Posts Tagged ‘Chapters’

Generosity lives on

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

This year many members of our community came together on February 14th to celebrate Generosity Day by saying YES!   The day has passed, but the movement continues.  +acumen chapters are continuing to explore what it means to be generous through a series of community events and activities.  Here’s a sampling of what’s going on around the world:

ATLANTA+acumen has turned February into Generosity Month! The team is looking to engage and explore ideas of generosity, sharing, and love in the context of community.  More information on their Share the Love campaign here.

BOSTON+acumen has teamed up with Catchafire, the world’s largest online pro-bono talent provider, for a skill-based volunteer drive (Feb 24 5-7pm). The event is free and you can RSVP here.

CHICAGO+acumen is running a Generosity Salon (Feb 26, 4-6pm) a discussion of what it means to be generous in the context of Acumen’s work, and comes complete with with “generosi-tea” and dessert. Join the conversation here.

DC+acumen is giving back to a family-owned organic distillery by volunteering to help with bottling for a day.  Gin-erosity!  Please RSVP to dcplusacumen@gmail.com and let the team know if you’d like to join the carpool.

DUBAI+acumen continues with their Business 4 Good workshops for aspiring social entrepreneurs in the Middle East.

KARACHI+acumen is hosting an ongoing series of community volunteer events throughout February to promote the spirit of generosity.  Contact them here.

LONDON+acumen teams up with Mark Williamson of Action for Happiness and Vaso Parisinou of Giving What We Can to present Generosity Day on (Feb 23, 7:30-9:30pm).  Look forward to inspiring talks, networking and games.  More information here.

NY+acumen co-hosted a sold-out event with the Social Innovator’s Collective on Feb 14, and a follow up success at COMMON Pitch NYC on Feb 15.

VANCOUVER+acumen continues with their monthly Salon series and this month’s theme is Generosity!  The event promises dinner and discussion (Feb 28, 7pm) Tickets are available here.  They’ve sold out in the past, so get yours today.

Phew!  That’s a lot but we know that there are more great ideas and initiatives out there. Fortunately, it’s never too late to flex your generosity muscle. Learn more about what others have done at www.causes.com/generosityday


Why Generosity?
At Acumen Fund, we have championed the role of accountability in philanthropy and poverty alleviation.  And while we strive every day to be accountable to our donors, our entrepreneurs, and the customers they serve, we always remind ourselves why we are doing this work in the first place. Our purpose and motivation stem from a place of generosity.  The balance of these core values of generosity and accountability gets at the heart of who we are and what we do.

About +acumen chapters
+acumen chapters – self-organized, volunteer-led groups in cities and schools around the world – are actively supporting Acumen Fund’s mission to create a world beyond poverty through education, fundraising and service.  To start a +acumen chapter in your city, contact Jo-Ann Tan at jtan@acumenfund.org. You can learn more about +acumen chapters on our website.

Jo-Ann is the lead architect of Acumen Fund’s community.  She is working to create a step change in terms of awareness and engagement for Acumen Fund through its online presence and volunteer chapters.

VANCOUVER+acumen Case Competition – From a Student’s Perspective

Monday, February 6th, 2012

Finalists from last year's competition

+acumen chapters – self-organized, volunteer-led groups in cities and schools around the world – are actively supporting Acumen Fund’s mission to create a world beyond poverty through education, fundraising and service.  To start a +acumen chapter in your city, contact Jo-Ann Tan at jtan@acumenfund.org. You can learn more about +acumen chapters on our website.

We’re excited for VANCOUVER+acumen’s efforts to mainstream patient capital.  This post originally appeared on VANCOUVER+acumen’s blog.

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Stop for a second, and close your eyes. Go back to a time when you were a university student. You have to wake up at 8:00am on a Saturday morning to present a case to a panel of judges and you’ve barely gotten any sleep over the past twenty four hours (this doesn’t sound promising)… but wait, this is the first time you actually want to wake up that early on a weekend and you can’t wait to present!

