UnLtdWorld 2: the birthday and launch

Nick and Mark K Tuesday night was the UnLtdWorld 1st birthday / re-launch over at Lovells' nice buildings in Holborn. Congrats to Alberto and the team, especially Nicola, who organised the event. I haven't had much chance to check out the new incarnation of the site, but I certainly prefer the design. As ever, it will be up to the individual social entrepreneur to see if it works + repays time for them…but definitely seems more practically focused and oriented towards action, which should be a good thing.

The party was fun, with some pleasant surprises. I bumped into SSE Fellow Alison Skeat, who was full of purpose and confidence about her new project, Dirty Hands (great name!: see more in this pdf), which is regenerating a piece of land in Newham in order to grow food, and nvolving the local community in doing so. Great to hear how she was being incredibly resourceful in persuading companies and councillors alike to contribute to the project.

I also met up with Fife SSE Fellow Mark Kelly, who won a Special Recognition Award at the event (hence that orange lego brick thing under his arm in the photo) for his contribution to UnLtdWorld's development. Mark was on great form, and was very kind about the impact that Fife SSE had had on setting him off in a different direction. His is a great story, and it feels like he's only at the very start of what he might achieve. Was good to see him getting the recognition he deserves.

Congrats to all….

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Social media for social entrepreneurs

[this is a brief chapter for a forthcoming handbook from NESTA (of which more when it comes out)….thanks to them for letting me blog this in advance….]

While entrepreneurs in the business sector identify untapped commercial markets, and gather together the resources to break into those markets for profit, social entrepreneurs use the same skills to different effect. For social entrepreneurs, untapped markets are people or communities in need, who haven't been reached by other initiatives. But while they may read from a different (triple) bottom line, social and business entrepreneurs have a lot in common. They build something out of nothing. They are ambitious to achieve. They marshal resources to meet their needs. They are constantly creative. And they are not afraid to make mistakes.

The marshalling of resources is particularly important in this context, as start-up and fledgling social entrepreneurs often have little spare money (or money at all) for key parts of their work, namely marketing, promotions, communications, fundraising, events organisation, and community-outreach. This is where the development of web 2.0-type tools is playing such a significant role; where two or three years ago, we would get the question “do you know someone cheap who designs good websites?”, the questions now tend to be “what’s a blog and how do I start one?” or “should I pay for this or is the free version OK?”. The costs of podcasting, blogging, uploading video, starting an online network, promoting your project on Facebook or specialised networks like UnLtdWorld, fundraising online etc have fallen so far as to completely democratise it: for social entrepreneurs now, the big question is no longer “what can we afford?” but “what should we use?” and “how do you use it best?” In some cases, SSE Fellows (like Nathalie McDermott of OnRoadMedia or Jude Habib of SoundDelivery) take this a step further and make it their mission to empower communities / other organisations to speak up or better achieve using new tech.

Our message to them is a simple one: work out what you want to achieve and then work out whether technology can play a part in helping do it. It can be all too tempting amidst a rash of “twitter is the cure to all ills” headlines to leap in, waste time and lose focus. But if building a community of like-minded people who support and engage with their idea is important to moving it forward (and those people can be found online), then fire away using Facebook groups, twitter, blogs and whatever is most appropriate. Such tools are often a cost-effective means to an important end: building a following around an idea or a new enterprise. Tools such as blogs and twitter also allow for a more direct form of communication that, when done with consistency and authenticity, will better engage and inform that following. That builds trust, credibility and loyalty to an organisation in the medium to long term.

What is particularly interesting for social entrepreneurs in this space is that tools like Twitter and Facebook have blurred the line between the personal and the organisational, between the life and the work. But this is already the case for social entrepreneurs in many cases, so fits naturally with the way they are and the way they operate. Alongside the fact that networking is key to their success (particularly when they can feel isolated and disillusioned on their journey), it’s clear why such tools can be not only useful organisationally (for communications, community-building etc) but also individually (to make contacts, build relationships, find support, bookmark sites of interest etc).

However, whilst not wishing to end in Luddite fashion, it’s important that we also remember that many social entrepreneurs work in real, geographical communities that can’t be reached online; that e-mail remains the primary communication tool for the vast majority; that ‘slacktivism’ will tend to reinforce the idea that people can solve problems with a click of a mouse (and keep a healthy distance from all that nasty poverty and disadvantage); that online approaches need to be measured for their social impact if resources are put into them that could go elsewhere; that Facebook status updates aren’t a substitute for meeting people face-to-face; and that doing things is more important than talking about doing things.

Ultimately, social media tools provide amazing opportunities and resources to facilitate change, to network effectively, to communicate directly, to fundraise innovatively, and to build communities swiftly. But in all but a very small minority of cases for social entrepreneurs, they are means to an end, not the end in themselves.

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Monday round-up: Observer, organisations, opinion, Obama

Obama
Round-up of recent news, views, links and opinions; at the start of the week for a change….

