Monday news: new boss at Fifteen, school uniforms, and the price of lobbying

Consider this an addendum to the round-up last Friday, seeing as I forgot to include the major news story….partly because I didn’t think it was ‘public’ knowledge yet. But it is, so I can belatedly report that Penny Newman is taking over as the new boss of the Fifteen Foundation….Formerly a hugely successful CEO of Cafedirect, of course, Penny will be taking over from fellow Social Enterprise Ambassador Liam Black who left, having published a warts-and-all report of the various successes, difficulties and challenges Fifteen had faced in the past few years. Will be interesting to see what happens at Fifteen next, both in terms of its expansion plans (it is in Amsterdam, Melbourne and Cornwall as well as London) and its approach to training and support. Congrats and best wishes to Penny on the appointment.

Other interesting things that have cropped up recently:

– article in the Independent on a school uniform social enterprise which provides (more) affordable uniforms to parents, locally sourced and supplied; intriguing and interesting, especially given that the price / monopoly of some school uniforms has recently been highlighted

– The Homeless World Cup, founded by the indefatigable Mel Young, grows ever bigger and better, with a dedicated Women’s Cup added this year; lest you think this is just a one-off event, Optimist World (I know!) reports that over 70 per cent of players that take part in the Homeless World Cup experience a significant life change

– Social enterprise can help those who are marginalised and under-represented in the workplace, according to a report by the Equalities Unit; yes, particularly if BAME / women (those under discussion here) are viewed as potential leaders, rather than beneficiaries, and if they are not treated as a special case, but given access and the personal support necessary to achieve their goals….

– I was reading this article about Labour having to return £15,000 that a charity had given them for lobbying purposes, and couldn’t remember why the organisation rang a bell; then I remembered that I’d seen them at an UnLtd replication seminar once; interesting that the debate has focused on this being a ‘new low’ for Labour, rather than a strange use of funds by a charity, who have responded by classing it an administrative error (i.e. they should have put the donation through their associated company).

– And now we know that we’ve made it: in the newly revamped Cluedo board game, Jack Mustard is a football pundit (gah!), Victor Plum is a self-made video game billionaire (ugh!), Diane White is a former child star (pah!) and….drum roll, Eleanor Peacock is a "vain social entrepreneur". One step forward, two steps back…..

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Back in the game: a returning news and info round-up

Hello everyone: a big welcome back from the SSE blog. We’ll start back in traditional fashion with a round-up of everything that’s been going on in the world of social entrepreneurship and enterprise in the past few weeks.

– For the geeky web 2.0ers amongst you, How Sociable will tell you how well your brand is represented on the social web. What more could a blogger want…. (thanks to Beth for this)

– Can you smell a rat? No, but they can smell a landmine apparently. And now they can smell the money: £500,000 worth of it for this rodent-loving social entrepreneur.

– Are you a sneaky rat yourself? Try this online ethical test for your moral DNA…

– Patrick Butler had an interesting piece in yesterday Society Guardian about Jamie Oliver / school dinners….but more generally about lone heroes bringing about social change (or not). Well worth a read, particularly for the complexities of measuring and attributing success and the need for catalysts.

– I totally identified with this post by Mike Chitty:

"Enterprise is not about business and entrepreneurship.
It is not about premises, finances, business plans and swots.
It is a process for human development.
It is a way of exploring:

  • who I am,
  • what my potentials are/might be, and
  • the kind of future that I could create.

It is way of living – of becoming.
Enterprise can be a catalyst, a framework, for the emergence of identity."

– CICs are back in the news (stay awake at the back), with two CIC CEOs setting up a CIC association to provide support and representation to all those CICs out there. There’s a fairly equivocal statement from the Coalition in response, but given their recent call for more promotion of the structure, they must surely see this as a good thing. Certainly, the meagrely-resourced regulator does….

– This year’s FOOTSEY event in Yorkshire looks like being even bigger and better than last year’s, which I have to say I thoroughly enjoyed. I’ll be trying to get back up to God’s country for this one as well, so see you there….