Now fast forward in time. Imagine you are sitting at a beautiful desk in a New York head office and you are in front of a… a stock chart? No, of course not. An idea. Not just any idea, but a breakthrough idea that could change the world.

VANCOUVER+acumen Case Competition. This is how these two scenarios come together, allowing for a group of undergraduate and graduate students to step into the shoes of a board member, an investor, or fellow for Acumen Fund, not only challenging them to think critically but inspiring them to think differently. On March 10th, students will spend 24 hours with a take home ‘open’ case and the following day, will present to a panel of judges made up of industry leaders in finance and social enterprise.

This is not an easy task, but thankfully we (the students!) have the wonderful Mark McCoy as our coach for the competition. Here is a summary of what Mark has taught so far:

Workshop #1

This workshop focused on strategies for case analysis as well as an introduction to Acumen Fund. Mark led us through an example of a boy named Arthur who had an unsuccessful first year at university. He then used this example to illustrate various techniques used in sorting out the facts of a case, fully understanding the problem, conducting analysis, and outlining a solution. We also had the opportunity to learn more about Acumen Fund’s investment criteria, portfolios, fellows program and the concept of patient capital.

Workshop #2

The topic of workshop #2 was implementation and presentation. The example of Arthur was applied again, and this time to Acumen Fund’s ‘10 Things We’ve Learned About Tackling Global Poverty.’ The students were intrigued and conversation was sparked. Mark went into more detail about Acumen Fund’s investment criteria and how Acumen Fund measures impact.

There was also an astounding guest presentation from Nikolas Laufer-Edel who taught the students how to create an effective, visually appealing power-point presentation. The energy in the room after workshop #2 was definitely one of excitement and anticipation.

Workshop #3

The final workshop focused on financial modeling. Although Mark didn’t expect us to become ‘masters of Excel’ in just a few hours, financial modeling is a fundamental aspect of determining whether or not a project is going to be financial sustainable.

Lastly, I have gathered some thoughts from a two of the other students who attended the workshops. Here is what they have to say!

“I heard about the case competition from a fellow student. I was curious about how finance concepts could be applied to something other than banking. I also found out that the woman who wrote the book ‘The Blue Sweater’ founded Acumen Fund. The workshops have been very interactive and Mark is engaging and very supportive. I am looking forward to the case and taking all of the skills we have learned and applying it to a meaningful cause!” – Jasmine

“I thought this would be a great learning experience because of the workshops. I love that there is that social, entrepreneurial aspect in this case competition because of what the organization works to fund. I had also heard great things about this case competition! From my experience, working on cases is such a unique way to learn about business problems and really working the brain to form a creative solution. I can’t wait to read the case and feel the sense of accomplishment at the end of everything.” – Elizabeth

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Rebecca Konsolos is a student at the Sauder School of Business at the University of British Columbia. She is in her third year of her undergraduate degree, majoring in finance and international business. She is a volunteer for Vancouver +acumen and is very passionate about her work there. Follow her on Twitter @rkonsolos

Movement Building is a Generational Task

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

Erica Dhawan and other Acumen Fund Chapter Leaders at the 2011 Investor Gathering

This post originally appeared on Erica Dhawan’s blog on November 24, 2011

“Product building is a five-year task. Movement building, on the other hand, is a generation-long challenge that requires much bolder vision, patience, and ambition. What this moment of inflection demands is exactly such a movement – a movement that creates a fundamental mindset shift in how society mobilizes resources to address our social and environmental challenges..” –Judith Rodin, President of Rockefeller Foundation at Acumen Fund 2011 Investor Gathering

4 years ago, I had a dream. I was an investment banker at Lehman Brothers and I was also a first generation Indian-American activist and social change agent.  I wanted to bring these two worlds together somehow. I believed that I could be part of a bigger social movement despite my day job demands.

