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Year
Up Selected for Second Annual Social Capitalist Award
~One of 25 Organizations
That Are Using Business Excellence to Engineer Social Change~
New York,
NY (December 21, 2004) – Fast
Company magazine, in partnership with global consulting
firm the Monitor Group,
has announced its second annual Social
Capitalist Awards, which identifies 25 organizations
that are using creativity, business smarts, and hard work
to invent a brighter future. These dynamic organizations are
the Googles, Amazons, and Microsofts of the social sector:
They invent technologies to serve the poor and build groundbreaking
products that serve market needs in developing nations. They
devise ingenious ways to do well and do good. Winners will
be featured in the January issue of Fast Company, on newsstands
December 21.
The Fast
Company/Monitor Social Capitalist Awards is the
only award program that quantitatively measures a non-profit
group’s innovation and social impact, as well as the
viability and sustainability of its business model. From helping
underprivileged children attend college and making health
care available to those in destitute corners of the world,
to rectifying third world labor abuses and financing underprivileged
business owners—this year’s award winners are
as diverse as they are groundbreaking.
“The Social
Capitalist Award winners represent a global movement
of entrepreneurs who’ve chosen to apply their skills
to the common good,” said Fast
Company editor-in-chief John Byrne. “In
the meantime, they’re redefining what it means to be
a ‘successful business,’ and are proving, without
question, that the goals of altruism can jibe with the means
of capitalism.”
“Whatever our professions, we are
all citizens, and we all care deeply about unmet social needs—which
is precisely where social entrepreneurs make their essential
contribution," said Monitor Group CEO Mark B. Fuller.
"But good intentions are not enough. The Social
Capitalists are so special because they translate that
vision into action, and meet the harsh market standards of
performance and accountability.”
Fast
Company/Monitor’s 2005 Social Capitalist Award
Winners, in alphabetical order:
*Denotes Repeat Winner
- *Acción International,
Boston, MA: Pioneered use of small loans to seed tiny businesses
and lifts families out of poverty.
- ApproTEC, San Francisco,
CA: Produces easy-to-use tools for developing-world farmers
to help them increase earnings ten-fold.
- *Aspire Public Schools,
Redwood City, CA: Charter school management group building
a system to transform American education.
- *City Year, Boston,
MA: Recruits diverse young people to devote a year to community
service in exchange for an educational stipend.
- *College Summit,
Washington D.C.: Works with schools and colleges to help
low-income students go on to higher education.
- Earn, San Francisco,
CA: Provides financial counseling and matching funds to
help poor people open savings accounts.
- Endeavor Global,
New York, NY: Global venture catalyst scouts out entrepreneurs
in emerging economies.
- *First Book, Washington D.C.: Enables disadvantaged children to own their first book.
- Grameen Foundation USA,
Washington D.C.: Provides microlending institutions with
financial and technical resources to increase efficiency
and expand outreach to the poor.
- Housing Partnership Network,
Boston, MA: An ambitious group of 80 nonprofit housing groups
that decided to pool skills, money, and policy influence.
- *Jumpstart, Boston,
MA: Pairs college students with 3-to-5 year-olds who need
help with reading and social skills.
- *New Leaders for New Schools,
New York, NY: Recruits would-be principals to undergo extensive
leadership training.
- *Program for Appropriate
Technology in Health (PATH), Seattle, WA: Invents
medical tools that save lives in developing nations.
- Rare, Arlington,
VA: Leader of radio-based environmental advocacy in developing
nations.
- *Room to Read,
San Francisco, CA: Promotes literacy and education in Asia
by providing scholarships and building schools and libraries.
- *Rubicon Programs Inc.,
Richmond, CA: Provides livable wage employment and job training
to the homeless and mentally ill.
- SEED Foundation,
New York, NY: Builds public boarding schools in urban areas.
- Scojo Foundation,
New York, NY: Makes affordable eyewear available to the
1.6 billion people whose decline in eyesight as they age
prevents them from reading and sometimes costs them work.
- Social Venture Partners,
Seattle, WA: Introduces philanthropic newcomers to the world
of civic engagement.
- Springboard Forward,
Mountain View, CA: Provides on-the-job coaching to low-wage
workers to help them out of the poverty cycle.
- TransFair USA,
Oakland, CA: Allows farmers in developing countries to sell
crops for a livable wage by giving them collective bargaining
power.
- Vera Institute of Justice,
New York, NY: Works toward justice by incubating programs
to serve those entangled in the justice system.
- Verité,
Amherst, MA: Conducts factory audits for major corporations
to ensure quality working conditions for foreign workers.
- *Witness, New
York, NY: Founded by musician Peter Gabriel, Witness gives
a voice to victims by obtaining and archiving videotapes
of human-rights transgressions.
- Year Up, Boston,
MA: Provides job training for low-income, high-school/GED
educated 18-to-24 year olds.
How the
Winners Were Chosen
Fast Company,
in partnership with the Monitor
Group, chose the second annual Social
Capitalist Award winners from a pool of 118 organizations,
half of them nominated by a panel of prominent funders, academics
and other experts, and the rest self-nominated. Each participating
organization submitted to a rigorous screening process requiring
financial records, business plans, and online surveys. Groups
were graded in five distinct categories: Entrepreneurship,
Innovation, Social Impact, Aspiration and Sustainability.
Final grades included adjustments based on structured telephone
interviews with each group's executive director and with independent
experts qualified to speak about each organization. To learn
more about the Fast Company/Monitor
Social Capitalist Awards, or to donate money to one of the
award winners, visit www.fastcompany.com/social.
About Fast Company:
Founded in 1996 and published monthly, Fast
Company (www.fastcompany.com)
covers ideas, trends and individuals devoted to managing change
in today’s economy. The magazine was acquired in 2000
by Gruner + Jahr USA, one of America’s largest magazine
publishers.
About Monitor Group:
Monitor Group, a family of strategy, advisory, and merchant
banking firms linked by shared knowledge, skills, and experience—is
dedicated to enhancing both the competitiveness of its clients
and the practical realization of their animating moral purpose.
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“Year
Up has developed a program model that continues to prove
itself as both sustainable and scalable. We knew from
day one that this program would make a big difference
in our community and that is
why we provided support early on.” |
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Paul
Grogan
President,
The Boston Foundation |

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