– Someone mentioned £300m being taken from the RDA regeneration budgets to fund the new housing initiative to me today. Will try and find a link soon enough: unclear what the ramifications may be region-by-region

– Good to see Social Enterprise Ambassador, SSE expert witness and all round good guy Craig Dearden-Phillips nominated in the most admired chief exec category in the Third Sector awards. And to see him having an entertaining debate with the publisher of his own book….

– Also, much SSE news forthcoming: a new programme in the East Midlands starting in October; a new SSE in Cornwall starting formally soon; and a new publication to be launched next week. I know your breath is bated now; more soon.

– Finally, the hot question of the week: are you a changer, a contributor, or a coaster?

Till next time….

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Giant summer round-up: wedding, website, weekly

So this blog is taking a bit of a break over the rest of August, partly because this blogger is getting married (though not quite as ethically as fellow blogger Rob Greenland did). Many links to update you on, and a hello to all the new subscribers who’ve joined us over recent weeks. We’ll be back at the end of the month with more news and views: I’d love to hear any comments on this post about the type of things you’d like us to cover in the autumn.

– First up, the Social Enterprise Coalition have a new website. I know! They’ve discovered images and everything :0) More seriously, congrats to James and the team on what looks to be a good piece of work. It is a vast improvement: clearer, more vibrant, and more navigable than was the case previously. I’d have hoped for a bit more web 2.0-ness and interactivity, and that there might be a few more resources online in advance, but those are minor quibbles….and we’ll be uploading on our return.

Social Enterprise: the way forward? is a useful post on the Civitas blog about social enterprise in the health sphere (and the pros and cons / problems therein)

– Get ready to tear your hair out: three definitions of social enterprises from Venturesome…..

Every great business is an argument; oh yes it is; oh no it isn’t

– Have you got a "How can I make money?" or a "How can I save money?" mindset? And which is best in the midst of a credit crunch?

Wonderful post from Ambassador Peter Holbrook. Well, not really from him, but from one of Sunlight’s users: a genuinely moving post.

A social entrepreneur found David Cameron’s bike. Who would have thought….

Interesting discussion of where philanthropy meets business; getting a bit hot under the collar and personal as you scroll down the board….

– Have I linked to this before? Don’t know: SocialVibe

– Social Enterprise Magazine are launching a new weekly news bulletin called livewire

On that bombshell, and wishing you all a lovely summer, goodbye.

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Tuesday round-up: Shirky, Scotland, Shoreditch

Much linkage to get involved with this morning….a bit of a mish-mash, but hopefully of some use:

380_image_voice_social_enterprise_e
Voice 2009 will be in Birmingham; for the flagship social enterprise event, another big venue: the Birmingham ICC. See picture left (CEOs of SEC and Advantage West Mids)

– Couple of interesting pieces about fairtrade (coffee) and online debates; see Ugandan coffee trade and Fairer than Fairtrade

Campbell Robb on the third sector and public service delivery in the Times, on removing the barrier to allow third sector orgs to deliver etc.

– Less enthusiastically, a piece in today’s Times Public Agenda discusses how devolution is still an ideal, not a practical reality, something which chimes with SSE Fellows’ experiences of local authorities (though it is a varied and patchy picture)

– What is citizen philanthropy? Perhaps not a question that’s keeping you awake at night, but this article is an interesting read: This Is What Philanthropy Looks Like

Matt Stevenson-Dodd posts on his fellow Ambassador Daniel Heery’s great work in Cumbria

Scottish social enterprise support is "fragmented, complex, uneven and inconsistent"; apart from that, all is well. More seriously, the report is worth reading, particularly in its call for support providers to talk to each other and work in a more joined-up (hate that phrase) manner. Lessons for England as well as Scotland, methinks.

– Clay Shirky is author of Here Comes Everybody, which is about ‘organising without organisations’: groups, networks and the effects of new technology. "Group action just got easier" is his five word thesis. Anyway, he spoke at Demos the other day, and you can download the hour-long podcast to listen in….

