Frontier Market Scouts Take on the World Of Social Impact Investing

This post was submitted by MPA and FMS alumna Danielle Steer.

It’s not every day that a person can sit at a pub watching the World Cup and listen to four different languages at the surrounding tables, while discussing impact investing as a poverty alleviation strategy. Unless, of course, you’re a part of the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey community. Today, this is my lunch break.

This experience seems apropos considering I’ve just finished two intense weeks in a classroom with 30 other inspiring, diverse, and experienced individuals and practitioners for the Middlebury Institute’s Frontier Market Scouts (FMS) program.

FMS Group Work

Participants from Around the World

I was unsure at first what types of professionals might be attracted to the program. My career has previously focused on gender education and development; so I was excited to learn more about how entrepreneurship could help build local economies and empower the impoverished. I was beyond pleased on the first day when I found out my colleagues in the class hailed from backgrounds not only in development and the public sector but also big banks and Wall Street. Some were gaining relevant professional experience during graduate school while others had quit jobs at Visa and Citibank to take part in the training and fellowship. We were also a geographically eclectic group as well with participants from Ireland, USA, Singapore, Australia, Philippines, Cameroon, China, the Netherlands, and Rwanda.

Ross Baird- FMS Instructor

Intense Training with Real Experts

The two week FMS training is broken down into five-two day workshops covering different aspects of social entrepreneurship from the scouting and entrepreneurs to the impact investor perspective.

The first session was taught by Ross Baird, Executive Director at Village Capital. Ross brings a contagious energy to the course and provides a great introduction to impacting investing and social enterprise. From pitching frameworks to impact evaluation criteria for entrepreneurs, we explored various options for how scouts might identify and develop entrepreneurs in emerging markets.

Session two brought a change of pace with Simon Dejardins, currently residing across the pond at the Shell Foundation in London. Although his content was jam packed with “how to scale” high impact social enterprises, we were able to experiment with various approaches in business support and stakeholder analyses.

The half-way point of the training brought Dr. Yuwei Shi,  founder and Director of Research at the Center for Social Impact Learning at MIIS. Yuwei focused on an action learning approach to business modeling by bringing in fellow experts on business development and ideation. In addition we explored a live case study, Salud2. Salud2 is a social enterprise at the concept phase started by five MIIS alumni this spring. Although Salud2 was a runner up at the recent Hult Prize competition, the FMS participants were able to go through the a business modeling exercise to help Salud2 consider alternative directions they might take their business before they enroll at the Hult Accelerator this summer.

With two sessions still to go, the FMS crew took a two day break to process the immense information we had covered over the week. We were also able to take advantage of the local beauty and activities along the way!

Feeling rested we returned to the ever charismatic, Paul Berloff of Accion Venture Labs. Paul led us through a series of lectures and activities focusing on investor perspectives.   From the due diligence and the role of investors to the trends and criteria for impact we took an in-depth look at impact investing through the eyes of Accion Venture Labs.

For the final training session, we were joined by MIIS alumni, Amit Sharma and Ravi Kurani. This workshop provided an overview of the current universe of systems of environmental, social, and governance ratings (ESG ratings and analytics), including the ones commonly used in impact investing such as GIIRS. We also walked through the development of ImpactSpace , a start-up with the mission to help capture data and impact measurements for social ventures working with their counterparts.

FMS Participant Nicole Manipol

Putting it All Together

Although I feel like I’m still processing information, theory, methodology, and tools packed into two short weeks, there were some common themes and big ideas throughout the course.

In the classroom I learned not only from the practitioners brought in to teach but also my colleagues. The class was a healthy mix of experience and knowledge that allowed us to work in meaningful and balanced groups. When I faltered on financial models, the ex-Citibank employee was there to simplify the process. When we talked about design and impact, the development students helped clarify impact metrics and the methodologies used to understand them.

After class, we dove into the nuances of culture and various informal aspects of the impact investing space during happy hour. Each of the practitioners took the time to get to know the participants and share stories about their very different experiences in the space.

As a people person, I really enjoyed the focus on relationship-building as a common theme throughout the two-week training. Whether you’re an entrepreneur looking for seed funding or an investor hoping to make an impact, personal connection and human interaction drive the entire process. I feel fortunate that I now have 30 new FMS colleagues in the field and around the world.

FMS Particpants in Big Sur

 

 

Special announcement: Frontier Market Scouts expanding to US Placements, in partnership with Sorenson Center for Global Impact Investing!

Have you ever talked with someone looking to get into impact investing as a career–and didn’t have any answers on where to go? Over the past three years, the Frontier Market Scouts program, which was launched in 2011 in partnership with Village Capital and Sanghata Global, has been an invaluable launchpad for professionals aspiring to enter the impact investment world–we’ve trained and placed over 75 professionals with investors and start-up ventures in emerging markets over the last three years.

From a professional standpoint at Village Capital, the Frontier Market Scouts have been critical to Village Capital’s sourcing engine: they have recruited over 5,000 unique enterprises to apply to programs in the past 24 months, largely led by Scouts on the ground. Scouts come from top graduate programs and professional firms such as Goldman Sachs, Cambridge & Associates, TDBank, and Deloitte; placements globally have included firms as wide-ranging as Invested Development (Kenya); Unitus Seed Fund (India); Artemisia (Brazil); Transist (China); and New Ventures (Mexico).

