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1.13.2004 ET
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How to Change the World: Social Entrepreneurs and The Power of New Ideas by David Bornstein - Part 2
An Interview with David Bornstein and Profiles of the Social Entrepreneurs in How to Change the World.
(CSRwire) A Conversation with David Bornstein, Author of
HOW TO CHANGE THE WORLD: Social Entrepreneurs and the Power of New
Ideas
(www.howtochangetheworld.org)

What is a social entrepreneur?
A social entrepreneur is a person who has both a powerful idea to cause a
positive social change and the creativity, skills, determination and drive
to transform that idea into reality. Social entrepreneurs combine the
savvy, opportunism, optimism and resourcefulness of business
entrepreneurs, but they devote themselves to pursuing social change or
"social profit," rather than financial profit. Behind all innovative
business, there are entrepreneurs - individuals who possess the foresight,
belief and boldness to build something new. The same holds for social
change. Behind almost all important social innovations are social
entrepreneurs - people with new ideas for solving problems, who build new
kinds of organizations to implement those ideas, who will not take "no"
for an answer, and who will not give up until they have spread their ideas
as far as they possibly can.
Where did this new wave of social entrepreneurship come from? Why has
it found a place in the 21st century?
In the United States and across the globe, individuals today are far more
aware of social problems and have far more power to address them. At the
same time, many have lost faith in governments. Social entrepreneurship
allows people to align what they enjoy doing, what they are good at and
what matters most to them - and have a real impact. This is a very
fulfilling and rewarding way to work and live. There are also major
historical forces that have, for the first time in history, made social
entrepreneurship feasible for many people in recent years. The growth of
an educated middle class, the extension of basic rights to women and
minorities and the spread of information technology have made it possible
for hundreds of millions of people around the world to unleash their
creativity in new directions. In recent decades, more than 80 countries
that were formerly dictatorships, totalitarian societies or apartheid
regimes have moved toward democracy. People today are better informed
about social problems and they have both the desire and the ability to
solve them. Entrepreneurs love to be innovative. Contrary to assumption,
they do not only seek to maximize profits. This is why so many innovators
today are focusing on creating new solutions - new ways to do business,
new ways to alleviate poverty, new ways to attack a host of social
problems. (This trend seems to have accelerated since September 11th.)
These people represent the second great wave of entrepreneurship, which I
believe will become a major force in the 21st century. The first wave
occurred in the business sector over the past three centuries and brought
enormous wealth gains worldwide. The second wave aims at building upon the
first wave to create a more humane and sustainable world.
Why are these ideas so successful? Are there commonalities between
these social entrepreneurs despite their obvious differences?
When people hear about innovative businesses - think of eBay or Starbucks
or Home Depot - they have an intuitive understanding about why the
businesses were successful. In each case, you had a talented entrepreneur
who saw an opportunity before others, who raised capital and built a
high-performing organization capable of managing fast-paced growth.
Social-change ideas that follow this pattern can and will be very
successful. The problem is that, historically, this has not been the way
social problems have been addressed. Society has not supported, financed
or encouraged social entrepreneurs the way it has encouraged millions of
business entrepreneurs. Rather, it has relied on top-down bureaucracies to
handle the "non-business" work of society. But that is changing today, with
many more entrepreneurs starting social-change organizations and receiving
support and encouragement. Regardless of the field in which social
entrepreneurs work - education, health, environment, disability, policy -
the basic entrepreneurial process and temperament are the same.
Entrepreneurs are obsessively driven to succeed; they are, therefore, good
listeners; they build good teams; they pay close attention to what the
"market" tells them; they stay focused on long-term goals but continually
adapt to changing environments; and they are always looking for new
opportunities to grow and innovate. That is why their ideas are so
successful.
So many governments are failing to implement change where social
entrepreneurs are flourishing. How do you explain this phenomenon?
