










Under the incubation of The Rockefeller Foundation, Jacqueline Novogratz develops the business plan for GivingWell, combining the best of markets with the best of charity. Shortly after it is renamed Acumen Fund.
Acumen Fund is officially incorporated as a not-for-profit organization.
On this day, the team is scheduled to move from The Rockefeller Foundation offices into their new office two blocks south of the World Trade Center.
In the aftermath of 9/11, Acumen Fund convenes a roundtable on global terrorism discussing the role that civil society organizations could play in the Muslim world.
Acumen Fund makes its first two investments, both grants.
20 Founding Partners gather in NYC to celebrate the launch of Acumen Fund including The Rockefeller Foundation, Cisco Foundation, and The Kellogg Foundation.
Acumen Fund approves a grant to Aravind Eye Hospital in India.
At the end of year one, $1.3 million has been approved in 4 enterprises -- all grants.
Acumen Fund approves investments in Kashf, a microfinance enterprise in Pakistan, and Sekem, a sustainable development enterprise in Egypt. They are Acumen’s first debt and equity investments and the first targeting civil society organizations in the Muslim world.
Acumen Fund turns 2-years old. Its portfolio includes $2 million of investments approved in 6 enterprises.
Acumen Fund approves an investment in A-Z Textile Mills in Tanzania. A-Z now produces over 20 million mosquito bednets a year, is one of the largest employers in Africa, and has fully repaid its original loan proving the power of patient capital investing.
Acumen Fund turns 3-years old. Its portfolio includes $2.6 million of investments approved in 10 enterprises.
Acumen Fund approves its first water investment in Water Health International (WHI). WHI operates community water systems across India that currently provide 500,000 customers with safe water daily, catalyzing the growth of the entire water sector in India.
The Indian Ocean tsunami kills 230,000 and displaces 1.7 million people. Acumen Fund helps raise money for various relief efforts, and questions whether or not it should be involved in disaster relief.
Acumen Fund turns 4-years old. Its portfolio includes $4.9 million of investments approved in 16 enterprises.
A core group of Pakistani philanthropists commit $200,000 to launch the first international branch of Acumen Fund in Karachi stressing the importance of having a strong local presence where it invests, and marking its continued commitment to supporting civil society in the Muslim world.
Acumen Fund approves an investment in Saiban, an affordable housing development in Pakistan. Saiban's affordable housing units are currently providing 30,000 people with safe thriving communities.
A massive earthquake hits the Kashmir region of Pakistan killing 75,000 people. Jacqueline and members of the team travel to the region and decide that it should not be in the business of disaster relief. Instead it will continue to focus on building long-term sustainable solutions providing critical goods and services to the poor.
Google.org approves a $5 million grant to Acumen Fund to partner on the co-development of a data measurement system to help with the management and analysis of Acumen's investment portfolio. The software, now called PULSE, is currently being used by hundreds of foundations, NGOs, and social enterprises.
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation pledges a four-year, $3.9 million grant to establish a Water and Sanitation Funding Facility within Acumen Fund.
Acumen Fund opens its office in Karachi, Pakistan. To date, Acumen Fund has invested $12 million in 11 enterprises throughout Pakistan.
Acumen Fund turns 5-years old. Its portfolio includes $8.9 million of investments approved in 20 enterprises.
With its commitment to establishing a strong local presence on the ground in the regions it works, Acumen Fund opens an office in Hyderabad, India. In Spring 2011, the office relocated to Mumbai. To date, Acumen Fund has invested $26 million in 21 enterprises throughout India.
Acumen Fund launches the Global Fellows Program establishing its commitment to developing the next generation of social leaders.
An investment in Dial 1298 is approved. The Dial 1298 for Ambulance fleet has grown from 10 ambulances in Mumbai to 514 across India, with plans to scale to 1,000 by 2014. To date, they have responded to over 210,000 emergency calls.
Acumen Fund releases a concept paper on the Best Alternative Charitable Option (BACO), explaining its methodology for comparing investment opportunities with traditional charitable alternatives.
With its commitment to establishing a strong local presence on the ground in the regions it works, Acumen Fund opens an office in Nairobi, Kenya. To date, Acumen Fund has invested $16 million in 17 enterprises throughout East Africa.
