The Feast: Franchising, Financing, and Technology

October 5th, 2009

Last Thursday you could find me drooling in my seat at the all-day social enterprise conference phenomena known as The Feast . As Stacey Murphy of @bkfarmyards put it: “#Feastongood was pretty unforgettable. Only criticism is too many inspiring people to meet in too little time.” It was hard to meet someone who wasn’t incredibly interesting and taking their ideas of social innovation to the next level (I challenge you to try at The Feast 2010–tickets are already on sale.) I am still somewhat in a daze regarding all of the things that were discussed, opportunities to be seized, and the amazing people who were brought together.

There was, however, a recurring theme that I noticed in many of my conversations: franchising, financing, and technology.

But let me back up a bit…the night before I attended a panel discussion at The Foundation Center on donor management systems. As some of the organizations I am working with are revving up for full-on fund development, implementing an affordable donor management program seems like a good part of the plan. I was a little shocked when I arrived that probably 80% of the attendees were twice my age. I got up and asked a question regarding options for donor management systems that would work for organizations with staff who telecommute and lack a brick-and-mortar base of operations. The question was confused people–both in the audience and in the panel–but I got a helpful answer in the end. However, the answer suited my question by accident–these traditional programs aren’t being designed with 21st century social entrepreneurs in mind, they just may work out unintentionally. Read the rest of this entry »

“I want to work for a big INGO, because I want to be rich.”

September 23rd, 2009

Monday evening I attended Net Impact NYC’s Womens Social Entrepreneurship Panel at The Feldenkrais Institute. The panel was moderated by Ann MacDougal, Chief Management Officer (New York) at Acumen Fund and featured:

Elizabeth Scharpf, Chief Instigating Officer at Sustainable Health Enterprises (SHE)
Katie Orenstein, Founder and Director at The Op-Ed Project
Amini Kajunju, CEO/COO at the and Executive Committee member at Angel Africa

They are the big-wigs at their respective organizations and have each made great strides in addressing social issues, but these three women were also honest, funny, and down-to-earth about life as a woman social entrepreneur. Elizabeth Scharpf spoke about her “tipping point” that guided her down a different path. She had been working at an INGO in Mozambique, and had spoken with some young children about what they wanted to be when the grew up. One child answered: “I want to work for a big international development organization, because I want to be rich.” Hmmm. That wasn’t exactly the motivation for involvement in the social sector that she (or really anyone else for that matter) wanted to hear. What resulted was Elizabeth’s pursuit of an alternative path that led her to start SHE. Read the rest of this entry »

The Scarlet Pimpernel: All Day Buffet

September 16th, 2009

One week, two great events…(Part 2 of 2)

Event 2: NY 100 Party

We’re sick of the doom and gloom–the stories of revival coming out of this crisis need to be told too.–NEWYork 100

Last night I headed over to All Day Buffet’s NEWYork 100 Party at Brooklyn Bowl. All Day Buffet is the Scarlet Pimpernel of the growing social entrepreneurship scene…they are everywhere, doing good, somewhat disguised. When I got to the event last night, the first thing someone asked me was: “How did you hear about All Day Buffet?”  I told them that I had unknowingly come across them on  multiple occasions, but it wasn’t until recently that I realized that All Day Buffet was really behind it all.
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BRAC’s Friendraiser: Lessons in raising friends

September 16th, 2009

One week, two great events… (Part 1 of 2)

Event 1: BRAC’s Friendraiser

Last Wednesday I headed over to BRAC’s Friendraiser at the Edwynn Houk Gallery. I was invited to the event by my friend Laina–who is always up to good. My hat goes off to the BRAC Host Committee, who organized the free event, as it was truly a great way to introduce new “friends” to the organization’s mission and activities. There were a bunch of things about the event’s structure itself that I really appreciated. Some Friendraising tips to consider for your organization’s next Friendraiser:

Price: The event was free. While fundraising and/or off-setting costs are definitely important and events can be a great opportunity for such a thing, free events are a great way to encourage new attendees. In NYC especially, everything seems to have a dollar sign attached to it.
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Castle Rock: Lessons on Hiking & Entrepreneurship

September 4th, 2009

I dug out my old headlamp, had my mother ship me my sleeping bag, looked over my urban wardrobe despondently before picking out some articles that could function as “camp attire,” and boarded a flight to North Carolina for the 2009 Rockbrook Camp Reunion. I started going to Rockbrook when I was 12 years old and was a camper there for 5 years, a staff member for an additional 5—and I hadn’t been back since August 2004. As a matter of fact, as I walked down the unlit gravel path to my cabin on Friday night and was actually slightly afraid of the dark and the woods, I realized that it had been 5 years since I had been camping at all.