All too often, governments have attacked problems with a short-sighted,
top-down approach that does not lead to innovative solutions. Governments
have to respond to the demands of two- and four-year election cycles;
entrepreneurs think in terms of building great companies or organizations
over many decades. Additionally, rather than pursuing ideas through an
organic, bottom-up "entrepreneurial" process that encourages creativity
and human initiative at each step of the way; governments are often
organized for top-down bureaucratic processes that often dampen, or
restrict, individual initiative. Finally, all ideas need "champions" to
push them forward - people who are obsessed with making them work and
will not give up until they succeed. Many of these "champions" or
entrepreneurs avoid working in government because they would rather not be
constrained by political considerations and bureaucratic handcuffs; they
prefer the freedom of building their own organizations. As a result,
governments have difficulty attracting large numbers of entrepreneurs.
However, there are examples when a "bureaucratic entrepreneur" within the
government can have an enormous impact. One example is the case of Bill
Drayton, who, as assistant administrator of the EPA, demonstrated the
potential of "pollution trading" to cut pollution emissions - an idea that
has since been adopted around the world. His story is detailed in the
book.
How did you select the social entrepreneurs in HOW TO CHANGE THE WORLD?
What were you aiming to profile?
The stories were selected, above all, because they are interesting and
engaging, and because they span a range of countries and touch on a wide
variety of issues - from education to health to environmental protection.
The profiles capture all the details about how the entrepreneurs began
(humbly) and how they proceeded, step by step, over the years, to pursue
their visions on an ever increasing scale. My goal was to demystify their
success: to show how seemingly ordinary people and ordinary efforts, over
time, can produce extraordinary results. I also wanted to draw on the
entrepreneurs' own words in explaining their decisions and actions, to
make their methods and thinking easily understandable to others. When
taken together, the profiles highlight many of the common factors that
allow social entrepreneurs to succeed where others have failed.
Many of your social entrepreneurs are fellows of the organization
Ashoka: Innovators for the Public. What was it about Ashoka that captured
your interest?
Three things.
First, it is very hard to find social entrepreneurs. There are no
directories that list them. The newspapers don't have sections that
specialize in reporting on the most entrepreneurial social organizations.
So in order to find them you need assistance from credible organizations.
Ashoka pioneered the idea of searching for and channeling support to
"pattern setting social entrepreneurs" more than 20 years ago. From what I
have seen, it has developed the most rigorous search and selection process
for identifying social entrepreneurs at relatively early stages in their
careers. Using Ashoka's network as a starting point made researching this
book - which involved interviews with 100 social entrepreneurs in eight
countries - a manageable job.
Second, the founder of Ashoka, Bill Drayton, is himself a social
entrepreneur who has traveled around the world for two decades looking for
other social entrepreneurs in order to support them. As such, Bill Drayton
was a useful central character for the book - someone who could tie
together many individual stories and add some key insights.
Third, Ashoka's efforts to find social entrepreneurs have paralleled many
of the changes that have occurred across the world in recent decades.
Ashoka has generally begun working in countries shortly after those
countries have experienced the democratic reforms that allow social
entrepreneurs to flourish. The organization's growth has, in effect,
mirrored the spread of democracy and freedom over the past 20 years. So
Bill Drayton's efforts to expand Ashoka lends a natural narrative flow to
the book that captures these global changes.
What do you see as the most important aspect of these social
entrepreneurs?
The most important aspect of the social entrepreneurs is simply that one
walks away after hearing their stories with the conviction that big
problems can be solved. Their stories create a sense of possibility and
hope and they encourage action because their ideas are practical and
doable. We have become accustomed to low performance in the social arena.