Acumen Fund turns 6-years old. Its portfolio includes $15.3 million of investments approved in 25 enterprises.
Thomas Friedman writes an op-ed in The New York Times on the concept of patient capital mentioning Acumen Fund. It is the first time 'patient capital' is used in print.
An investment in Global Easy Water Products (GEWP) is approved. Thousands of smallholder farm families in India are benefiting from increased crops and income thanks to GEWP's drip irrigation systems.
An investment in Global Easy Water Products (GEWP) is approved. Thousands of smallholder farm families in India are benefiting from increased crops and income thanks to GEWP's drip irrigation systems.
Acumen Fund is selected for the 2008 Fast Company Social Capitalist Award and Jacqueline Novogratz is featured in FORTUNE as an "innovator" in its feature on philanthropy.
Acumen Fund turns 7-years old. Its portfolio includes $32.1 million of investments approved in 40 enterprises.
Acumen Fund partners with NextBillion.net to help extend its reach to practitioners and academics in the space.
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation commits $6.7 million to launch Acumen Fund's agriculture portfolio.
After three years of joint development with the support of Google.org, PULSE is officially launched at the Clinton Global Initiative. At the same conference, the Aspen Network for Development Entrepreneurs (ANDE) is launched in a move to further professionalize the sector.
Acumen Fund launches its energy portfolio with an investment in d.light design. d.light design's solar powered lights displace kerosene lamps, which are dirty, dangerous and expensive. Since the investment, they have provided 3 million people with access to safe solar lighting, primarily in India and now East Africa.
WHI closes a Series D round of funding of $15 million from the IFC proving its ability to scale and gain access to commercial capital.
The Blue Sweater, a book by Acumen Fund founder and CEO Jacqueline Novogratz launches. New York Times columnist Nick Kristof reviews the book calling Jacqueline "one of the most interesting innovators in aid and development."
d.light design reports its first 100% solar village in Orissa, India.
Acumen Fund turns 8-years old. Its portfolio includes $38 million of investments approved in 46 enterprises.
Young Professionals for Acumen Fund hosts a photo auction in NYC with Nuru Project called DIGNITY. More than 250 people attend the event and over $27,000 is raised. Young Professionals for Acumen Fund would become the inspiration for volunteer chapters around the world.
An investment in Husk Power Systems is approved. Currently, 60 rural villages in Bihar, India are powered by Husk Power System's rice husk-fired generators, providing electricity to over 130,000 people.
Acumen Fund's first official volunteer chapter, New York for Acumen, is born. Shortly after, chapters are launched in Dubai and San Francisco.
Jamii Bora, a housing portfolio investee based in Kenya, fully repays its $250,000 loan marking Acumen Fund's first official exit.
Volunteer chapters in Vancouver, Chicago, and Washington, D.C. are launched.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton mentions Acumen Fund's model in a major speech on international development.
A Blue Sweater book club discussion with Jacqueline Novogratz is organized in the Kibera slum by residents of Kibera and neighboring slums.
Acumen Fund turns 9-years old. Its portfolio includes $45.7 million of investments approved in 49 enterprises.
Jacqueline appears on CNN's Amanpour with Christiane Amanpour in a segment called "Aid to Pakistan," and Acumen Fund investees Ecotact and Jamii Bora are featured on PBS NewsHour.
The first Presidential Summit on Entrepreneurship, hosted by The White House, takes place in Washington, D.C. Five Acumen Fund entrepreneurs are invited by President Obama to attend.
Katie Couric interviews Jacqueline for Glamour Magazine.
More volunteer chapters are launched internationally in Toronto, Pakistan, and Japan.
The worst floods in history hit Pakistan displacing over 20 million people. Even though Acumen Fund is not in the business of disaster relief, it realizes in such times, its obligation to help direct its community to sources of information and rally their support around trustworthy relief organizations.
New investments in Juhudi Kilimo and Gulu Agricultural Development Company are actually co-investments with peers Grameen Foundation and Root Capital, demonstrating the power of flexible capital and partnerships.
Atlanta for Acumen is launched, marking the 10th official volunteer chapter.
