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Home » Fundraising » Here Comes SoCap

September 29, 2010 By Nell Edgington 2 Comments

Here Comes SoCap

So it’s my favorite time of year again, well at least in the world of social innovation. The Social Capital Markets Conference in San Francisco starts Monday. There are a lot of social innovation conferences, in fact you can read a great rundown on many of this Fall’s best. But SoCap is by far my favorite. It is the one place where the disparate array of people who are interested in how to get more money flowing to social impact come together for 3 days. There are nonprofit, for-profit and hybrid social entrepreneurs; philanthropists; social investors; government bureaucrats and anyone in between. It seems this conference more than any other is a microcosm of the convergence that is happening in the world of social innovation between the public, private and government sectors.

I’ll be honest, the first two years of the conference were a little heavy on the for-profit social entrepreneurship side, leaving somewhat behind government and nonprofit. There were sessions and speakers from those worlds, to be sure, but the emphasis of the conference in the beginning was how to get money flowing more readily to double bottom-line businesses (for-profit businesses that are making money AND creating a social impact).

This year’s conference promises to open wide the doors of the social capital market. For starters, SoCap organizers have developed 6 “tracks” that each focus on a particular area of the social capital market. The track that interests me the most, of course, is the one focusing on nonprofit/philanthropy. Sean Stannard-Stockton of Tactical Philanthropy has put together a nice track with cutting-edge topics in the world of making money work better in the nonprofit sector:

  • Decriminalizing Fundraising
  • Scaling Social Impact
  • Individual Donors Practicing Unconstrained Philanthropy
  • The Lessons of Behavioral Finance
  • When to Invest and When to Give
  • Nonprofit Analysis: Beyond Metrics

In addition there are several other tracks that hold great appeal: Impact Investing, New Money, Metrics and System Thinking and so on. And then there are some fabulous speakers including Jacqueline Novogratz from Acumen Fund, Matt Flannery from Kiva, speakers from the Gates Foundation and Root Capital and many others. Add to that the side sessions, pitch events and more, and my head starts to spin. Three days is just not enough.

I’ll be blogging from the conference as I did last year (you can read my blogs from SoCap09 here, here and here).

What I love so much about SoCap is that it really challenges this burgeoning community/movement/space to do more, to ask harder questions, to push the momentum forward. You come out of a session with many more questions than you had going in. But also, so much more energy to break out of the normal way of thinking and envision a different path forward. Because at its essence, SoCap is about creating something completely new. It’s about creating a space where money and social impact meet and create a synergy that can, we hope, change the world. The old rules and constraints don’t apply. This conference and all the people attending it, in person or via social media networks, are writing the new rule book. And that’s exciting, challenging, exhausting and exhilarating all at the same time.

If you are attending SoCap too, let me know. See you there!

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Filed Under: Fundraising, Nonprofits, Philanthropy Tagged With: Acumen Fund, Convergence, Gates Foundation, Jacqueline Novogratz, Kiva, Matt Flannery, philanthropic equity, Root Capital, Sean Stannard-Stockton, SoCap10, Social Capital Markets conference, Social Entrepreneurship, social innovation, social investors, Tactical Philanthropy

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Comments

  1. JinAtSmilely says

    September 29, 2010 at 3:44 pm

    Ashoka, a social entrepreneurship initiative, has partnered up with Staples to raise funds their their charity. Isn’t that a great idea? All you need to do is follow @StaplesTweets on Twitter with #Follow4aCause, and Staples will donate $1 for each new follower. For more info, click here: http://bit.ly/9UEnMv

    Reply

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