In the 1960s, for example, there was great optimism about what could be
accomplished in the U.S. through government. Then came the Great Society,
the war on poverty, and subsequent wars on crime and drugs, and countless
failed development projects. Over the past four decades, expectations have
plummeted. Today, many people do not believe that we can alleviate poverty,
or fix the education system, or improve government, or find better ways to
deal with many social problems. Around the world, people are voting less
and less. Amidst this disenchantment with government, the field of social
entrepreneurship has emerged. Against the conventional wisdom, these
leaders are demonstrating that problems can, in fact, be solved. But, in
order to do so, society needs to think differently about the approach: It
needs to harness the wide-ranging talents of its best social
entrepreneurs, encouraging them to innovate and pursue their visions. Just
like in the business sector, there is no shortage of entrepreneurs, but
there is not yet enough systematic support given to the social
entrepreneurs.
How should budding social entrepreneurs go about implementing their
ideas? Where should they begin?
Social entrepreneurs, like business entrepreneurs, should begin with what
they know best and should focus on an idea or issue that resonates deeply
in their lives. Entrepreneurs rarely come up with their ideas suddenly.
Typically, they spend years thinking about them - often searching for the
right moment in their lives to move forward. Sometimes their ideas can be
traced all the way back to childhood interests. Before starting out on
their own, they often work in jobs that teach them how a particular type
of business or industry operates. Social entrepreneurs go through the same
types of "apprenticeships." They usually work for several years in a
particular field, profession or organization, acquiring the knowledge,
skills and contacts that enable them to branch out on their own and
improve upon what is currently being done. Then they enter the "launch"
phase - when they start preparing to build their own organizations. Again,
like business entrepreneurs, social entrepreneurs usually begin by tapping
their personal networks - friends, families, colleagues, teachers,
mentors. They often start with a few well-selected tests of their ideas -
to demonstrate early viability - and build credibility and momentum. They
enlist advice from well-connected and experienced allies about how to
raise funding, think through strategy, and build a team of supporters and
advisors. There are many resources where social entrepreneurs can turn to
for assistance during this launch phase. I list several of them in the
Resource Guide in my book.
Do you envision social entrepreneurship reaching a saturation
point?
No. Again, just like in the business sector, it is difficult to envision a
time when there will be no more demand for new entrepreneurs. Society is
ever-changing. Every day, people identify new opportunities and new needs.
Business entrepreneurs build new businesses to satisfy those needs using a
for-profit approach. Old companies go out of business; new ones open up.
By the same token, there will always be new and different problems that
social entrepreneurs will seek to address more effectively. Old
organizations will stop functioning; new ones will have to be built to
replace them. Consider some of the problems today that social
entrepreneurs are addressing that were not major issues twenty years ago:
global warming, AIDS, water shortages, providing better social and health
services for an aging population, creating education systems that prepare
people to succeed in the "information age." As social entrepreneurship
grows and becomes recognized as a respectable and important line of work,
society will begin to see a beneficial process in which new organizations
with innovative solutions continually replace out-dated social
organizations that have lost their performance edge or drifted from their
original mission. This happens every day in the business sector. In the
social sector, because the "social capital markets" are not very
efficient, the turnover is slower and less systematic. But today we are
seeing more and more of the beneficial competition that leads to
improvements and innovations. The social entrepreneurs are at the
forefront of these changes.
Can anyone change the world?
There are two ways to answer this question. If "change the world" means
causing a major change that spreads across society and affects millions of
people, the answer would have to be no. It takes a particular kind of
person with a very deep need - someone who is totally obsessed with an
idea - to bring about a social change on a major scale. These "leading" or
"ground-breaking" social entrepreneurs are comparatively rare. (In fact,
I'm not sure if society could tolerate large numbers of them.) On the
other hand, if "change the world" means bringing a positive change to some
corner of the globe - affecting the lives of one, ten, a hundred, or a
thousand people, then, in my opinion, the answer is yes. Researching this
book has taught me that ordinary people have far more capacity and
potential than they ever know or use. Many of the people I have
interviewed who have done remarkable things are far from "extraordinary."
The main quality they share is a belief that they can make a difference.