Acumen Fund expands to West Africa with an office in Accra, Ghana.
Learn MoreKeep posted on our progress via:
AMC, a low-income housing development company influenced by the Saiban model and founded by former Acumen Fund Fellow Jawad Aslam, lays the first brick on its first affordable housing project.
Jacqueline is named one of the "Women Who Shake the World" by Newsweek & The Daily Beast.
Acumen Fund turns 10-years old! Its portfolio includes $60 million of investments approved in 57 enterprises.
The East Africa Fellows Program is announced to build the leadership capacity and community around the region's most promising business and social impact leaders. It is the first of many Regional Fellows Programs to be launched in the coming years.
d.light design launches the S1 -- the world's most affordable solar lantern at $8.
The London for Acumen volunteer chapter is launched.
Acumen Fund is actively evaluating investments in education and plans to launch the portfolio in 2011.
Keep posted on our progress via
Acumen Fund started as an idea. We now have a proven model that combines the best of charity and markets to change the way the world tackles poverty.
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Acumen Fund is creating a world beyond poverty by investing in social enterprises, emerging leaders and breakthrough ideas.
Our companies have touched the lives of tens of millions of people. From ambulances to electricity, we have $73 million of approved investments in 65 breakthrough enterprises that serve the poor.
Our offices in India, Pakistan, East Africa, West Africa, supported by our global team in New York, drive our investing work with strong local teams that find, assess, and provide management assistance to our companies. Each office is supported by an advisory board and, increasingly, local funding to create strong institutions in each of the regions where we operate.
$18.7M, 18 enterprises
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$4.0M, 3 enterprises
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$18.2M, 13 enterprises
Investments managed out of the New York office.
$14.9M, 13 enterprises
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$21.6M, 20 enterprises
Learn MoreCreating a world beyond poverty will take all of us – an interconnected community of global citizens equipped with the moral leadership to meet the complex challenges of our time.
Acumen Fund is building a global ecosystem of leaders who share common values, have the hard skills to produce results, and possess a deep commitment to creating a more inclusive world.
The Global Fellows Program is a one-year immersion in leadership development beginning with two months of training in New York, followed by nine month placements with our investees. Since 2006, we’ve had 44 Fellows from 19 countries.
Our East Africa Fellows Program was launched in 2011 with 20 Fellows driving groundbreaking projects within existing companies and as entrepreneurs. We plan to launch Regional Fellows Programs in all our geographies in coming years.
In 2006 Acumen had 7 Global Fellows…
Jocelyn currently leads IDEO's domain around design for social impact. As a Fellow, she worked in Kenya with Advanced Bio-Extracts (ABE), a leading manufacturer and cultivator of artemisinin, a key ingredient in the most effective treatment against malaria. Jocelyn supported ABE's second round of financing and growth by constructing financial models, reports and projections for the management team; developing standardized operating procedures; and sourcing potential investors.
Currently we have 44 Global Fellows and 20 Regional Fellows.
Jawad is currently working with Ansaar Management Company, which provides low incoming housing in Lahore, Pakistan. AMC is a for-profit spin off of Saiban, and has received investments from Acumen Fund and Bamboo Finance, and will focus on scaling low-income housing in Pakistan. As a Fellow, Jawad worked to scale the activities of Saiban, a non-profit housing organization providing urban squatters and low-income groups in Pakistan with access to affordable home ownership and essential amenities.
Tricia is currently working at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Delhi, India, on a project to improve financial access to healthcare. She was formerly the Head of Marketing & Strategy for LifeSpring Hospitals, which is also where Tricia worked as a Fellow. LifeSpring is a chain of hospitals that provides quality health care to lower-income women and children in India.
Catherine is currently West Africa Manager at Acumen Fund, where she is s responsible for launching Acumen Fund’s presence in the region, with a focus in Ghana and Nigeria. As a Fellow, Catherine worked in Kenya with the Sustainable Healthcare Foundation (SHF), which provides micro-franchise healthcare and drug distribution in Nairobi. Her efforts were focused on helping SHF franchisees reach profitability and to improve their systems for data collection and management.
