Viser innlegg med etiketten impact investing. Vis alle innlegg
Viser innlegg med etiketten impact investing. Vis alle innlegg

søndag 25. mars 2012

Social Capital Resources


Plattforms for supporting next generation business.

Movements/Social Change

Social Ventures/Social Enterprise/Social Business/
Here is a list of 200+ that the William James Foundation has worked with: http://williamjamesfoundation.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=Page.viewPage&pageId=607



 Funds/Financing
http://www.bonventure.de/en/home.html (only German speaking regions)
http://www.vilcap.com village capital seed funding network for socent
http://www.toniic.com global impact investment angel network
http://hubventures.hubbayarea.com/ seed funding for socent in the SF Bay area
http://w1sd0m.net search 400 institutional impact investors

Inspiration/Strategy etc.
http://www.blueoceanstrategy.com/ making competition irrelevant

Text/Knowledge/Books

onsdag 7. desember 2011

Africans want to be entrepreneurs and don’t want to rely on handouts – Dambisa Moyo



Erin Burnett interviewed Dr. Dambisa Moyo, the author “Dead Aid: Why Aid is Not Working and How There is a Better Way For Africa.”
Moyo argues that Africa needs innovative ways to finance development, which includes trading and accessing capital markets. In a nutshell, Dr. Moyo’s argument follows the old Chinese Proverb about how giving a man a fish feeds him for merely a day, but teaching a man to fish feeds him for a lifetime. Dambisa Moyo completed her Ph.D in Economics at Oxford University and has a Masters from Harvard University.
In May 2009 Dr. Moyo was named one of the 100 most influential people in the world by TIME Magazine. The clip is from June 10, 2009. Is this conversation and the points she makes in this interview still relevant going into 2012?

søndag 4. desember 2011

SocEntLab + *iHub_ Nairobi


Our new innovation playground in Nairobi. Come visit!


*iHub_ – Nairobi’s Innovation Hub for the technology community is an open space for the technologists, investors, tech companies and hackers in the area. This space is a tech community facility with a focus on young entrepreneurs, web and mobile phone programmers, designers and researchers. It is part open community workspace (co-working), part vector for investors and VCs and part incubator.



*iHub_ Nairobi:

'via Blog this'

tirsdag 4. oktober 2011

A different kind of safari

Some memories from last year. And yes. We got the financing.


In June, travelled a gaudy crowd norwegians to Kenya. It was desired to try to realize a vision of a school in rural Kenya for solar power, water purification, clean energy. The vision that had emerged through collaboration between Kvadraturen Education Centre / Vest-Agder County Council and Kisumu Polytechnic. 

Norwegians who had strayed to Kenya was the County Council Mayor Thore Wester Moen, Head of the Comiteef or culture and education Olav Haavorstad, Regional Manager Kjell Abildsnes, Erling Andresen (Senior, Kvadraturen School) from the VAF and the ARC-Aid CEO Spinnangr and the undersigned, Svein Mork Dahl.


Our goal for the trip was to create a common understanding between the Norwegian and Kenyan partners on the framework for the project, and through meetings with the Kenyan authorities to create local ownership of the project. The desire to meet local authorities to take us on a different safari through Kenya's political landscape.


Happiness is a quiet hour on the terrace before you find the bed. The sound of Africa. Thunder rolling in the distance, and lightning that lit up the sky in a constant strobe lights as on nature's own nightclub. Tomorrow is the party for invited guests and kids program at ARO DC. I hope the storm comes this way, but from what I've heard it's way to the Rift Valley, so tomorrow's festivities should be secured.


We have already met our Kenyan partners from Kisumu Poly, and visited DCen in Bondo, and PC in Nyanza. These state representatives serve as a form of county men, so our courtesy visits here are important for the rest of the trip. Important to go official channels. African courtesy visits are a fascinating spectacle for us Northerners. More form than content. You use like 10-15 minutes to introduce himself and thank the other party to have the opportunity to meet before you use the last quarter of the allotted half hour on the facts. 


We are gathered for a "nightcap" on the terrace to get the whole mind. The program for the trip are not yet nailed down and ready, so we do not know yet who we will meet next week. This is Africa, so we go to bed knowing that uncertainty is our only sure clue.


It's Saturday and party at the center of many invited guests, singing and dancing and hired musicians. Let me particularly impressed by the children the program appearance. The center has also been honored with visits by the Secretary in the Ministry of Education, which bodes well for the rest of our mission. The rest of the weekend precursor quiet with a visit to Bondo, and Godfrey newly opened restaurant. Tighten to NOK, although the food is not kept winning standard. Personally I suspect that the meat that was served was a goat, but the joke that I saw a stray dogs here in the place that now is gone ..


We hope to have met Prime Minister Raila Odinga in Nyanza, when he and President Kibaki are here because of the funeral of a member of parliament, but it can not do, we decide to follow them back to Nairobi. All flights are booked by the funeral guests, so we decide to drive to Nai. We stops at Tea Hotel, an old British colonial hotel in the Rift Valley, and the feel of a bygone era. One can feel the history in the walls where wallpaper is loosened, and the hotel fading along with the remnants of the British Empire.

After a week in Majiwe it is a shock to come to Nairobi. A vibrant international city with well over 3 million people, buildings, a vibrant nightlife, and otherwise is known for having some of the world's worst traffic jams, and a few years ago was known as Nairobbery colloquially. We still do not know if we get a meeting with the Prime Minister's office, but we live in hope.