They are not without self-doubts and they are not geniuses. But they have
initiative, they listen to their instincts and they take action. Above
all, they begin. I suspect that there are millions of people out there who
could bring important changes to their corners of the world - and who would
find great fulfillment doing so. If more parents and teachers and if
society at large could encourage more people to try their hand at social
entrepreneurship, I believe it would unleash enormous potential. It would
also produce great benefits for society and much individual happiness.
About the Author
David Bornstein is the author of The Price of a Dream: The Story
of the Grameen Bank, which chronicles the worldwide growth of the
anti-poverty strategy "micro-credit." The Price of a Dream, which
drew on ten months of research in villages in Bangladesh, won second prize
in the Harry Chapin Media Awards, was a finalist for the New York Public
Library Book Award for Excellence in Journalism, and was selected by the
San Francisco Chronicle as one of the best business books of 1996.
Bornstein's articles have appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, The New
York Times, New York Newsday, Il Mundo(Italy), Defis Sud
(Belgium) and other publications. He co-wrote the two-hour PBS documentary
series "To Our Credit," which focuses on "micro-credit" programs in five
countries.
Bornstein received a Bachelor of Commerce degree from McGill University in
Montreal and a M.A. from the New York University Department of Journalism.
In addition to writing, he has worked as a computer programmer, systems
analyst and pizza chef. He has spoken widely on the topics of social
entrepreneurship and micro-credit.
Bornstein lives in New York City with his wife and son.
Social Entrepreneurs profiled in
HOW TO CHANGE THE WORLD
Bill Drayton, U.S.
Chair and Founder of Ashoka
In 1980, Bill Drayton, former Assistant Administrator at the U.S.
Environmental Protection agency who pioneered the first demonstration of
"emissions trading"- a market-based approach to pollution reduction that
has since been adopted around the world - founded Ashoka: Innovators
for the Public based on the recognition that social entrepreneurs
deliver the highest leverage and impact society-wide for addressing social
problems. Drayton, a former management consultant with McKinsey & Company,
established Ashoka to provide social entrepreneurs - and their new ideas -
with financial backing and a series of professional supports to help them
spread their ideas and solutions, individually and collectively. Through
Ashoka, Drayton has played a major role developing and legitimizing the
profession of social entrepreneurship.
Jeroo Billimoria, India
Founder of Childline-India
Jeroo Billimoria has provided millions of vulnerable children living in
India with a 24-hour toll free telephone hotline that connects them to an
extensive network of hundreds of child-service organizations, making it
possible for ordinary citizens, policemen or social workers to assist
children in danger at any time. Manned by street children themselves,
Childline combines 24-hour emergency telephone services with follow-up
support to alleviate their distress. Through the franchise model,
Childline has been able to multiply rapidly to more than 40 Indian cities.
Jeroo is currently spearheading the replication of Childline India
throughout Europe and Asia.
Erzsébet Szekeres, Hungary
Founder of Alliance Industrial Union
Erzsébet Szekeres developed a program to address three of the most
difficult problems that disabled adults face in Hungary - a lack of job
training, few employment opportunities, and a housing shortage. By
addressing these issues, she is helping the disabled to be as independent
as possible and is replacing the outdated, paternalistic approach of the
state toward this segment of society. Her organization has built centers
across Hungary which provide skills training, access to employment and
housing for previously institutionalized disabled citizens. Currently,
Erzsebet is spreading her model throughout Europe with the help of the
Committee for Disabled of the European Union.
Vera Cordeiro, Brazil
Founder, Saúde Criança Renascer Association
Vera Cordeiro founded the Saúde Criança ("Children's Health") Renascer
Association in 1991 at the Public Hospital of Lagoa in Rio de Janeiro,
with the aim of providing emergency assistance to ill children from
low-income families during and immediately after hospitalization. Hundreds
of children enter Brazil's public hospitals each month, many of whom live
in extreme poverty. Factors linked to economic, domestic, psychological
and social conditions create unbearable burdens for these children and
their families. Naturally, these adverse conditions inhibit a child's
recuperation and guarantee repeated hospital visits. Renascer seeks to
break this vicious cycle by providing families with the minimum material
and psychological support necessary to foster home recovery or at least to
minimize patient suffering. Since its inception, Renascer has been
duplicated in fourteen public hospitals in Rio de Janeiro and two other
cities, assisting 20,000 children. The organization is developing a model
which Cordeiro is working to reproduce in public hospitals across Brazil.
