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Social Innovations

A Coffee Shop for the Social Capital Market

The social capital market aims to have a positive impact on the planet.

Markets convene in conversations, not in taxonomies or on trading floors. That was true when investors in ships going to or coming from the Spice Islands convened in Amsterdam coffee shops to figure out how to share risk and return in the exploding opportunity ahead of them. Those conversations, a reaction to transaction-intensive, one-off deals, created the Dutch Bourse. Similarly, a couple of hundred years later, merchants in the new trading empire of Manhattan gathered under the Buttonwood Tree on Wall Street to devise on the fly a shorthand means of understanding the value held by the man under the other limb, abstracting the relevant elements, assigning a future value to the current cost, and making a deal.

When a market is new, the value is discovered in conversation because people use different words for the same thing. Thus conversation is where market liquidity emerges. The Social Capital Market, sometimes called the blended value market, or half a dozen other names, has additional complexity as it comes into its own. That additional complexity is similar to the multifaceted nature of the market for clean technology and energy.  In both cases, it’s not just about the money. It’s also about having a positive impact on the planet and its people.

In the early stages of the clean tech market, true believers dug themselves into foxholes and defended their definitions, holding their positions with more than rational fervor because they were linked to their vision of what the world ought to become. They were evangelists with a rigid theory of change: People ought to pay for solar panels even though they didn’t yet make financial sense, simply because it was the right thing to do. 

That started to change when new money came into the room. Definitions are transformed when new money arrives; gold melts meanings that seemed to be set in stone, and they become fluid and eventually fungible.  Meanings turn into negotiable things that accompany the buying and selling of companies in markets where people can figure out what the value is and what an increase in value looks like.

The hedge fund managers, the venture capitalists sniffing for potential opportunities, and the family office managers couldn’t understand the arcane insider jargon and linguistic disputes of the early clean tech conferences’ true believers. The value remained opaque to them, and the true believers were oblivious to the need for change. Then in stepped Nick Parker, who in 2001 built the Clean Tech Venture Forum. He made the emerging clean tech market make sense to the new money with a series of conferences and research initiatives that validated the category to the market.

The definitions changed and got simpler because real investors, before they take action, have to settle on definitions that mean the same thing to both parties so they can agree about value. This process was not without its cost. Markets are about fluidity, setting up structures in which value can be clearly seen and flow from one party to the other. The true believers who remained rigid were quickly sent to the sidelines because they could not function in this type of reality.

That same rationalization and clarity is happening in the Social Capital Market. Previously two things have plagued this blended value market. The first is opacity: When you tell people you are not just looking at risk and return in an investment, but also valuing the third dimension of impact, it’s hard for them to understand. There is a cultural validation of the position that single-mindedness—focusing only on the financial return—is the right approach to investing. Then people donate and create an impact out of the excess. Saying you can actually consider the social value you create when you contemplate an investment challenges the dominant way of thinking we have inherited from the robber barons of 100 years ago.

This new mode of thinking is incomprehensible to many investors, though the recent meltdown on Wall Street is opening many people’s eyes to the limitations of greed and the fact that you can’t escape the impact of your investments.

The second problem is a paucity of information; many people don’t see enough examples to buy into the reality of the new Social Capital Market. A convening in San Francisco in mid-October—Socap08—is solving this second problem. Socap08 will bring together dozens of social venture funds raising money from people who’ve accepted the investment paradigm that you can have both financial return and proactive social impact.

The Social Capital Market is emerging just as the deficiencies of the previous, single-minded model of investing have become obvious. Given the blood on the floor on Wall Street, people are newly aware of the downside of a purely greed-focused approach. Perhaps Socap08 can help people open their eyes and see the need to take into account the social impact of investing as well.

What I do know is that more than 300 people will be attending the conference, and more funds doing good while doing well will be there than have ever been gathered in one place before. The event has the potential, I think, to do more to validate this blended value approach to investing than anything that’s happened before it.

I can’t speak for the long-term impact of Socap08. I can say that the crowd assembled will, in the aggregate, show that this new asset class that draws on elements of both giving and investing, of both philanthropy and the power of the market, is real, big, and growing.

For more information visit http://www.socialcapitalmarkets.net


imageKevin Jones is a cofounding principal of Good Capital, an investment firm that accelerates the flow of capital to enterprises that use market forces to create large-scale social change. Jones is a successful serial entrepreneur, angel investor, and cofounder of Social Capital Markets, the groundbreaking conference on social venture investing.

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COMMENTS

  • BY chris macrae

    ON October 2, 2008 02:17 PM

    I am a mathematician. I like to see constitutional models of organisational systems defined
    so they are transparently verifiable and not smudged with all sorts of classifications that
    social and CSR funds have used over recent years

    Can we make a list of models that are 100% verifiable with exact specifications?

    The one that is simplest to me is Dr Yunus’ Social Business Model which is the subject
    of his book “creating a world without poverty, social business, future of capitalism”. This
    is a constituitional model that has been tried and tested in bangladesh for 25 year now
    with probably over 500 verifiable cases, as well as being the core model of microcredit
    the way Dr Yunus and his 4 founders originated this form of microbanking owned by
    the poorest in the community.

    Are there any other named models where an ordinary panel of concerned people could
    look at an organisation and say yes it is or no it isnt applying the particular named model?

  • Kevin, thank you for articulating the issue of social investment so clearly.

    I do agree that there is confusion still, and I believe the issue comes from trying to include too many parameters in the equation. And I agree with the previous comment that we should look at what Muhammad Yunus has done.
    This is what I am trying to do, and why I have been pushing the concept of an Entrepreneur Commons (www.entrepreneurcommons.org).

    The issue I see is one of measurement:
    - how do you measure a good investment from a not-so-good investment when you have to balance between a rate of return and other things like impact of community (and what is that?)? Should you be happy with a 3x return if other criteria are met?
    The existing investment models from Angels or VCs are not working in this context: with equity deals all you know is that you will only get the answer later on, at some unspecified time and definitely after the fact when it is too late to do anything about it.
    It may work for a few true believers who want to invest in social businesses, but certainly not for the larger audience of investors who want to do good but would like some clarity on what to expect.

    The answer is to do debt instead of equity, as microfinance is doing:
    - investors know when they are getting their money back
    - they know what return they can expect from the investment
    - best of all, success is measured by the fact that the loan has been paid off, which is as simple to measure as it gets.

    The investment decision then becomes:
    - is this social business I am looking at something that I want to be part of? this applies to anything that would bring good to the community, and everyone is free to decide what their area of interest is
    - is the rate of return something I am comfortable given the level of risk? this can be benchmarked against regular markets return.

    Because we are talking social investment, the Entrepreneur Commons is hybrid structure, in line again with what Muhammad Yunus recommends:
    - a regular investment fund, whose purpose is to generate profit for investors so that they can come back for more
    - a not-for-profit organization, to manage the fund. The not-for-profit is a social network of entrepreneurs providing mentorship in addition to loans, so that the value generated is not spent on anything else than what the investments that are targeting or their investors.

    Because Entrepreneur Commons is for social entrepreneurs in developed countries, and because entrepreneurs are typically very individualistic people who are focused on their business more than anything else, you also need “glue” to make sure the social network is healthy. So the Entrepreneur Commons includes a Mutual Guarantee Funds, which creates an incentive for entrepreneurs to work with each others, and which also mitigates the risk for investors: the mutual guarantee fund covers 50% of the default, so that both investors and entrepreneurs have an interest in minimizing defaults.

    Entrepreneur Commons will be presenting at Socap2008, on 10/14/08 at 2:30pm room 355C, so feel free to check us out to get more info…

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