In January 2008, I pitched Acumen Fund on an idea for bankers, marketers, consultants, students, designers, entrepreneurs to volunteer their time to fund raise and educate people on Acumen Fund’s work in patient capital.

Acumen said “we like it.  Now Erica, go do it.”

One volunteer meeting turned into many more, often stretching late into the night because everyone had busy full-time jobs.  We organized a panel on how young professionals could get engaged in social entrepreneurship work at NYU, we held an awareness event at SAKS 5th Avenue and then with the help of Nuru Project, we organized a DIGNITY photo auction and fundraiser that raised $25,000 for Acumen Fund in one night. The seeds of New York for Acumen were born.

This was the start to a speech I gave four years later, last week at Acumen Fund’s 10 year Investor Gathering. Acumen Fund chapters are now in 10 cities with thousands of members, from Vancouver to Dubai to London to Tokyo.

As I spoke on stage with other chapter leaders, I felt a movement start to take shape around the ideas of dignity, of patient capital and of moral leadership.  My dream came true and now this is a collective dream.

Most importantly, I recognized the power of the decentralized local chapter model to build a movement for patient capital. The volunteer chapter model is an important growth opportunity for nonprofits and helps organizations like Acumen Fund move from ‘product building’ to ‘movement building’ as Judith Rodin described. The Acumen Fund local chapters are teaching Acumen Fund how to collaborate across sectors, generations, and cities in ways that they haven’t seen before, infusing leadership trainings and activities at a more local level, and deepening conversation and action in communities.

The phenomenon of launching local hubs led by volunteers is becoming more and more common (i.e. TEDx, World Economic Forum Global Shapers). I believe this is the model for movement building in the future. Join the Acumen Fund chapter community here. Movement building is a generational task.

Erica Dhawan is a writer, researcher, speaker, and consultant on leadership, Gen Y, and women. She currently works with Otto Scharmer at the Presencing Institute, a global action learning platform that combines systems thinking, mindful leadership practices, participatory innovation tools, and generative stakeholder dialogue techniques. She is also one of the founders of Acumen Fund’s global chapter network. Follow her on Twitter at @edhawan.

Changing the Way the World Tackles Poverty – Starting with our Own Communities

Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

Acumen Fund Chapter leaders meet during the inaugural 2011 Chapter Leadership Retreat.

An “Aha moment” is an instant of sudden realization where the crux of a problem, or a key insight into possible solutions, becomes clear.  Over the past 10 years, the Acumen Fund community has achieved many such moments, and gathered in November to celebrate their continued exploration of solutions to issues of global poverty.

Timed to coincide with Acumen Fund’s annual Investor Gathering and 10 year anniversary Celebration, leaders of Acumen Fund’s volunteer chapters from the UK, Asia, Middle East, and North America convened on Nov 10th to Nov 12th in New York for the inaugural 2011 Chapter Leadership Retreat.  I was given the opportunity to attend the gathering as a core member of the recently launched BOSTON+acumen chapter. What resulted from the 2.5 day retreat was a heightened sense of inspiration, empowerment, and an increasingly connected community around the concept of patient capital.

At Acumen Fund, there is an undeniable sense of innovation, entrepreneurship, and inclusiveness that is encoded in the organization’s DNA. Conversations with Jacqueline Novogratz, Jo-Ann Tan, and other staff and chapter leaders in attendance revolved around leadership, building a deeper understanding of Acumen Fund’s vision, and scaling patient capital in our communities. In dozens of conversations over the weekend, a handful of fundamental questions surfaced: How can we take the values of Acumen Fund including moral leadership, dignity, generosity and accountability mainstream? How can we serve as a breeding ground for the idea of patient capital in our own communities? As leaders, how can we manage ambiguity and inspire others to contribute to social change?

The strategic alignment of the chapters to Acumen Fund’s vision was directly reflected in the “aha moments” of the last decade. The Investor’s Gathering on Nov 10th showcased snapshots of defining moments through stories and vivid images, depicting the evolution of the last decade of Acumen, the people behind it, the patient capital work, and the field. Lesson #4 of the 10 Things We Know to Be True seemed to encapsulate the vision of the community chapters. “We won’t succeed in the long term without cultivating local leaders, local money, and strong local communities.”

