Conference is Here!

By Shivani Singh

A Socent’s Experience at Impact Bazaar

I recently attended Impact Bazaar, the first of its kind by Impact Hub in New York City. I wasn’t sure what sort of conference I was signing up for, exactly. There wasn’t much information online and the event was scheduled to last over two months. But not only did I find the experience to be useful, engaging and fun, I also found it difficult to leave at the end of my two weeks there!

About Impact Hub NYC

Impact Hub NYC is a subsidiary of MissionHUB, the organization responsible for the hugely popular SOCAP series. Over time, MissionHUB has established Impact Hubs in San Francisco, Berkeley, New York, DC and Philadelphia, and they exist to “support social entrepreneurs and impact investors in building sustainable businesses that drive long-term social and environmental change.”

Impact Hub NYC is a certified B Corporation. It’s “a coworking & events space for a community of entrepreneurs, activists, creatives, and professionals taking action to drive positive social and environmental change.”

Impact Bazaar: The Event

Impact Hub NYC’s Impact Bazaar was well attended. There were organizations big and small, from around the country and a few from further away. It was a close and informal setting for the most part. And it was always cheerful. But what really set Impact Bazaar apart from other such conferences is the fact that it was so accessible. Admission was only $10/day and it bought access to most events, the work space, and good, fair-trade, coffee. Lunches, a range of ethically made products, and specialized engagements were available for sale.

Throughout the event, there were a variety of meetings, presentations and workshops by experienced, committed professionals. In general, there was this unmistakable sense of camaraderie. Everyone involved seemed genuinely dedicated to being helpful. Certainly, the opportunities for intimate networking were impressive.

My own favorite part of the conference was the people. I met (and learned much from) some great people at Impact Bazaar. These people were full of helpful expertise, contagious energy, and promise for the future we have the power to create, together.

What’s Next?

Since this was the first such conference, I can’t wait to see what the future holds. I suspect this will become an annual thing, where lessons learned along the way will be applied for bigger and better events. Over time, I have no doubt that more participants and impressive names will join the roster. What I’d love though, is for this unique, open and accessible culture of Impact Hub NYC’s to thrive.

-Shivani

Enabling not aiding: a solution to the non-profit brain drain

By Jessica van Thiel

We are different from most consultancies in the way that our model operates. Our intention is to enable social entrepreneurs by providing them with the resources and funding they need to be able to focus entirely on their organizations and causes; because the current model that most non-profit organizations use is just not sustainable.

Too often professionals with a great deal of expertise and education are expected to work for very little or on a voluntary bases (in many cases). This of course is not sustainable and the result is a high turnover of staff, the abandonment of projects and in many cases the closure of the organization.

We aim to prove that our innovative model of operations will address these greatest known industry shortcomings and will tackle them head on by enabling (not aiding) promising local social entrepreneurs and by engaging only sustainable and scalable operations.

By the end of 2016, our objective is to make great strides. The direct impact will be seen at the ‘grass roots’ level through our pilot projects. Supporting the education of school children in Nepal, and the creation of jobs for rural women in India will be the tangible results seen right from the start.

However, raising funds is tough and raising funds where it is unlikely to make a massive return on investment right away, or where there isn’t a cool new gadget to grab, is even tougher. We are a social enterprise and “social entrepreneurship” is a relatively new, developing trend.

Much work is yet to be done to discover the amazing benefits of running socially responsible and economically sustainable organizations. But at PATHFINDER we are confident that over time, our model will prove to be successful and demonstrating of enormous potential!

-Jess