– Bilumi: stands for Buy It Like You Mean It, "an online community of people reviewing and rating the socially
responsible business practices of companies and their supply chains"; interesting Shirky-esque stuff

– The Shoreditch Grand Prix involves kids bicycles, leg-power, and fundraising for social entrepreneurs

– Finally, while I mostly turn to Bubb’s Blog for a smile in the morning (I will be picking out an appropriate tie and bottle of wine for my next meeting at ACEVO), Jeff Trexler’s reaction to the SEC video of social enterprise is pretty entertaining.

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A CIC in the teeth?

Interesting to note that Jonathan Bland has come out to say that there hasn’t been enough marketing of the Community Interest Company model. Interesting because, currently, the CIC model is all over the sector press and the blogs because of ECT (see Social Enterprise Magazine‘s front cover this month: HAS ECT SOLD OUT?; the article isn’t online but it’s a helpful, if not full, explanation of what’s happened…combined with the Guardian article I posted about recently). Interesting, also, because of what he said was "absolutely shameful":

"All that work, all that money spent on the regulation – and now they
don’t have a marketing budget…When we brought together some
of the CICs that have been created, they said the biggest issue they
have is that nobody knows what they are and they have to spend all their
time explaining what they do."

But isn’t the ‘shameful’ aspect, if any, that "all that work" and "all that money" went on a legal structure that doesn’t appear to be producing any lasting changes to the sector. And that this is the case is as much a structural issue (i.e. how it was set up: the details of the structure) and a choice issue (i.e. there were lots of options anyway) as it is a marketing one. And that all that work and money could have gone into something that might have had a game-changing effect on the movement.

What has become evident is that there are critics of the structure for different reasons: on the one hand, those that feel the regulation around the structure is not sufficiently strong, nor the community interest test sufficiently rigorous, to ensure democratic accountabillity in the governance of the CIC. On the other, there are those who feel that the dividend cap prevents a decent level of equity investment. Finally, there are none of the benefits that a charity might receive (rate relief, tax relief, gift aid etc).

Some good introductions to CICs are here (written) and here (2 x podcasts). What surprises me, as a certified non-legal expert, is the simplicity by which the asset (held in the community interest: hence the name) can be transferred under these circumstances. Whilst my memory is sometimes faulty, I do remember the launch being all about how the asset lock would ensure these assets are used solely for the benefit of the community. This was to reassure investors, funders and other stakeholders in the structure (no.1 benefit of the CIC, according to them: "The Community Interest Company brand provides: Reassurance to stakeholders, as the asset lock and community purpose are regulated"). But actually those assets can be sold / transferred as long as they get market value for them.

Equally, few CICs have managed to gain inward equity investment, as drawn attention to by several of the venture investors / financiers in the sector. It’s interesting to note that ECT’s problems were exacerbated by this: as Steve Sears says in the interview in Soc Ent Mag:

"It was financed through debt and we were going to have a problem continuing to grow. The problem was lack of equity, lack of money, and it was getting harder to borrow because of the credit crisis"

So there wasn’t enough of a capital base to scale up and support further growth. As Rod Scwartz (who’s been passionate and perceptive on this issue) writes: "by structuring as a CIC, ECT and others forgo the ability to raise
genuine equity. Investors are unwilling to accept equity-like risk
(which is associated with many of these CICs) for what are (lower)
debt-like returns. Who could blame them? This is a fundamental flaw of
the system, especially for fast-growing companies like ECT which
require the cushion normally provided by equity."


And this is why so many have been writing about this story, and about the CIC structure: at a start-up level, CICs have difficulty (or simply can’t) in accessing start-up grants, and don’t have any of the benefits associated with a charitable structure. If they are trying to achieve inward investment once established, that is also proving very difficult. In a sense, as someone jokingly said to me, it’s "classic third way"….

Which leaves the main positive remaining USP feature as the "badge" or "reputation" of the structure as a social enterprise model. Clearly, though, in the wake of the above, this too may suffer. Will putting more marketing budget behind an unproven structure bringing few benefits and raising many challenges be the best use of resources in difficult times ahead? An investment in people, in skills, in knowledge, in peer-networks, in support….must surely bring more benefit, regardless of what structure they choose.

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