– Interesting article by Simon Caulkin in the Observer on EAGA, a partnership that works on fuel poverty and green service: Hot prospects for a company with a conscience:

"The company could be a poster-child for post-crunch capitalism, the
embodiment of Peter Drucker's definition of the socially responsible
business, turning 'a social problem into economic opportunity and
economic benefit, into productive capacity, into human competence, into
well-paid jobs, and into wealth'."

– More on the SROI vs. social auditing brouhaha, in New Sector magazine. Although there are many similarities as well as differences of emphasis. As Jeremy Nicholls put it, the aim should be to "keep credible, keep practical"

– Good overview report of the Social Enterprise World Forum

– This is an interesting discussion (on something called Social Velocity: nice!) here on scaling and communication, focusing on the US example organisation, FORGE…

– ….which also gets a mention in this post on clear, honest communication in the field of social entrepreneurship

– Pamela Hartigan, who co-wrote The Power of Unreasonable People, is writing a 5 part blog on Harvard's Center for Public Leadership on social entrepreneurship

– Am also a fan, US-wise, of Kevin Jones, and he has an article in Stanford Social Innovation Review laying out the landscape of social capital on the back of SoCap08

Free photocopying for charity? What's not to love?

– Can social entrepreneurs really have work-life balance and succeed? Social Enterprise Ambassador Craig Dearden-Phillips thinks not

– Back in 2004, in my previous job, TheyWorkForYou made the shortlist of an award I was running. MySociety, the organisation behind that site (and many others), recently celebrated its 5th birthday. David Wilcox has a good overview here, whilst founder Tom Steinberg looks to the future here

– We were also delighted to hear SSE Fellow Amanda Roberts on Radio Five Live Breakfast this morning, standing up to the smug-tastic Nicky Campbell about why her organisation's therapeutic services were right for the children of Lambeth; I can't find it in the 3 hours of Listen Again (!), but I can point you to her website: Bud Umbrella

– And finally, looking ahead to the big event of tomorrow which is of course…..CAN's 10th Birthday, joining us in reaching a decade in age! Congrats to all current and previous staff involved.

Oh, OK, here's a post for the Obama fans amongst you:
Barack Obama and the Spirit of Social Entrepreneurship

Enjoy the late night coverage…………..

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Thursday round-up: 2gether, 2 winners, 2-pennorth

Quick round-up; am in Belfast tomorrow at SSEI so won’t be an end-of-the-week trawl.

– Enjoyed my one day at 2gether08; mixed feedback, but then that’s what you get with a mixed crowd, I guess…and a mixed line-up; networking was great, even if the social media-meets-social good crowd is a realtively small and incestuous one. Do check out the site for video of the sessions and speakers: there was a lot there….include myself and Cliff from UnLtd now in full technicolour video apparently….

– At the event last night, they announced the New Statesman New Media Award winners. Check out the list here, including two SSE Fellow-led/involved organisations, Patient Opinion and School of Everything. Congratulations to Paul Hodgkin and Andy Gibson (and the rest of Everything), as well as all the other nominees, which included SSE Fellow Nathalie McDermott for the excellent SavvyChavvy

– Am not avoiding talking about this, but easier to check out previous posts, or my comments on Rob’s blog for my two-pence worth of views….

Doing very nicely by doing good: the Economist’s take on microfinance making macro profits

– Room to Read founder John Wood featured in the Sunday Times; interesting feature on an amazing organisation

– Lots on social enterprises in the health sphere and pensions….check it out on Third Sector et al. You’ll be glad to know you can TUPE yourself over. For nurse-led stuff, you’d do well to check out Entreprenurses (and their recent 5-part podcast), the fount of all knowledge and expertise on the subject

– Finally, self-referential link news: this blog got picked up by New Start (who also have a decent article on ‘accidental social entrepreneurs‘) and, halcyon days indeed, Social Enterprise Coalition‘s Media Monitor….

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Podcasts and audio links and updates

I linked the other day to some recent podcasts on Social Innovation Conversations and that got me thinking about the various other bits of audio I’ve been listening to of late; some of this is repetition of previous podcast posts, but anyway:

– You can do a lot worse than Peter Day: both his InBusiness and his Global Business programmes. And, topically enough, the last programme of the latter was from the Skoll World Forum for Social Entrepreneurship. Shame that a UK-based programme on the subject was so US-centric but maybe next time….

SmallBizPod is good (as is the blog and their news RSS feeds); hope that Alex Bellinger will put online some stuff from the Shine Unconference which he came to

– Also enjoying the Bottom Line with Evan Davis; always interesting when the 3 CEOs he has each week are from organisations of vastly different scale and sector…

– Others to watch out for are the various US magazines (Harvard Business Review, Stanford Social Innovation Review) and universities (MIT etc) which are putting more and more material online.

– Finally, for a bit of light-ish relief, the Bugle which, in my humble opinion, is carat-gold genius.

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