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As Delaware Registers its First Benefit Corporations, a Conversation With the Early Adopters

09 Wednesday Jul 2014

Posted by Aman Singh in CSR, CSRwire

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Accountability, bcorp, benefit corporation, blab, Brand Management, Business, capitalism, corporate governance, CSR, CSRwire, delaware, exemplar, farmigo, Innovation, method, new leaf, plum organics, rsf social finance, Sustainability, venture capital


On August 1, 2013, Delaware welcomed a record 17 companies to register as Delaware benefit corporations on the statute’s first effective …

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Crowdfunding for Capital Creation: Fad or Business Opportunity?

03 Thursday Jul 2014

Posted by Aman Singh in CSR, CSRwire, Guest Author

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capitalism, cityville, clay christensen, crowdfunding, CSR, CSRwire, donorschoose, Facebook, kickstarter, klout, LinkedIn, pinterest, small business, social enterprise, Social Media, social media, soho loft events, Stakeholder Engagement, tumblr, Twitter, youtube


Co-written with Patricia Smith

“You can’t evolve into being a social media company. You have to be born social,” began Lou Kerner, veteran internet analyst and former managing director of the Private Shares Group at LiquidNet, an institutional equities marketplace. {Kerner departed LiquidNet within three months of taking the job citing differences in views with upper management.]SoHo_Loft_Capital_Creation

The event: The SoHo Loft conference on capital creation and crowdfunding at law firm Reed Smith’s palatial New York City office.

The topic: Crowdfunding and social media, i.e., how investors, analysts and executives can now use the power of social crowds to raise capital.

Crowdfunding isn’t just the newest — and hippest — way of raising capital for entrepreneurs today. It is also a wide open opportunity for investors, analysts and activists to build new enterprise and address the change they continue to seek from traditional business. Crowdfunding, essentially, builds on our hunger for social connections to raise awareness, pique interest and channel that into opening access to capital for worthy projects.

Case in point: Kickstarter, RocketHub, Seedmatch, etc. Some would even put DonorsChoose in the same category.

Congressman Patrick McHenry, R-NC, who opened the conference, alluded to President Obama’s recent appeal to pass the crowdfunding legislation, titled The Entrepreneurs’ Access to Capital Act, to free up capital for entrepreneurs. A firm and emphatic supporter of the bill, he added:

“The marketplace desires this. Why else would so many people come here on such a gloomy day if you didn’t want this? Capital must flow where it is best used. This is what is at the heart of capital formation. Get to the point where the American dream was to grow a business and eventually access our public markets.”

Choosing to use Innovator Dilemma author Clay Christensen’s theory of disruptive innovation, Kerten exemplified Wal-Mart and Amazon not dominating the fast-growing social media space today despite their size and history because “you have to be born social to be social.”

Web 2.0: Banking on Social

KickstarterPrimarily “Second Internet” or Web 2.0 companies are all about facilitating sharing, he emphasized. Facebook is the dominant platform for these activities, he continued, adding that Twitter, Tumblr, LinkedIn, Pinterest and YouTube represent formidable platforms in their own user following and growth.

In this landscape, brands can no longer buy audiences. “They have to earn them because users choose what messages they’ll share with their social network,” he argued. Example: Gaming company Zynga’s ability to drive Cityville to 100 million users in just seven weeks by leveraging Facebook users’ willingness to share their passion.

Smart brands understand people with high social media influence can do a lot to help or hurt their brand with a simple tweet or Facebook post. Klout is the perfect example of this growing niche of influencers. In its short existence, Klout has rated over 100 million individuals’ influence on social media and devised a score that Kerner termed as the equivalent of a FICO score for the Internet.

The Palms Hotel in California, in fact, is using these scores to decide who gets an upgrade. Some airlines are using it to decide who gets bumped from a flight, he added.

Social Media: Fad or Opportunity?

Offering up a recent study of Facebook usage, Kerner noted that 16 percent of Facebook users’ time spent online was on Facebook. Further, that time spent online was up 40 percent from the year before. Compare this, he said to Facebook’s latest product, Frictionless Sharing, which allows you to share content with your Facebook network without actually being on the Facebook platform. The opportunities? Endless.Zynga_s_Cityville

Twitter’s uniqueness, on the other hand, is in the immediacy it offers users. This, according to Kerner, is only going to grow. Pointing out that news organizations were one of the weaker members when it comes to using social media, he added: “Of the top news organizations, 93 percent have Twitter links going back to their own content and only 2 percent have links that send them someplace else.” For Kerner, this emphasis on pushing out content and resulting failure in engaging their audience in real dialogue translates as lost revenue.

We’re already using social media to channel our passions, thoughts and build deeper relationships. So, why not also to fund projects and new ideas?

What do you think? Could crowdfunding be the way forward for budding entrepreneurs tired of working in a closed-door market?

Originally written for and published on CSRwire’s Commentary sectionTalkback on February 28, 2012.

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Sustainability is a Team Sport…And a Business Enabler

02 Wednesday Jul 2014

Posted by Aman Singh in Uncategorized

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capitalism, CSR, jobs, recycling, REI, Sally Jewell, supply chain, sustainability, Uncategorized


  • 118 stores.
  • $1.7 billion in sales in 2010.
  • Over 10,000 employees.
  • One of Fortune’s “100 Best Places to Work For” since 1998.

