Enterprise Week and Social Enterprise Day

I’ve been tracking a few associated pieces about Enterprise Week (and Thursday, Social Enterprise Day). Today is of course, Women’s Enterprise Day (because the acronym is WED?)….anyway, here are some related bits of news:

– Jonathan Bland of SEC in the Society Guardian today saying what you’d expect, really: a rolling out of the 55,000 numbers and a rallying call on procurement

– A couple of slightly more critical responses from the Adam Smith Institute and the Daily Telegraph, the latter of which looks at whether government legislation has helped foster an entrepreneurial culture in the UK…and questions whether event days actually work

– …well, judging by the FT’s coverage, they don’t do any harm, as they have a series of interviews running all week, including some top tips for entrepreneurs (from John Caudwell and Sir Tom Hunter, amongst others)…although the FT is the official media partner….

– Gordon Brown applauds a renaissance of entrepreneurship and enterprise at the start of the week

– Check out the Trailblazers supplement as part of the campaign (via Social Enterprise Magazine)

– From a personal point of view there seems to be a little less going on this year (maybe, because there was SO much going on last year: awards, publication launches etc….), although there is a shindig at no.11 tomorrow (at which SSE will be rolex cinesi perfetti appearing, I believe….), the launching of the social enterprise plan, which will be pored over by us all, and the launch of a new venture from SSE Fellow James Greenshields’ Media for Development: Inside Job Productions

What’s most impressive about the day and the week are the organisations it brings together in one co-ordinated campaign, and that enterprise is promoted by all of those as a means to job creation, wealth creation and improving people’s lives in the round. If some greater focus is given to these issues as a result, then it can’t be viewed a failure: promotion and marketing is a key part to any campaign’s success….

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SSE Fellow activity: website launch and No. 10 dialogue

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Massive backlog of things to post about at the moment (a backblog, maybe?), but here’s a couple of pieces of news from an SSE Fellow and a current student.

– SSE Fellow Dave Pitchford‘s web-based initiative, Intelligent Giving, launches today; congrats from all here, and make sure you check out the site, which is a new, independent guide to charities for the donor….should stir up things in the VCS potentially…

– Sahra Digale, who is part of the current London cohort, has been mixing in some interesting political circles. Earlier in the year, she attended a No. 10 Dialogue event (photos here) with the PM on the subject of engaging with muslim women. A report based on the dialogue is now available, and has started some interesting thinking  around Muslim women and social enterprise….See the report and the feedback (pdf) at the Women and Equality Unit site, and the Women and Work Commission report as well…

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Comprehensive Spending Reviews

For the sector geeks amongst you, a good link here from Voluntary News, detailing various responses to the Treasury Comprehensive Spending Review re. the third sector. SSE also submitted a response, + fed into the London Third Sector Alliance response as well….

Whilst we’re in the political sphere, it’s also worth mentioning that there was a social enterprise supplement in the Observer this Sunday (though sadly not online, that I can see), organised by SEC and featuring many of the award-winners from the Enterprising Solutions event. There’s also an article by Ed Miliband which features the following:

"[Government] can help to build a culture of social enterprise. We want more people, from schools to boardrooms, to understand what the term means. Only by extending understanding of the concept can we inspire more people to become social entrepreneurs. We can ensure that social enterprises have the right advice. This starts with Business Links….but it also means encouraging specialist support agencies and the networks of successful social entrepreneurs"

Yes, yes and yes to that: broadening understanding of this movement… to encourage many more people to get involved in it…and encourage those networks and agencies that provide opportunities/support to those people.

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Double devolution and social entrepreneurs

Yesterday, I attended a Transforming Neighbourhoods seminar here at the Young Foundation, hosted by the Lead Policy Advisor, Paul Hilder. It was a stimulating presentation and discussion around their three strands of work in this area, namely:

– influencing
– research
– local learning/policy

It was interesting to get some flesh round the bones of the phrase "double devolution" which is being banded around with increasing abandon, it seems. Specifically, what a reformed first tier (of neighbourhood forums, community councils etc) would look like and how this would change the landscape for grassroots social entrepreneurs and community activists. Some key points (for me) were:

– 73% of people support changes that would give local neighbourhoods greater control over some services and budgets (the "some" is probably the most important word there)

– the comparison with other countries: how exceptionally large Uk (and especially English) local government is compared to France, India, Brazil, China etc.