Acumen Fund chapters are self-organized, volunteer-led groups. We provide a platform in our respective communities for spreading Acumen Fund’s principles and its approach to help create a world beyond poverty, and through our activities, we cultivate leadership within our network of volunteers.  Our hallmark event, Dignity in a snapshot (next event is 12/1 in Toronto), is an example of an initiative which brings the community together around Acumen’s values and raises funds to support its mission. Going forward, the chapters are positioned to build local leaders, money, and communities around patient capital. Many chapters are already piloting initiatives to build robust local solutions with potential for long-term viability. The TORONTO+acumen and VANCOUVER+acumen chapters are piloting a venture network to identify a pipeline of noteworthy social enterprises in their communities. The TOKYO+acumen chapter is exploring ways to support a local nonprofit investing in small businesses in disaster-struck northern Japan on measurement frameworks such as GIIRS and IRIS.

As chapter leaders, we aim to take Acumen’s principles and ways of working to create a long-lasting impact on our communities. I look forward to next year’s chapter retreat to exchange ideas and build on our list of aha moments.


Elly Brown is a Project Consultant at Root Cause, a staff writer for NextBillion, and part of the leadership team for BOSTON+acumen, a volunteer-organized chapter supporting Acumen Fund’s mission.

Letter from Jacqueline Novogratz – Fall 2011

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011

Dear Friend of Acumen,

Read our Ten Year Report.

We are approaching the American holiday of Thanksgiving and there is much for which Acumen has to be grateful, starting first and foremost with our global community that reminds us daily of what is possible. Thank you for being part of it.

On November 9-10, we celebrated our first 10 years with a series of unforgettable activities. Partners, advisors, board members, chapter leaders, and friends from 20 countries came to be part of the two days. First, our Partners gathered for a series of “Deep Dives” to study and discuss what we’ve learned about the role of subsidies in market creation for the poor; lessons from energy, agriculture, and education; leadership; and our failures. Our NY+acumen chapter then hosted a Dignity photo auction with the help of the Nuru Project, and raised $30,000 for our work – many thanks. Judith Rodin, President of the Rockefeller Foundation, spoke at our Investor Gathering as did Seth Godin, entrepreneurs Jawad Aslam and Sanjay Bhatnagar, team members, and fellows.

In the evening, we celebrated with nearly 500 people, a Bollywood flashmob, spoken word poet Sarah Kay, and an exquisite performance from Aaron Neville. We send great thanks to them as well for their contributions. (Click here for a 7-minute video of our community and here for photos of the evening). All of it reminded us how lucky we are to be working on something so much bigger than ourselves, how far we’ve come, and how many miles there are to go.

Take a look at photos from our Investor Gathering and Celebration.

We’ve covered a lot of distance in the past decade. Acumen Fund has approved investments of more than $72 million in 65 companies. Our investees have touched more than 86 million lives and created more than 55,000 jobs. Nearly 50 global Acumen Fund Fellows are emerging as architects of the social sector, and we recently launched our first regional fellows program in East Africa. In collaboration with Google.org and Salesforce.com, we created a metrics platform called Pulse, now in use by over 50 organizations. We’ve also worked closely with others in our sector to establish standards and create the Global Impact Investing Network and Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs, industry organizations for a growing field that now counts over 200 organizations. We couldn’t have done any of this without the support of our partners, advisors, board, and team and we are grateful for everyone’s sustained focus and hard work to make it happen.

Watch the video of our ten year story.

And we are just getting started. If our first 10 years focused on proving that patient capital works, our next decade will focus on taking the idea mainstream. We can and must do more to create a more inclusive global economy by combining the ideas of patient capital and moral leadership. We will continue to push outward, to strengthen and expand our investments, and to demonstrate the potential of our approach in key countries around the world.