That’s the clout enjoyed by Recreation Equipment Inc. (REI) today, a national cooperative and one of the country’s largest outdoor apparel and gear manufacturers founded by a group of conscious mountaineers in 1938.

At last week’s Net Impact conference, REI CEO and President Sally Jewell took the stage to discuss how her company was faring amid Amazon’s recent expansion, whether a cooperative should be a viable option every entrepreneur should consider, and how sustainability is a team sport – and not a niche market anymore.

The Amazon Disadvantage…

Calling Amazon a “tough competitor” for brick and mortar stores, Jewell, who is a former commercial banker, took umbrage with Amazon’s policy of no taxation alleging that this discouraged new jobs. “Our business is doing well. Fair competition is always good, but unfair competition isn’t. By not charging taxes, Amazon is taking away much-needed state revenue” and sales from REI stores.

“Not being able to employ people is frustrating,” she added, emphasizing that while REI was doing well with stores having grown every year since 2008, hiring was definitely slower than the CEO would prefer.

…And The Sustainability Advantage

With sustainability making inroads into American consciousness at a very slow rate, does the environmental tag hurt REI?

“Sustainability is no longer as niche as some might think. The new generations really care about the environment and their communities,” Jewell emphasized. “The average age of our store employee is 32 years. They really care about the products and take pride in our commitment to the planet. This is what got us to No. 9 on Fortune’s Best Places to Work for last year,” she added.

In fact, while REI stores have steadily grown in number since 2008, she added, their footprint has remained lower than 2008 levels. The company has also doubled the number of stores that are using on site energy generation, Jewell informed a packed room.

Cooperative: The Right “C” for Entrepreneurs?

REI is one of few cooperatives in the country that has successfully provided its members with an economic model that is lucrative and works over the long-term. “There is no mission without margin. You have to run a healthy business to be sustainable. While we don’t have investors to worry about, we have a member community,” Jewell informed, warning that, “The founders [of REI] sacrificed a lot to protect the cooperative structure. Their family home was a distribution facility for 22 years. Their daughter was packaging stuff since the age of 5 years.”

The result?

“85 percent of our sales are from our members who get a yearly dividend. So the structure is successful but hard,” she said.

Responsible Capitalism: More Investment Options

Jewell also offered a new face of investment options, saying the market desperately needed to step away from thinking in the short term. “We need to suggest more robust federal regulations that put in a longer-term requirement from companies instead of a quarter or even a year. This change alone can transform the way we think, hire and help ensure many more businesses are successful,” she appealed.

While REI is certainly known for its innovative product line, environmentally- and socially-conscious supply chain, it has in no way perfected the dilemma of margins vs. fewer resources. How do we get away from random acts of kindness to systemic change? “It’s hard to get incentives [internally and externally] exactly right. Our employees are pulling the company forward,” she admitted, adding that, “Sustainability is a team sport that has the potential to create demand for recycling and working itself up the supply chain.”

The Power of Education

Since the conference attracts a majority of MBA students and recent graduates from the exemplary Net Impact chapters, interviewer Marc Gunther asked in closing: How can these students best help companies like REI?

“We need people who can make business sense out of sustainability. Help other companies see the benefit. Whatever we do for sustainability has to be good for business,” she pointed out. “This is what students with your experience, passion and understanding can help other businesses comprehend and implement,” the 54-year-old chief added.

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Occupy Wall Street & Corporate America According to Michael Moore

25 Tuesday Oct 2011

Posted by Aman Singh in Uncategorized

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Accountability, aman singh, aman singh das, Apple, Business, capitalism, careers, consumer education, corporate citizenship, corporate social responsibility, CSR, jobs, Leadership, michael moore, Occupy Wall Street, occupywallstreet, OWS, responsible capitalism, shared value, social responsibility, Social Responsibility, transparency


Interesting segment of Piers Morgan Tonight on CNN with Michael Moore in the hot seat and a live town hall to discuss Occupy Wall Street. Some of the highlights that made me think:

Who is to blame for today’s mess?

MM: One hundred percent corporate America. I don’t blame the government because corporate America funds and rules the government. The politicians act as their funders ask them to so blaming D.C. isn’t going to help anyone. The root cause is corporate America.

Are the “Occupiers” against capitalism or capitalist greed?

MM: Depends on who you ask. For students, this is about the debt they have when they graduate. For the parents, it’s the mortgage they owe on a house that is worth less than half of what they owe in debt. For many others, it is unemployment, lack of affordable health care, the manipulative bank industry and so much more.

Apple has more employees in China today than domestically and in many ways the company has become emblematic with capitalism. Isn’t China at least part of the problem?

MM: Part of the problem yes but do you know how much debt a student has when he/she graduates from Peking University? Zero dollars. American students? An average of $35,000.

It all started when General Motors decided that making $4 billion in profits wasn’t enough. That they had to stretch it to $5 billion and to do so, they would have to migrate tens of thousands of jobs to China.

And guess what, if Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak were two entrepreneurs trying to start Apple today, they would have received no help from their local or national banks. That’s the America we are living in today.

——————

Also on my radar, the excellent coverage on CSRwire’s Talkback lately re: Occupy Wall Street:

Occupy Wall Street Considers A New Economy
Is the Occupy Movement a Call for Sustainability?
For Responsibility, Occupy Government as well as Wall Street

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