While we wait for clarity we will visit the Nairobi National Museum, and will be so short notice innkallt to PMs Office.Vi have managed to get to a meeting, and are excited about how we and our vision will be taken in mot.Vi throws us in the taxi who spend 40 minutes on the few kilometers to the Treasury Building.



Hurry is lastverk said, and when we arrive waiting room to the PMs Office is we sit and wait. One hour, two hours. After three hours we are summoned to a meeting where we will be greeted by a delegation led by Caroli Omondi, the 35-year-old chief of staff to Raila. For once, I'm not the youngest in the room.


For us the meeting is a journey. They have put themselves into the matter, know what we are talking about and have input and reviews. Best of all is that we get assurances that this is something that Kenya wants, and it assures us that Kenya is willing to assume the obligations that will accompany the establishment of Solskolen. Now it's just up to us mzungus to obtain financing.


The journey is over, and we can go home with memories of a safari like no other. 

søndag 19. juni 2011

Whats preventing Entrepreneurship in Africa?


This past week Venturecapital4Africa conducted a poll with members on VC4Africa. Specifically,weI wanted to know what the community feels prevents (more) entrepreneurship on the continent. Is it the entrepreneurs, tough business models, lack of exits, the government, corruption or a lack of capital?





Akinyele Aluko, one of the respondents writes from the University of Calabar in Nigeria,’The hardest is getting funds for a start-up, however, other attendant problems are lack of ideas because our R&D system is very poor so innovation is limited. Corruption is another serious problem as well as lack of sincerity by our government.’ Fred Oduke, from the Makerere University in Uganda, expands, ‘It’s hard to get investors ready to invest in new ideas or emerging businesses. As well, we have a very hostile business environment, where government, being the biggest buyer, is deeply tipped in corruption and only those connected can access government contracts. However, it is not all doom, as democracy takes root, opportunities beckon those investing in new ideas and especially pro-poor targeted enterprises; 90% of African are poor, yet they are consumers. Pro-poor business ideas are bound to pay most, especially where ICT is the driver.’

Putting more emphasis on the role of corruption and government, Fidel Buchi Anyi writes from Lagos, Nigeria, ‘Corruption is the greatest impediment to entrepreneurship in Africa! It is corruption that drives poor and inconsistent government policies, volatile political environment, sit-tight rulership, non-access to project financing, multiple taxation, etc. Remove corruption and the business environment will be cleared up to allow brilliant ideas to thrive. Fair competition and honest productive collaboration can only flourish in an environment where corruption is treated with disdain and trust can grow.’ Oliver Wassmann, from the Technische Universiteit Berlijn, shifts the focus again when he writes about the need for better education. He says, ‘The one and single most important issue in Africa is lack of education. And when I say lack of education, I mean lack of knowledge and lack of good values! Education drives the behaviour of human beings. How often did I meet really motivated people with brilliant ideas who miserably failed to live up to their promises? Pointing the finger to government and corruption from my point of view is too simplistic. Corruption flourishes all over the world, also in countries like the US and Germany, yet they are still prospering.’ Clearly all of these challenges play a role in putting together the right ecosystem businesses need to thrive. But which factor stands out heads above the rest?

Not surprisingly ‘Hard to access finance’ is ranked as the number one factor hindering entrepreneurs today. So why does the community cite this as the number one challenge? Is it because the entrepreneurs have bad ideas unworthy of investment? I don’t buy this as many of the ideas we see on VC4Africa are not only important they are actually essential – serving a basic life need in critical sectors like agriculture, health or housing. I wish I could say the business plans I read in other parts of the world were as relevant! So the ideas don’t seem to be part of the problem to me, even if we need different business models and some creative implementation needed to execute them successfully.

So what does ‘Hard to access capital’ actually mean? Is it hard to find money for businesses? Is this to say there is no/little money available or instead that there is money but for some reason it is hard to move? And in this case is it because the entrepreneur lacks the skills, network, model and circumstance needed to make an investment worthwhile or does the money get stuck because the broader political, economic and social context don’t make sense? The infrastructure doesn’t effectively facilitate investment or the money simply doesn’t see the market developments needed to offer viable exits down the road? Again, all of these pieces play a role.

That said, investment capital is seriously required by thousands if not millions of entrepreneurs building businesses across the continent. And I strongly believe there is always money for a good idea in a growing market. In furthering this discussion I reach out to the community again and ask the same question from a different perspective, ‘What is the hardest part about investing in Africa?’Share your thoughts and help spread the word.

See some of the other comments made by respondents:



Welcome to Mikono Knits

We are hooking up with Mikono Knits to upscale their social business.

The vision of Mikono Knits is to be an inspiring ethical fashion label, creating stylish and unique knitwear, thereby providing a sustainable source of income for underprivileged Kenyan women.

Natural Kenyan wool and cotton are the raw materials utilised in the designs. Drawing mainly on Western designs, African 'flavours' are added using African handmade buttons, beads and shells.

For more info on us, Mikono Knits, and how to purchase our products please contact us at caxtus (a) inventure.no

Welcome to Mikono Knits:

lørdag 28. mai 2011

Kenya Social Investment Exchange has launched


Yesterday launched East Africa's first stock exchange for social enterprises.



The reason is to give investors the opportunity to invest in quality assured social enterprises, and promote social entrepreneurship within the region through access to capital that may increase the scalability and impact of social enterprises.

It will also initially be quoted a fund for investments in social enterprises, or Social Purpose Enterprises (SPEs) that it is known as down here.

Exchange is supported by the Nairobi Stock Exchange, the Rockefeller Foundation and the Aga Khan Foundation.

I think this is a big step forward for social entrepreneurship in the region.