Nicole currently works for Global Citizen Year, a program that immerses high school graduates in developing nations to live and work on the frontlines of today's global challenges during a gap year before college. As a Fellow, Nicole worked in India with AyurVAID, a patient-centric hospital chain with a standardized approach to delivering safe, effective, and, affordable care to poor communities in India. She helped develop processes and systems for managing relationships with network hospitals and partners.
Ramakrishnan currently works for Bridge Academies International, which establishes private schools for Kenya's poor. As a Fellow, Ramakrishnan worked in Kenya with Meridian Medical Centre, whose vision is to establish a chain of affordable, high quality outpatient clinics across Kenya. At Meridian, Ramakrishnan helped to develop expansion plans, opened a new branch outlet for services, and supported the development of a branding and marketing strategy to attract and retain new business.
Suraj currently works at Acumen Fund leading the development and execution of the East Africa Fellows Program. As a Global Fellow, he worked in Kenya with Ecotact, a Nairobi-based company that aims to improve the urban landscape for low-income communities through environmentally-responsible projects in sanitation and housing. His projects involved developing a marketing plan for expansion of the Eco-toilet model and building a financial consolidation plan. He also started TEDx Kibera, the first TEDx event in a major slum.
Josephat is the Uganda Country Manager for VECO East Arica, which seeks to contribute to viable livelihoods of organized family farmers through improved income and food security. During the Fellowship, he worked in Kenya with Western Seed, which promotes sustainable agriculture practices and produces seed varieties appropriate for traditionally low-income farmers. Originally from Uganda, Josephat has experience managing rural community development programs.
Jocelyn is the Executive Director and Co-Lead of IDEO.org, the nonprofit organization started by IDEO to address poverty-related challenges through design and to encourage the use of our human-centered approach to innovation in the social sector. As a Fellow, she worked in Kenya with Advanced Bio-Extracts (ABE), a leading manufacturer and cultivator of artemisinin, a key ingredient in the most effective treatment against malaria.
Wangikuyu is the Marketing Coordinator for Kickstart International, which aims to transform Africa from subsistence to commercial agriculture through low-cost capital equipment. Wangikuyu’s role at Kickstart is to promote the “Farming is my Business” campaign, which promotes the aims to lift up the image of the farmer to be a legitimate and proud businessman.
Irfan is the Founder & Lead Partner of Karibu Homes, a social enterprise that brings home ownership along with a secure, sanitary, and progressive community to low-income families. Karibu Homes hopes to build 10,000 homes and house 50,000 people per year. Irfan also co-founded Honey Care Africa, a social enterprise that has impacted over 10,000 lives. Irfan is also the Director of the East Africa Film Academy, Co-Founder of Galu Beach Retreat, and Managing Director of White Rose Services.
And by 2015 we project to have 100 Global Fellows and 300 Regional Fellows!
Chapters are deeply committed volunteer groups around the world learning and spreading Acumen Fund’s principles and approach to help create a world beyond poverty - and raising funds to support our mission.
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No organization can do this alone, which is why we invest in the spread of ideas. Our work supporting companies and leaders forms the foundation of everything we do. When we gain insight in these areas, we invest in sharing them with the world.
Some foundations are combining philanthropy and capitalism in a very innovative approach, like the Acumen Fund.
Its novel approach is fostering a proper debate among development experts about the role of market forces and accountability.
Acumen has helped redefine what development aid should look like.
One of the most interesting innovators
in aid and development.
What Africa needs most today is more 'patient' capital to spur its would-be capitalists.
The world looks different, in part, because
Acumen exists…
Our goal is to transform how the world sees poor people – not as passive recipients of charity, but as individuals with the potential to take control of their own destinies.
In 2001, Acumen Fund was one of the few organizations in the world using an investment model to fight poverty in the developing world. Today, there are at least 199 organizations in the emerging "impact investing" sector.
When Acumen Fund was launched in 2001, it joined a handful of existing players in the nascent impact investing space including pioneers like E+Co and Technoserve.
PULSE helps organizations track and benchmark financial, operational, environmental and social data to better demonstrate impact.
Impact Reporting & Investment Standards, or IRIS, is a common language for describing the social and environmental performance of an organization.
PULSE helps organizations track and benchmark financial, operational, environmental and social data to better demonstrate impact.