FMS and Village Capital are excited to announce that this summer, we will be launching the first US-based Scout placements, in partnership with the Sorenson Center for Global Impact Investing, based at the University of Utah. Scouts will undergo a two-week practitioner-led training in Salt Lake City at the Sorenson Center for Global Impact Investing (formerly known as the University Impact Fund); at the end of the training, they will be placed with impact investors and startup enterprises across the U.S. The program–including curriculum and placements–will be operated in partnership with MIIS.

How you can get involved:

1. Do you know a talented person looking to break into impact investing as a profession? Please forward this e-mail to them: we’ve found the Scouts program to be an excellent career on-ramp. Applications are due May 7th, and the training begins in Salt Lake on May 28th; application can be found at: http://www.miis.edu/academics/short/frontier-market-scouts/apply/application

2. Are you based in the U.S., and do you need short-term project help? Please fill out the short partner form (http://www.miis.edu/academics/short/frontier-market-scouts/partners/partnerform) if you’d like to have a Scout work with you. Scout placements last three-to-six months, starting in mid-June and ending in mid-December. Scouts have been able to add value in deal sourcing, diligence, operational assistance, and sales/business development. You’ll have the opportunity to interview potential placements directly, and we will ask placement partners to contribute a small stipend.

Wait, what again are you doing in Ecuador?

…. I seem to get this question a lot.  Don’t tell anyone, but even though I’ve already been here in Ecuador for a few days, I still don’t really know the complete answer.  I would imagine that if you placed all the people to whom I’ve given some sort of answer in a room together, you’d probably think I have multiple personalities.  Given the many stakeholders, deliverables, and project tasks that have been tossed up over the past few months, the possibilities for what I’ll actually accomplish are endless (and quite frankly, a little overwhelming).

Therefore – to clear it all up for you guys and myself, I’m going to use this space for some good old fashioned project organization.  I was inspired last week by little sister’s first week in high school Chemistry where they learned how to write up a proper lab experiment.  And since my project here is quite experimental in itself.. I think that’s precisely the format I’ll use to relay to you, my loving public, and to myself what the heck I’m doing down here.  So here ‘goes..

Background: One of the greatest things to come out of the development/NGO/social enterprise/foreign aid/do-gooder space in the past 10 years (in my opinion) is impact investment. What is impact investment you ask? As one of my classmates used to say, that’s a GREAT question. In my own words, impact investment is the flow of capital (cash) from a social investor to a social entrepreneur with the intention that this injection of capital allow the entrepreneur’s enterprise to scale and grow not only in revenue, but also in social impact. If this defintion doesn’t do it for you, check out this, and this .  Oh and this too!

Now some of you critical thinkers out there might be wondering what I mean by “social.” And my response is – what does it mean to you? For some investors, social impact may come in the form of clean energy, last-mile power distribution, or employment. For others, it could mean access to healthcare, affordable basic goods and services, or education. For instance, First Light Ventures aims to invest in companies that provide affordable basic goods and services to impoverished individuals.

So far, impact investment has made wonderful headway in the United States. And while we in the US definitely have our own social problems, there are BILLIONS of people in the world living below the poverty line, many of whom live in emerging markets. Foreign aid efforts have been proven inefficient, and microfinance for the most part is geared toward individuals. Impact investment allows social entrepreneurs who would otherwise be overlooked by traditional investors the chance to play in the venture capital space and prove that not only can they sustain a profitable business, but also one that benefits society as a whole. This leads us to the main reason for me being here….

Problem: Well, there are a lot of those out there. I’ve settled on one that is pretty all-encompassing, and we’ll go ahead and call it a challenge. Problem is such a weird word…

1) How can impact investors most effectively and efficiently channel much needed capital to social entrepreneurs in emerging markets? And more specifically, in the rural Amazon of Ecuador?

Hypothesis: The Village Capital (VilCap)  business accelerator model (more on this in a later post!) will help to harness social innovation and entrepreneurs in the Amazon region of Ecuador, and thus further promote social and ecnomic development in the region.

Methodology: Well, here I am in Ecuador so the first hurdle has been conquered. One of the biggest challenges for impact investors is actually getting to countries such as Brazil, Lebanon , Egypt or Ecuador. Not to mention, language and cultural barriers are abound in these locals, making it difficult to work effectively in a limited time contraint. Lucky for me, hablo español, I am familiar with latin culture from previous travel and educational experiences, and the kind folks at the Yachana Foundation  have agreed to host me for next 5 months in exchange for some entrepreneurship training at their high school.

So, in order to tackle this challenge I’ve been tasked to perform feasibility study, or estudio de factibilidad, on whether or not a business accelerator or some other type of medium for impact investors and social entrepreneurs to gather is possible in the Amazon region of Ecuador. And since this blog post is quickly turning into a novel… I’ll wrap it up by saying that over the next 5 months I’ll be visiting various micro enterprises and social businesses in the Amazon, venturing to existing business incubators in Ecuador to see how they run their ships, working closely with the entrepreneurship program at Yachana, and talking to anyone and everyone who will listen to my ideas :)

Until next time, sending you all lots of latin love :)

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