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March-April 2005
Global
Social Venture Competition Finals Open to Public- April 15
The
San Francisco Bay Area community is cordially invited to attend
the open finals of the Global Social Venture Competition.
Featuring nine socially responsible business plans from around
the world, the competition will be held in the Berkeley
Art Museum on Friday, April 15, beginning at 9:00 AM.
(Guests are asked to use the Durant Ave entrance.)
The nine teams, each of which must include at least one
graduate student from an accredited business school, have
developed social enterprises that range from applying nanotechnology
to solar power systems in developing countries to training
low-income urban youth to conduct market research on their
peer groups. They will compete for recognition and $45,000
in prizes.
The competition, founded by five UC Berkeley MBA students
in 1999, has grown into a global partnership between the campus's
Haas School of Business, Columbia Business School in New York,
and London Business School. Long-time sponsor The Goldman
Sachs Foundation and Omidyar Networks also support the competition.
The competition is unique among business plan competitions
in that it gives equal weight to financial profitability and
social impact assessment. To compete successfully, social
ventures must show a demonstrably greater impact of their
social impact assessment than existing firms in the industry.
Each plan must have at least one current MBA student from
an accredited business school on the management team.
Judges from the venture capital, social entrepreneurship and
philanthropic communities evaluate the plans for their business
viability and their expected social return on investment.
Following the nine finalists, Human Service Fellowship
(Kellogg Business School, Northwestern University), which
has already been designated as the winner of the Social Impact
Assessment award, will present its winning assessment.
The Finalists
Amhartan Accessible Travel Services
(London Business School) is working to improve the experience
of travelers with special needs, such as medical disabilities,
by providing consumer services and training travel industry
workers to accommodate special needs travelers.
Connect US LLC (Columbia Business
School, Columbia University) uses wireless messaging to remind
patients to take medication as prescribed to help minimize
the social and financial burden placed on the U.S. health
care system when patients fail to follow doctors' orders.
Fuelture (Wharton School, University
of Pennsylvania, and London School of Business) will support
converting high-mileage urban vehicles, especially taxis and
small delivery vans, to automotive propane or liquefied petroleum
gas (LPG) instead of gasoline, which would reduce running
costs and improve urban air quality. Fuelture would simplify
the conversion process and create a chain of filling stations.
Fuerza Research (Kellogg School
of Management, Northwestern University) provides market research
on teenage trends by hiring and training low-income, urban
teens to conduct focus groups and peer interviews.
Green Scene (Stern School of Business,
New York University) will train and employ individuals with
criminal records in New York City to provide a range of outdoor
maintenance services, giving these individuals new skills
and employment.
INYUCA (ESADE Business School,
Barcelona), working in Colombia, South America, would replace
corn, imported as animal feed, with a locally grown product
- yucca. Growing yucca and processing it into flour would
create jobs in rural communities for farmers and processors
while providing an alternative to coca leaf cultivation.
MicroCredit Enterprises (Haas
School of Business, UC Berkeley, and Graduate School of Management,
UC Davis) is a socially-responsible investment fund targeting
the microfinance sector through MicroCredit Enterprises Investment
Accounts (MEIA).
SolarAMP, LLC (Kenan-Flagler School,
University of North Carolina) is a nanotechnology company
in the solar energy industry currently pursuing off-grid solutions
for developing countries.
World of Good (Haas School of Business)
distributes a line of globally-sourced fair trade gifts and
accessories under fair trade guidelines that generate employment
for women and disadvantaged communities, promise a living
wage, and promote social and economic development.

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