Hi!
I work for Amrit International Ltd. Group companies include Khaitan Biofuels a new start up, Krofta Engineering Ltd www.kroftaengineering.in an established water and waste water treatment company with more than 2 decades standing in India and global markets. The owners wife Dr Malti Khaitan also runs a 'for profit' alternative medicine therapy unit and clinic called www.flowercure.com A NGO 'Make Wish Foundation India' Delhi chapter run by D Malti Khaitan's daughter Ms Shreerupa takes care of terminally ill sick children wit gifts and giving them few hours of happiness and attention. Khaitan Biofuels start up is based on a patented technology held by one of the senior brothers of Khaitan family enabling a cheaper and cleaner way of extracting renewable energy biofuel which promises more than 85% GHG reduction by replacing gasoline partially in blends.
Could This Business Model Save The World?
Categories: News, Rumors, Gossip, & Trends Innovation Discussion Sustainability New Products, Services, and Business Models Innovation Community Ideas
More and more businesses are exploring ways to do good, whether it be by behaving with greater social conscience, seeking to lessen their environmental footprint, or both.
There’s only one problem with this business-as-savior model. That is, businesses weren’t designed to be saviors.
Certainly, you can tweak the model, introducing measures that write sustainability and social conscience right into the company dna.
But you keep bumping into the fact that businesses are best when they’re focused on building shareholder value.
This fact wasn’t lost on Audette Exel. A no-nonsense Kiwi with an incredible pedigree as both a banker and lawyer, Exel wanted to make a positive impact but kept running into the limitations of the business model.
At the same time, she knew NGO was not the way to go. Although they seemed to have a better grasp of the complex systems that enveloped social or environmental problems, NGO’s couldn’t realize their potential because they were constantly strapped for cash.
So, in a move that underlined her common sense and can-do attitude, Exel built one of each.
Chocolate, meet peanut butter
The ISIS Group includes several businesses that operate in niche areas of legal, consultancy and corporate finance. The ISIS Foundation, meanwhile, is a not-for-profit that focuses on improving the lives of children in the developing world.
Here’s where the real innovation comes in. The Group is also the ‘engine’ that funds 100% of the administration, infrastructure and emergency project costs incurred by the Foundation. Both the business and not-for-profit are run from the same offices, with day-to-day involvement by the same management teams.
As Exel says “This enabled us to tap great finance people who wanted to do good. Instead of sending them to build homes for the poor, we told them to simply continue doing what they did best – making money.”
The millions of dollars they made went directly into projects to help children. As a result, ISIS has saved, or dramatically improved, hundreds of thousands of young lives.
Exel likens it to Venus and Mars thinking. Alone, businesses and NGO’s can’t grow beyond their natural scope. Blended, they end up compromising their original strengths. But co-existing and working together toward a common goal, they can truly perform as unique partners.
So why isn’t everyone doing it?
Exel is the first person to acknowledge hers model is far from perfect.
“You need enlightened people on both sides to make it work. Even so, there are big differences that need to be overcome.”
Businesspeople, for example, often fail to appreciate that humanitarian solutions are more complex than business solutions. And NGO thinkers have a hard time seeing businesspeople as partners.
Issues like compensation are also thorny. As Exel says “How do you value the money maker, versus the money spender?”
Still, in a world grappling with conscious capitalism, the ISIS model is a great step in the right direction.
Why didn’t I think of that?
Exel’s business model seems self-evident – in hindsight. But in fact, it was the result of great innovation thinking.
And like every great innovation, it comes with learnings:
• Every innovation starts with an insight. And every insight comes from an unmet need. Learn how to find those unmet needs.
• A great insight needs to be answered with a great idea to blossom. ISIS answered the need for social enterprise with a solution that enabled both its Foundation and business to shine.
• Fail fast, fail forward. Audette Exel knows her model isn’t perfect. Every day, she challenges her team to hone it.
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Thanks for the note. Best of luck with your venture. Sounds like there is a lot of exciting stuff going on.
Marc Stoiber
Tulane is making a difference. Our business plan competition emphasizes Conscious Capitalism and offers a no-strings-attached cash prize of $50,000 for the winning plan, plus an additional $20,000 contest for a business that will start in New Orleans.
A six page summary is due midnight on Sunday, January 23rd.
Teams must include a student.
Details and entry can be found at TulaneBusinessPlanCompetition.com


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