In the next five years, our goal is to grow our portfolio from $70 million to $150 million, touch the lives of 150 million individuals, scale our successful investments and expand into seven new countries where we can both bring the most and learn the most. Regarding leadership, we intend to train 400 Fellows in our global and regional programs, and to expand from 11 chapters today to 40 in 2015. And we will continue to invest resources in learning and sharing what works and what doesn’t in solving problems of poverty, while having the courage to listen, to fail, and to get up and try again until we find what works.

Read the Ten Things We've Learned to be True

These are such extraordinary times. Think of the Arab Spring, the Eurozone crisis, Occupy Wall Street – everywhere, people are calling for a new kind of leadership. But we are better as a world at naming problems than we are at experimenting, at risking failure, and at bringing forth new solutions. This is why Acumen Fund will focus more deliberately not only on investing patient capital but also in cultivating a growing global corps of leaders. We are lucky to be working with many diverse partners in this endeavor, from the Woodcock Foundation in the U.S. to the Edmond de Rothschild Foundations in Paris, and from KCB Bank in Kenya to JS Bank in Pakistan. We have also partnered with Goldman Sachs’ 10,000 Women Initiative, and are proud to see our fellows delivering parts of their own training to dozens of women entrepreneurs in Kenya and India. The hunger for leadership is growing: we received more than 1,000 applications for ten spots in the coming year’s Global Fellows class.

If one thing has shifted my own understanding of what is possible, it has been the self-organized phenomenon of Acumen Fund Chapters in 11 cities today, including Vancouver, Dubai, Tokyo, and London. We are currently working with chapter leaders to extend parts of the Acumen Fellows’ curriculum into their activities, and to provide them with tools to put the principles of patient capital investing and moral leadership into action within their lives and communities.

Acumen Fund also continues to grow and change as a global organization. It is with profound appreciation that I recognize and thank our Founding Board member, Stuart Davidson, and our Board Chair Margo Alexander for their service. We could not have built Acumen without both Margo and Stuart. Andrea Soros Colombel will step in as our new Board Chair in January, and I look forward to working with her. I also would like to welcome three new board members: Ken Ofori-Atta of Ghana, Thulsi Ravilla of India, and Pat Mitchell of the U.S.

More than anything else, at the end of this first decade and the beginning of the holiday season, I realize how grateful I am to have more memories from Acumen Fund than I can count. I think of times holding newborn babies in bright pink rooms at LifeSpring Hospitals in India, surrounded by scores of smiling new mothers. I think of watching tribal women getting their eyes tested by VisionSpring and seeing the looks on their faces when they realized they could again thread a needle. I remember seeing the first green park built among the new houses in Saiban’s development outside of Lahore. And the awesome feeling of rebirth while standing in the cotton fields of northern Uganda, marveling at how we human beings can be so resilient against all odds.

For all of this and so much more, I am grateful. Indeed, the work of Acumen Fund contains within it the seeds of renewing systems of government and of capitalism. It is work based on the infinite capacity of the human spirit, and it recognizes that we need both markets and government to work together if we are to reach the poor in ways that matter, in ways that reach millions sustainably. Ultimately, the work of Acumen is about creating real, tangible hope in a world dominated by too much cynicism. This hope is not an easy hope, but a hard-earned one based on the highest expectations for what we as a world can do.

For ten years, we have seen glimmers of change, and when we look to the future, we can imagine the glimmers growing brighter. For our part, the Acumen Fund team will do everything in our capacity to bring forth new models of development based on investing patiently but determinedly in companies, leaders and ideas that can change the world. We obviously can’t do it alone, and need you to be part of this.

Please consider contributing to mark our first 10 years here and to signal your support for the next ten. We couldn’t be more excited to continue this work with you. Thank you in advance for all you have contributed and will continue to give to Acumen.

Here’s to a better future that we will create together.

In thanksgiving,

Jacqueline Novogratz