Impact Reporting & Investment Standards, or IRIS, is a common language for describing the social and environmental performance of an organization.
The Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs (ANDE) is a global network of 110+ organizations that work to propel entrepreneurship in the developing world.
The Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN) is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to increasing the effectiveness of impact investing.
The Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs (ANDE) is a global network of 110+ organizations that work to propel entrepreneurship in the developing world.
The Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN) is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to increasing the effectiveness of impact investing.
Impact Investments: An Emerging Asset Class, a collaborative research piece by J.P. Morgan, The Rockefeller Foundation, and the GIIN, explores how impact investments offer a new alternative for channeling large-scale private capital for social benefit.
Today, there are at least 199 "impact investing" organizations. We are proud of the role we have played in our first ten years to build partnerships and share knowledge across the sector. As we look to the future, we are committed to building an even more dynamic ecosystem to drive social change around the world.
When Acumen Fund was launched in 2001, it joined a handful of existing players in the nascent impact investing space including pioneers like E+Co and Technoserve.
PULSE helps organizations track and benchmark financial, operational, environmental and social data to better demonstrate impact.
Impact Reporting & Investment Standards, or IRIS, is a common language for describing the social and environmental performance of an organization.
The Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs (ANDE) is a global network of 110+ organizations that work to propel entrepreneurship in the developing world.
The Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN) is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to increasing the effectiveness of impact investing.
Impact Investments: An Emerging Asset Class, a collaborative research piece by J.P. Morgan, The Rockefeller Foundation, and the GIIN, explores how impact investments offer a new alternative for channeling large-scale private capital for social benefit.
in the year 2001...When Acumen Fund was launched in 2001, it joined a handful of existing players in the nascent impact investing space including pioneers like E+Co and Technoserve.
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Nothing about this work is easy. We are proud of our accomplishments over the last ten years, but we’ve learned at least as much from our struggles along the way.
While we know we don’t have all the answers, there are some important truths we have discovered in doing this work. These truths will guide our work in the next decade and beyond.
Dignity is more important to the human spirit than wealth
Neither grants nor markets alone will solve the problems of poverty
Poverty is a description of someone's economic situation, it does not...
We won't succeed in the long term without cultivating local leaders...
Great people, every time, no exceptions
Great technology alone is not the answer
If failing is not an option, you've ruled out success as well
Governments rarely invent solutions, but they can scale what works
There is no currency like trust, and there are no shortcuts to earning it
Patient capital investing is built upon a system of values; it is not a series...
In our first 10 years, we were pioneering a new field and working to reinvent philanthropy. In our next 10 years, our aim is to build a world-class global institution capable of fundamentally transforming how the world fights poverty.
Our vision is that one day every human being will have access to the critical goods and services they need so that they can make choices for themselves and unleash their full human potential. This is where dignity starts - not just for the poor, but for everyone on earth.
We are bringing one day closer.
We need your support! It will take all of us working together to create a world beyond poverty so please consider a generous donation.
Every dollar we invest typically brings in three dollars of additional funding. And our Board of Directors covers all our administration and fundraising expenses – so you don’t have to!
A series of small discussion sessions around key questions and insights from our work.
Presentations highlight this year’s achievements, Acumen Fund entrepreneurs, and our learnings about building sustainable enterprises.
to attend this event.

President, The
Rockefeller Foundation

Author
Cocktails, guest performances, and dinner to commemorate 10 years of working together to build a world beyond poverty.

Acumen Fund CEO

Spoken word artist and Founder of Project V.O.I.C.E

Bollywood-inspired dance company

Grammy Award winning artist
"Poverty" is not just about money. What keeps people from realizing their full potential is lack of choice and opportunity. It is this choice - this dignity - that human beings crave. Over the last ten years we have learned that working towards this fundamental idea of dignity is inherently more difficult, complex, and messy than working on solving a single technical problem. It demands letting go of the notion of solving problems for poor people. It requires listening to the poor as agents who want to change their own lives. Most importantly, it requires that we unfailingly, uncompromisingly address people’s full humanity. This is where dignity starts for us all.
In traditional aid, the lack of real feedback loops to donors and donor agencies silences the voice of the customer. When this happens we lose a crucial instrument in designing solutions that really work for the poor. At the other end of the spectrum, traditional venture capital and private equity put investors' demands first, even when this undermines customers' needs or bypasses the poor altogether.