J.B. Schramm, U.S.
Founder, College Summit
J.B. Schramm is helping low-income students across the U.S. enroll and
succeed in college. Operating from outside the educational system, J.B.
has identified a fundamental disconnect that prevents thousands of
high-potential students from attending college. (College graduates can
expect to earn $1 million more during their lifetimes than high school
graduates.) J.B. has designed a program that motivates all the actors
within this system (students, high schools, colleges, and communities) to
correct it. His training programs are designed for high school students
who possess the talent to succeed in college, but lack the support to
maneuver through the application process to present their strengths
effectively. College Summit organizes intensive, four-day, on-campus
workshops during which low-income high school seniors complete their
college applications essays, overcome emotional hurdles through
peer-support, receive one-on-one college counseling, complete common
applications and learn to navigate the financial aid system. College
Summit students enroll in college at a rate of 80 percent, against a
national average of low-income enrollment of 46 percent. The organization
is now working with city governments in Chicago, Los Angeles, Oakland and
Charleston to help rebuild the college guidance systems in public
schools.
Veronica Khosa, South Africa
Founder, Tateni Home Care Nursing Services
Veronica Khosa saw that the health care system in South Africa was unable
to manage the AIDS crisis. A nurse by trade, she had visited hundreds of
people with AIDS who were suffering alone in their homes, with no one
around to provide simple care or pain relief. In response, she founded
Tateni Home Care Nursing Services and instituted a community-based model
capable of addressing the AIDS pandemic at the enormous scale of the
problem. She spent years developing and professionalizing her basic
home-care model, instituting an innovative system to provide training to
thousands of unemployed youths so they could offer effective care to the
people in their communities and families. The government has adopted her
model for the largest state in South Africa and it has since spread to
more than fifty localities. Through the recognition of the world?s
leading health organizations, the idea is spreading beyond South Africa.
Khosa is now developing a community-based response to orphan care that she
plans to spread nationally.
Javed Abidi, India
Founder, National Centre for Promotion of Employment for Disabled
People
Javed Abidi is organizing a united cross-disability movement to make
legislative rights and economic opportunities a reality for 60 million
disabled Indians. Simultaneously, he is building partnerships with the
government and the corporate sector to define legal incentives and
corporate policies for the equitable employment of the disabled. Abidi led
a successful movement in 2000 for the inclusion of the disabled in the
country's first census of the new millennium. He played a key role in the
passage of the Indian Disability Act. Through his strategic leadership and
tireless efforts, the Indian disability movement has achieved many
significant gains in the past seven years, including improving access to
buildings, hotels, transport systems, universities and national monuments
(including the Taj Mahal) and influencing many corporations to increase
employment opportunities for disabled.
James Grant, U.S.
Director, Unicef (1980-1995), Orchestrated a Global "Child Survival"
Revolution
Grant conceived of and orchestrated a global campaign to stop the needless
deaths of millions of children each year from easily preventable illnesses.
The "child survival and development revolution" that he launched in 1983
mobilized massive international support to bring cheap, life-saving
medicines and technologies to children in developing countries including
vaccinations and oral rehydration therapy to prevent death from diarrhoeal
dehydration, the single biggest killer of children. By 2000, this
revolution for children was estimated to have saved 25 million young
lives. Grant also made possible another milestone for children: the 1989
World Summit for Children, and the adoption by the UN General Assembly of
the ground-breaking treaty The Convention on the Rights of the Child,
which entered into force as a part of international law within a year.
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