Investing in Cross-Subsidy for Greater Impact
Investors need ways to gauge social impact and business health. Cross-subsidy models can help.
Investors need ways to gauge social impact and business health. Cross-subsidy models can help.
By embracing a more-inclusive outreach approach, effective philanthropy advocates can attract more funders.
Blending practices and theory to improve health outcomes outside the clinical setting.
B Corps have an opportunity to dramatically increase their social and environmental performance by upgrading their internal management practices.
Solving major social problems is now possible, but not unless the organizations that have been most responsible for making a difference change significantly.
Our understanding of community can help funders and evaluators identify, understand, and strengthen the communities they work with.
Five practical considerations for organizations that want to use intentional influence to achieve a bold social goal.
The superficially enticing “logic” of effective altruism ultimately leads to a moralistic, hyper-rationalistic, top-down approach to philanthropy that can kill the very altruistic spirit it claims to foster.
There’s only one bottom line. It ought to be impact.
America must invest in art and imaginative capacity.