We are not going to solve the problems of poverty by just pouring money on them, nor can we sit back and let markets take their course and pretend that billions of poor people’s lives will be transformed by an invisible hand. This isn't about "trade versus aid," it’s about building systems that encourage - indeed demand - real, sustained, and honest engagement with low income people as active participants in their lives.
Patient capital makes markets work for the poor by balancing seemingly competing aims: it is an investing approach with long time horizons, because the companies we invest in build markets where they've never worked before; it focuses on financial sustainability but incorporates grants and smart subsidies; it uses markets not to maximize profits but as a listening device, because when someone has the choice to pay for a product (even at a subsidized price) she has the chance to have a say about what she desires, what she feels is worthwhile, what she does and does not want.
Low-income people face a different set of constraints because of their economic situation, but they make decisions, like everyone, that are based on status and beauty and avoidance of risk, and not just "what’s good for them."
We know that small-scale farmers are risk averse for very good reasons: every season they must risk everything they own to scratch out a barely sustainable wage (if they are lucky). We have seen that price matters, but sometimes charging too little - even in very low-income communities - can signal poor quality. We have watched wealthy people pretend they are poorer than they are to save money, and seen poor people pay more to be seen as wealthier, to save face, to bring extra care to their mother or child. We have seen that people will pay for convenience - to have safe water delivered - but they will not always pay for maintenance of something that belongs to the community.
All of this we have learned because we focus on the customer not as someone with a series of problems to be solved, but, every day and always, as a full human being.
Institutions and leadership will always outlast the money spent on any particular program. Yet too often, poverty alleviation programs are designed in conference rooms half a world away, with local buy-in bolted on all too late in the process. Worse, too often good programs are cut off after funds are spent, not for lack of success but because decisions are far removed from local realities, based on incentives that have nothing to do with needs on the ground.
Acumen Fund doesn’t create the "next great idea" - we look for entrepreneurs with a powerful innovation and the drive and skills to make it happen. We build strong teams in the countries where we work and surround them with the support, intellect, and full investment of local business and thought leaders - including, increasingly, local funding.
This is what it takes to solve the toughest problems of poverty: robust local solutions whose long-term viability is based not on the decisions of a faraway funder but because they have deep, lasting support from local teams, local capital, and, most importantly, millions of local customers. This approach can take longer to execute, but it’s the only one that lasts.
Great business ideas are just that - ideas. The real work is the drive and passion to execute in challenging environments.
Hundreds of business plans cross our desks every year, and we've learned that nothing comes close to mattering as much as the entrepreneur and her team. A business plan, an innovative product, money in the bank - these are all secondary.
We are looking for world-class leaders who break every mold and are willing to walk through walls to solve a pressing problem for their customers. These leaders are tough, disciplined and unrelenting; they are also empathetic, open-hearted and patient. They must have exceptional financial skills, operational skills and what we call moral imagination: the ability to put yourself in another's shoes and build solutions based on her perspective.
These leaders are rare. And we know it. So we choose them carefully and consciously invest in them - in our portfolio companies, in our Global and Regional Fellows, and in the Acumen Fund team.
Too much development work assumes programs and policies matter more than leadership, but leadership matters most of all.
We often say, "build it and they won't come."
Our office is littered with "the next great technology" - water filters, cookstoves, you name it - that have gone nowhere. Occasionally a new product-like the Rotavirus vaccine or the long-lasting anti-malarial bednet-can truly move the needle, especially for large-scale problems that require a single, public intervention. Usually, though, technology isn’t enough. No matter how great a new product is for the poor, it almost never sells itself. People buy services that they understand: they don’t buy technologies alone.
Innovations in delivery - which require genuine input from customers, working partnerships with distributors, and getting economic incentives right - are often more important than elegant designs. No matter how great an invention is, the business has to function in the real world where dealers, distributors, business partners, employees, and especially customers must vote in favor of your product each and every day.
We won't pull tens of millions of people out of poverty with a comprehensive ten-point plan. Plans written by experts can crash and burn when faced with the shifting realities of the marketplace, and even the best interventions must be designed to evolve if they are to go from good to great.
