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Archive for the ‘Market Deals’ Category

GamesThatGive acquired by Facebook Software Provider , Vitrue

July 21st, 2011

Exciting news out of Hub SOMA! GamesThatGive, formed by former Apple software engineer Adam Archer and web developer Kris Gross was acquired by the Facebook software provider, Vitrue. GamesThatGive is “guiltless gaming” where customers play charitable games on brand pages of companies such as Domino’s and Dockers and those brands donate money to charities including Ronald McDonald House, American Heart Association, Unicef, St. Jude’s Hospital and The Breast Cancer Fund. Congratulations to GamesThatGive, a fellow Hub organization! To read more about the acquisition click here.

 

 

Landmark Investment in Hotfrog on Mission Markets

February 3rd, 2011

Hotfrog, an early stage media organization uniting professional and citizen journalists to confront burning issues across the globe, completed the first transaction in their $2 Million Series A Round on Mission Markets.  The investment in Hotfrog is a landmark moment for Mission Markets who provide a secure, regulatory impact investing platform to increase the flow of capital to companies addressing social issues. The transaction holds larger significance for the Social Capital Market, showing that mission-aligned capital within an estimated $400 billion – $1 trillion market is beginning to move through systems designed specifically to catalyze the markets growth. Learn more about Hotfrog and Mission Markets.

People’s movement creates indigenous capital, sells it back to the West at a premium

January 5th, 2011

UN Foundation helps Sierra Gorda’s people create a unique blend of environmental and social impact.

“We got involved with Sierra Gorda in 2004,” said Ryan Hobert, Deputy Director of the UN Foundation’s Climate and Energy Program. “We wanted to offset all of our current and historical green house gas emissions, our heating, our cooling, and our air travel.

“We had come across Sierra Gorda through the UNDP’s Global Environmental Facility,” the group that provides multilateral funding of the environmental efforts of the World Bank and others. “They got started with an $6.7 million grant and we met Pati [Ruiz Corzo, Sierra Gorda’s founder] and we decided we wanted to build their capacity and purchase their first bulk sale of offsets.”

Hobert’s team got the Baker & McKinsey law firm to do pro bono work to help both sides work through the initial contract, an eight-month project that created a sturdy template. They bought their first five tons at $10 a ton.

“At that point there was some reticence about forestry because of questions about permanence,” the question of whether the seller will really be around in 30 years to complete the reforestation that they promise to undertake once the sale is made.

The fact that Sierra Gorda’s land owners have been planting trees on their own and public land for hundreds of years and that the group had local to regional to national endorsements by the Mexican government mitigated that risk.

The odd thing about Sierra Gorda’s contracts, why it can be lower risk and relied on, is that performance is not based on the sometimes fickle or changeable Western benevolent donors or impact investors. Instead the potential scalable replication of the social enterprise is based on deep community-based collaborations led by local Mexican people themselves.

That’s what indigenous capital means: the people who are usually the beneficial recipients of Western goodwill are actually in charge and selling the mix of social and environmental value they create back to the West as a reliable security.

Deals like this usually start with some level of subsidy, such as that provided by the UN Foundation, but then progress to being marketable.

As the relationship has grown in the last half-dozen years, Hobert has been pleased with Sierra Gorda’s performance and, like all good partnerships, is taking action to go deeper with it. “They had MDG benefits to their work, social impact, poverty alleviation impact, and while those two efforts, climate and MDG are often separate, [we liked getting both social and environmental impact in one project].”

Because Sierra Gorda brings together such a unique mix of value that is usually computed separately, the UN foundation has been helping get their methodologies certified by Rainforest Alliance and plans to celebrate their completion.

“They are doing this in a holistic way,” said Hobert, who could not think of another group providing Sierra Gorda’s unique mix of social and environmental value. “We like them, and what they do, and the way they do it.” Hobert said. “There are a lot of challenges to measuring and coordinating so many land owners but given those challenges, they seem to be engaging the people in a way that respects them and is trying to lift them up, and doing a good job of restoring their ecosystems. Unlike some projects with high potential where they hope to be in and out in a few years, they are working on reforestation over half a century, and they have an organization that is close to the people, that people trust.”

