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David Anttony shares about Buy One Give One as a social enterprise

 

 

 

 

 

David Anttony shares about Buy One Give One (Buy1GIVE1 - B1G1) as a social enterprise with Business Gyan magazine from Bangalore, India
 

http://www.businessgyan.com/content/view/3234/477/

Buy1 Give1 Free Social Enterprise

The SOUL of an Enterprise

Social Enterprise

By David Anttony

A social entrepreneur knows that business is like an onion - many layers but one integrated whole; miss out a layer and you don't have an onion.

Three key layers of a business design are usually left out, minimised or just payed lip service to - environment, community and staff development and welfare. 

If we were to use the metaphor of a seed growing into a fruit tree we can see how when a business design and execution is in alignment with natural order, exponential growth and returns can be achieved.

A seed as it grows, takes the basic building blocks of water, sunlight, minerals and carbon dioxide, and transmutes these into growth, fruit and new seeds; spurning exponential growth as animals and birds share the fruit and spread the seeds far and wide.

As a tree grows from a seed, it is full integrated into its environment taking only what it needs and giving back in the form of soil enrichment, oxygen (life for others) and shared fruit as well as creating natural beauty.

Imagine if business understood that sharing itself and its fruit (profits and resources) could lead to exponential growth beyond imagination, just imagine.

Currently there are no clear globally accepted definitions of what constitutes a social enterprise or a social entrepreneur and there is some confusion between social enterprises and corporate social responsibility. The key elements that make up a social enterprise and social responsibility however are widely accepted. The three additional business elements that need to be added to move in the social enterprise direction are environment, community giving/support and integrated staff welfare.

A thriving example of a global highly integrated social enterprise is Buy 1 Give 1 Free or B1G 1 (Buy1Give1Free.biz). It is highly integrated because it not only embodies the three additional core business elements, it leverages other businesses' activities making it easy for them to give forward to the environment and those in greater need while endorsing them as social enterprises.

Buy1GIVE1 (Buy1-Give1) does exactly what its name indicates. Every time as a customer you purchase a product or service from a B1G 1 company, you get to give a gift forward at no cost to yourself on a "buy-1-give-1-free basis". The company on the customer's behalf donates money to a non-profit partner of their own choice to purchase an item of an associated nature. For example, a restaurant for each meal sold, could donate money to a non-profit such as ISKCON (midday meals), to buy a meal for a child just like Bouncing Olive in Australia does. In Mumbai a very successful car hire company called Rohan Car Rentals, run by Manjoy Maheshwari, plants a fruit tree that feeds children for every day a car is hired. Another example is every time an author sells a book they could gift the cost of a book to school child similar to what international best selling author Masami Sato from Australia is doing with her best selling book "Joy - The gift of Acceptance, Trust and Love" in the slum schools of Mumbai. This is magic!

B1G1 simply acts as a middleman partnering businesses with non-profits on any product, any service anywhere in the world. The social enterprise concept that it embodies is so powerful that since it's launch two months ago it not only has been profitable from day one, it has spread to six countries including India. Already B1G1 is facilitating the planting of trees, educating children and teachers, feeding children and giving educational gifts to children and providing micofinance loan donations throughout India and the world.

Paul Newman, the well-known actor and social entrepreneur says, "Giving back, when conceived and executed thoughtfully, creates a win-win scenario for business and the public."

When a business thinks first about its staff, the environment and the community in which it trades, the long-term success in this modern fast changing world is more secure. At the end of the day giving your customers a clear story to share that touches them, creates dynamic word-of-mouth marketing that is very hard to purchase in other ways.

In the last issue of Marketing Magazine, an Australian national publication, Dora Nikols, a leading marketing consultant, wrote an article entitled, "What do you stand for?" She pointed out how leading global brands now support a key social cause such as Bono from U2, The Body Shop, Oprah and Microsoft. "Evidence shows that companies and brands that stand for something also stand out. They last longer, are more profitable and have good corporate reputations," she wrote.

There is often a little confusion between corporate social responsibility and social enterprise. This confusion is sure to continue for some time as more and more businesses take on social enterprise initiatives. At the end of the day the naming is not as important as intent and action. If greater care and thought is given to others then this is all good.

Social Entrepreneurs are enterprising individuals that create social enterprises. They are often individuals of high business calibre who believe that business must have a heart if it is to have a greater meaning. At the end of the day, more and more of us these days are seeking meaning and purpose as a top priority in our lives.

David Anttony is a Social Entrepreneur, writer and international speaker based in India and Singapore. His global vision is to see business flip from getting to giving as part of expanding business profitability in the 21st Century.  This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Issue BG77 Aug07

 IN ADDITION Oct 08

Social Enterprise is not really a new concept. If you read Masami Sato's book, ONE - Sharing the joy of giving she shares her amazing experiences in Japanese villages where all the businesses support each other and the community. Traditionally business was fully integrated into the community because industrialisation did not exists so each business had a face within the community that it traded. Social Enterprise back then was a simple extension of the village family. It was not though unusual for a business to be socially conscious and care for its members and customers because there was no view of separation.

What has happened since we entered the information age is the globalisation of our planet and yet all that has really done is created a bigger village! The Global Village concept is still alive and well and Social Enterprises of the 21st Century are often leading edge businesses in their field.

So in reality, Social Enterprise in the 21st Century is just another means for us to connect with our true natures - that of giving, sharing and caring. We all care and want to be cared for. We have just become more afraid in the mass sea of information and faceless corporations. Social Enterprises allow us all to remember that we are all want caring and connection as our number one desire.

We so often think we do something for a certain reason and that something exists for a specific reason - yet - underlying everything we do and create is a deeper desire. The deeper desire of a social entrepreneur is to connect and reconnect. Just read Masami Sato's book ONE - Sharing the joy of giving to read more about this amazing desire. Masami shares in such an eloquent way about this.

My personal vision is for businesses to reconnect directly with giving on a transaction-based giving basis. This will allow more fulfillment to flourish within businesses and corporations allowing people to remember and live happiness more. For example, in my own social enterprise business, Buy1GIVE1, each Friday as a team we all have lunch. The simple act of sharing food brings us all into simple connection as a family. After our lunch we share ideas of how we can improve and support each other in our roles.

Social Enterprise is here to stay because the active desire of so many people is now to connect. We have had far to many years of faceless enterprises driving commerce and the global conveyer belt of consumerism. The tide has changed and is flowing back to connection and integration. Yippee!

 




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