– that such representative neighbourhood bodies will have to be demand-led (i.e. gaining powers to act, to influence, to hold to account and to take control ONLY where citizens want them)

– that an element of the local authority budget should be given to the neighbourhood, but not too much (!) [various worries about extremism and the like]

– that the biggest barrier to all of their suggested moves (many of which may appear in the government white paper, and more on which you can find on their page from the link above) may be culture change within local government

I don’t think I’ve fully digested all of what it might mean (for our students/Fellows/ourselves), but certainly prompted a few thoughts.

And following on from that was Michael Lyons’ piece in the Guardian today which looks at the relationship between local government and the third sector. He has some criticism for social entrepreneurs/social enterprises ("overhyped, raising unrealistic expectations abuot what they can deliver") and the local authority officials ("stuffy, rule-bound"), even if he acknowledges that some of this is crude stereotyping. There’s not a small amount of truth in this as well, though.

Lyons’ primary challenge to the voluntary sector is to "show clearly the value they create" and develop "new measures of value…to give a strong basis for making investment decisions". The associated challenge to the local authorities are to make service commissioning less output and target driven to allow this value to be demonstrated. He then calls for the two sides to "meld" and "cast aside [their] preconceptions" of the other to form a dynamic alliance.

Stirring stuff, and more food for thought. Strongly agree with the need for the 3rd sector to show the value of its values, as it were, and for local government to attract energy and diversity into it. Ultimately, this vision will live or die by the necessary culture change referred to above, and to whether power and, yes, money is truly devolved to these lower echelons. Will the changes come slowly as double evolution or swiftly as double revolution? As Paul Hilder ended his seminar yesterday: "We’ll see".

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Video (and) conferencing

Just to dip our toe in the political world, worth drawing out a few headlines from the big players speeches at their various venues recently.

First up, the Lib Dems Menzies Campbell, who didn’t talk directly about the third sector, but did talk of the need for "local solutions to local problems" and of public services being tailored both to the needs of the individual and the "long-term" needs of the community. And they committed to some environmental tax policies, lest we forget.

Second up, Labour. Tony Blair‘s speech also didn’t deal with the specifics of our world, though in an Andrew Marr interview he did say, re public services:

"And if you look
around the world today, what’s happening are two things in virtually every major
industrial country. One, the barriers between public, private and independent
voluntary sectors…are coming down.

So that is going to carry on. And the
other thing quite specifically is the voluntary sector, the third sector, is
playing a far greater role in delivery. Not traditional, central or local
government. Now we’ve got to be at the forefront of that argument, in my view.

Because as I say, the issue at the next
election will be very, very simple for the British people. Yes, it will be who
will continue the investment, that’s important. But it’s also going to be, who
are the people that are going to deliver the service for you the parent, you the
patient? And we’ve got to be on top of that argument."

Gordon Brown, meanwhile, said that "the task is also to build stronger
communities and as nine years of government have taught us we can only
build strong communities by championing the active involvement and
engagement of local people themselves".

More sectorally, he said that:

"I want a new compact that elevates the third sector as
partner, not as the Tories see it – a cut price alternative to
government – but government fulfilling its responsibilities to fund
services and fully valuing the contribution the voluntary sector can
make."

Which brings us neatly to David Cameron, who spoke yesterday. He made ‘social responsibility’ the keynote theme of his speech, and some sections of interest include:

"The unintended consequence [of Labour’s top-down initiatives] is to stifle the very spirit of community self-improvement that they are responding to. Our response, based on our philosophy of social responsibility, is to trust local leaders, not undermine them. So we will hand power and control to local councils and local people
who have the solutions to poverty, to crime, to urban decay in their
hands."

AND

"We want companies to create their own solutions to social and
environmental challenges, because those are the solutions most likely
to last. So in a Conservative Britain, corporate responsibility will provide the
best long-term answer to economic insecurity, well-being in the
workplace, and environmental care."

We can also scarcely let pass the advent of WebCameron.org.uk which has been widely mocked, but is streets ahead of anything the others are attempting in terms of using the true potential of the internet. It will be interesting to see how it progresses, and how much it is used (by both Cameron and his hoped-for audience). Will the audience develop a sense of webcamaraderie? Will the LibDems (or Labour?) respond with WebCampbell?

Enough already. On the speech excerpts, it is interesting that it is only Cameron who seems to think that this (third sector and all that entails) will be one of the key battlegrounds of the next election, and his emphasis reflects that. The challenge for Brown will be to deliver on the message of double devolution and community ownership of structures and solutions in the interim. Otherwise, it may be the Tories who get the chance to justify what are undoubtedly welcome words with the considerably more difficult job of framing them as policies and putting them into action.

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