Crowdsourced Marketplaces – Only $250 and a huge payoff

December 31st, 2010

I just upped my pledge to $250 to put a remarkable Kickstarter project over the top. Symbionomics, stories of a new economy is high concept, with systemic change as its goal. I am a serial startup and turnaround entrepreneur with a record of seven out of eight successful companies become a professional investor (after selling several companies you realize every company is a future’s contract). I consider myself experienced, yet I have found that that Kickstarter and its crowdsourced funding peers like Indiegogo, deliver a far higher and more frequent and continuous level of emotional involvement linked to a funding commitment than I have experienced before. We, the team behind Hub Bay Area, Good Capital and Socap, have a lot to learn from them.

The Hub Bay Area has recently raised enough money from high net worth individuals and family foundations to start a seed fund for startup entrepreneurs working out of the two hubs we operate, the large and expanding one in San Francisco and the smaller one in Berkeley where we started.

That money came from people like Lloyd Elder, who built Google’s infinitely scalable server network. I met Lloyd through the remarkable Leila Janah, the globe trotting leader of Samasource. I really got to know Lloyd at a gala that featured Newark’s celebrity mayor, Cory Booker, followed up by a series of conversations at the Hub Soma where we both got comfortable with each other and our respective goals for our time, talent and financial resources. I am looking forward to what Lloyd can bring these startup entrepreneurs with his deep system thinking. Other investors in that high risk, high potential social impact startup fund were from family foundations working who have invested in our first Good Capital fund, the Social Enterprise Expansion Fund. Those new investments also were the product of long relationships that have grown in mutual trust over time.

We are doing a joint venture on the startup HubCap fund with Gray Ghost’s First Light.There are innovative crowdsourced due dilligence elements in the model Bob Patillo concieved and proved out in that model that I admit I was initially skeptical about but that proved to work. Like the best partnerships, that one has grown deeper overtime as we have looked for ways to do more things together.

We have a latent element of crowdsourced funding in our new HubCap seed fund, that my partner Tim Freundlich, a true genius, has devised using his Giving Assets platform that he spun out of Calvert. It allows for people to invest in a for profit social enterprise or donate to a non profit social enterprise and get a 35% tax deduction, based on their income. It’s a real thing of beauty in its robust flexibility. But we have no real online crowdsourcing strategy to help make that happen. We have printed up some response envelopes, but I see from my recent foray into Kickstarter and Indiegogo that some people have figured it out in a way I am only starting to glimpse.

The emotional commitment to these two startups success I have, the amount of time I have thought about them and the feeling of belonging these tiny investments have given me is something new, and powerful. I do not know how other people feel about their commitments on these platforms, but it’s something to look at closely.

At Socapeurope we plan to give awards for marketplace design, and we have been paying attention to the impact investing marketplaces that are starting to gain momentum, like Mission Markets, where one of our Good Capital companies is participating in a potential followon eight figure fund raise. A key element is how you price in mission in a way that it can stand up strongly against demands for pure financial return.

It’s clear, however, that there is something extremely powerful going on in these peer to peer, crowdsourced marketplaces where the collective intelligence of a community comes together to make something happen for raw, high concept startups with a lot of potential. I want to get smarter about this and make it a key part of what we do in Amsterdam May 30-June 1, when we go back to where the capital markets first took shape 400 years ago.

UK and two U.S. metrics groups join up

December 8th, 2010

SVT Group and REDF have joined to create  a United States chapter of the UK based SROI Network.They join the roster of GIIRS, IRIS, Impact50 as intermediaries playing the role of making sense of the Social Capital Market as it emerges. Making sense of the sense makers will be a key theme of SocapEurope and one of the focuses of the contextualized map of the market we are building as we head to Amsterdam.

Here is the press release on the new venture :SROI USA will be co-chaired by Cynthia Gair, Managing Director of Programs for REDF, and Sara Olsen, Founding Partner of SVT Group. Membership is open to anyone interested in helping to develop and promote the SROI methodology. A nominal membership fee to cover minimal administrative expenses will be charged but has not yet been determined.

“Our goal is to discover who is working with SROI or similar methodologies in the US, to provide a forum for us to share insights, and to continue to innovate around the original methodology for social enterprise that was first written about by REDF in 2000,” said Sara. “A star is born,” said Cynthia.

The first formal SROI Network was formed in 2008, with a headquarters in the UK and members from several countries. That network now has over 600 members in 13 countries worldwide, and country-specific chapters have been created or are in formation in Australia, Canada, the Netherlands and the UK as well as the US.

To participate and for more information, please email USA [at] sroi.net!