Creating new blueprints for social change requires taking bets on innovative business models, on sometimes-untested entrepreneurs, and on emerging leaders. We reach far, and sometimes we come up short. What’s important is learning from these failures and using them to get better at what we do. Openness to failing opens us up to the possibility of real, groundbreaking success.
Acumen Fund was created based on the belief that the public sector alone won't solve large-scale problems of poverty. We have always been big believers in the power of markets, and in the early years of Acumen we and our investees steered clear of major government partnerships.
Yet our thinking has changed as we’ve seen public agencies partner successfully with our investees without distorting the market: international NGOs serving as core customers of needed products - like bednets - that don't have a ready market but which provide outsized benefits when distributed for free; government ministries setting up innovative subsidy schemes that allow fledgling businesses to get off the ground; and state governments becoming major customers for some of our most successful companies, providing the capital needed to scale while maintaining the core innovation and quality of service upon which the company was founded.
We will often be disappointed if we expect governments to create new solutions. But the public sector is an integral partner when we look to scale what works.
Low-income communities are often understandably wary of outsiders coming in with "solutions to their problems." Having been short-changed in the past, they expect to be short-changed again. Why bother trying something new when the old ways work well enough, when the new ways might cost more than you can afford, when trying something new means taking a risk that could mean not enough food on the table?
We thought if you offered the poor clean, affordable solar lights that raised incomes, people would flock to buy them. An Acumen Fund investee gave a woman a free solar lantern to use in her stall selling samosas on the street for a month to test it out. At the end of the month, she said she loved the lamp: it allowed her to save money by avoiding kerosene, earn more by staying open later, and have a light to walk home safely. Still, she refused to buy the light when offered, saying she couldn't be sure of the product's quality.
We thought if you offered safe, quality housing to renters in slums at comparable prices, people would line up to buy homes. But people had been fleeced by too many fly-by-night housing developers to risk uprooting their families. It took the entrepreneur personally showing up at the site after violence erupted to prove his seriousness about the project, and then building a home for himself at the development to gain lasting trust.
We thought if farmers saw their neighbors double their productivity using inexpensive drip irrigation systems, sales would explode simply through word of mouth. Yet we've learned that our investees' field staff must show up again and again before new customers will sign up.
These examples make it all the more amazing that d.light has sold more than a half million solar lanterns; that Saiban has built a thriving community for more than 2,000 outside Lahore, Pakistan; that Global Easy Water Products has sold hundreds of thousands of drip irrigation systems.
Trust is the most precious commodity we can offer. Building it takes time, and it can be destroyed in an instant. It isn't so much what we do most of the time, but how we do it that counts. We learn this over and over.
We’ve spent a decade building a new approach to fighting poverty, and we’ve learned that our most valuable skill is our ability to balance the values we hold dear: generosity and accountability, listening and leading, humility and audacity - all built on a foundation of integrity and respect. The work we do exists in the spaces in-between, the grey areas where the rules have yet to be written.
Every day we make hard, sometimes excruciating decisions - between profit and impact, efficiency and equality, short-term and long term - in a complex, imperfect world that craves quick, easy answers. This takes discipline, focus, and sacrifice, along with compassion and empathy. Effecting real change, in other words, is hard work. It requires nothing more and nothing less than the art of leadership.
Indeed Acumen Fund's greatest legacy may someday be the leaders we've had the honor to work with and support - our team, our investees, our Fellows, and our global community. This moment in history, filled with so much opportunity and so much distance between us, demands a new kind of leadership, one that starts by understanding problems from others' perspective, one that begins with listening but is not afraid to take a firm, moral position.
In ten years of doing this work, we have learned that none of us has all the answers, and that all of us are needed to find them. Our opportunity today is to deepen the questions we ask; to be audacious in our aspirations but humble in the way we walk through the world; and to work together to find solutions that create a world where the full dignity of each and every person can be expressed.
If not us, then who? If not now, then when?
Acumen Fund Founder and CEO Jacqueline Novogratz is featured on the cover of Forbes Magazine! The December 2011 issue features 30 social entrepreneurs and innovators who are changing the world.
Read the full feature on Forbes.com…