After 10 summers of living in rustic cabins, prowling around after dark without a flashlight, going on daily hikes, hauling boats around, wrestling with campers’ massive Kmart sleeping bags on overnight trips, and living exclusively in Chacos and Patagonia, it was hard not to laugh at myself. Here I was in my American Apparel get-up, periodically checking my Blackberry to make sure everything was fine at home with my dog, and very cautiously treading on the “uneven” and “rugged” camp trails I had spent years recklessly barreling down.
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Case Study: “You best help the cause by doing what you do best”

August 24th, 2009

One of the things I remember most of my study abroad experience with SIT in Australia (which was a nontraditional program focused on Conservation and Natural Resource Management), was something a guest lecturer, Peter Cuming, had said (now, I’m paraphrasing here,this was several years ago): “You best help the cause [the environment], by doing what you do best.” At the time, I remember thinking, “How does that work? What if what you are best at is dancing? How does that help the environment?” A year later I graduated from college with a degree in English Literature–which had been my strongest subject–and (like many English majors before me) thought to myself: “Now what? How exactly am I supposed to help the environment with a degree in literature and a love of Chaucer?”
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NYWSE Mastermind-Mentoring Initiative Wrap-Up

August 17th, 2009

There are lots of great things to do in New York City in the summer. This summer I, along with several other women, participated in the first ever New York Women Social Entrepreneurs (NYWSE) Mastermind-Mentoring Initiative (MMI). Read on!

weegee_summer

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Devil’s Advocate: Teeny, tiny nonprofits

August 12th, 2009

Last week I came across an interesting tweet from @kenscommentary (Ken Berger, President of Charity Navigator)– “Too many itsy bitsy nonprofits! Consider this before you leap into teenyness”–and a link to the following article, “Alternatives to Forming a Charitable Nonprofit.”

cn1

The article is full of very useful information outlining alternative nonprofit funding options (like fiscal sponsorship or collaborating with an existing nonprofit) and highlights the need for sufficient research to be conducted as well as preparing viability plans.
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The Power of the People

August 7th, 2009

This week I read a post on Wesley’s blog entitled,“Lessons Learned: Mark Earls Lecture on Social Influence”, that I found pretty interesting. In the post he summarizes a lecture by Mark Earls, a former advertising and communications professional who describes himself on his About Page as someone who was:

… taught (at home, at school, at uni, at everywhere) to “think it through” i.e. not to accept what I was told but to challenge everything until a more compelling, better-evidenced and more workable descriptions of how things work emerges.

But down to the nitty-gritty. The part of Wesley’s summary that I’ve been thinking about all week is the following:
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Now That’s Advertising, Duane Reade

August 4th, 2009
The bottom of the ad reads: "Your City. Your Drugstore. DUANE READE." As seen on the M train

The bottom of the ad reads: "Your City. Your Drugstore. DUANE READE." As seen on the M train

I was sitting on the M-train crossing over the East River and looked up to read this sign. I thought it was a really clever, public health-related ad that incorporated the City as part of its campaign.  It is so effective, not just because it makes you stop and feel a little grossed out, but also because it makes you feel as if you are part of something unique, special and personalized: the New York City subway system. It’s “Your City. Your Drugstore.” It makes me want to go out and buy Purell right now.

Businesses are used to spending lots and lots of money on advertising campaigns–its no secret. But, I am actually less interested in talking about advertising and more interested in talking about Duane Reade’s ability to work the City. As this advertisement shows, Duane Reade knows its audience (New Yorkers), but what you may  not know is that it also knows the City, very, very well. Part of my day-job involves retail attraction and in an effort to learn as much as possible about urban retail attraction, I attended a seminar by Michael Berne of MJB Consulting earlier this year who brought up Duane Reade as a case study. Duane Reade’s incomparable success in NYC is related to its flexible and creative real estate needs. Most big-box retail, like CVS, Walgreens, etc., have very specific requirements when it comes to real estate leasing: very specific square-footage, layouts, one floor, etc. Not so for Duane Reade. They’ll take anything as long as it’s at a good location. I thought this quote from a 2005 NY Mag article was pretty hilarious and accurate:

The company [Duane Reade] understands two important things: New Yorkers are uniquely harried shoppers, and the whole ball game comes down to real estate. Duane Reade has used its skill at that quintessential New York blood sport to cut rents by shoehorning its stores into bizarre locations other chains wouldn’t touch.

The article goes on to give some specifics about Duane Reade’s real estate strategy:

While most pharmacy chains run in fear from multi-floor, non-box layouts, he embraces them. Forty-nine of his stores have two floors, and they come as small as a studio apartment (under 500 square feet) and as large as a suburban supermarket (a 17,200-square-foot box in Flatlands, Brooklyn). Odder spaces include a store at 62nd Street and Broadway with a basement described as “kind of a triangle with a leg on it,” and an old theater on East 86th Street with 1,300 square feet on the ground floor and 12,000 upstairs.

Duane Reade’s flexibility in terms of their space requirements has given them a substantial edge on other NYC pharmacies, who were much slower to adopt this practice. However, the payoff for the company has been substantial. According to the article, when Duane Reade acquired a space in Times Square in 2000 the going rate was $250 per square foot in that neighborhood. However, basement retail space was going for $85 a square foot–and that is where Duane Reade located: in the basement.

Tom Bow, senior vice-president for the Durst Organization, which leased the space [to Duane Reade, said:] “Most tenants wouldn’t be able to take that space, but they could,” says Bow. “They understood that Times Square was a 24/7 location. They just knew the local market.”

The moral of the story: Well, there might be two morals. One: Understand your audience and understand your market. That may sound pithy, but you may be sacrificing opportunities by not accurately understanding people’s interests. Take time to do this important research. Two: Break out of the box! Blaze your own trail! Find creative and new solutions to your problems or to your existing strategies…you never know when you could be doing something better if you don’t investigate new options and test them out.