From the monthly archives:

February 2010

Embracing the Label “Social Entrepreneur”

by Barbara on February 27, 2010

After bouncing back and forth between nonprofits and for-profits, I am weary of the false divisions between the sectors. A friend of mine, a long-time nonprofit consultant and former director, remarks that traditional NPOs are on their way out, that “social entrepreneurship” is taking over the sector. I get the sense that social entrepreneurship is actually taking over not one but three domains – nonprofits, small business, and individual careers.

Main Street businesses and community-based nonprofits face similar threats as models:

  • People have increasing choice about where they give or spend their money – and where and how they work.
  • People have increasing access to opportunities outside of their communities.
  • People have the means to ask more questions about how things really operate, how the nonprofit is actually managed and whether that “community business” owner is really a pillar of the community.

In terms of careers, younger people have no memory of the social compact that would justify unlimited devotion to corporate masters and loan obligations that take any possible romance out of poverty-level wages still paid at some nonprofit jobs.

I recently worked in the animal welfare industry and still engage in the animal welfare cause. There exists a fluid network of pet shop owners, volunteers, activists, government-run pounds, nonprofit shelters, donors, consumers, and other business owners banding together on the Internet and elsewhere to improve pet’s nutrition, legal rights, quality of life, and cultural status. Job holders, volunteers, and self-employed workers alike float between sectors and roles and jobs – or hold multiple ones at the same time.

My days as a self-sacrificing nonprofiteer are most definitely over …

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The Other Side of the Fence

by Barbara on February 15, 2010

One of the best things about being the Vice President of the United States has got to be getting to do stuff like getting your picture snapped with Olympic athletes.

One of the most exciting things about being an Olympic athlete has got to be having your picture taken with important people like the Vice President of the United States

One of the most depressing things about most jobs I’ve had was the outsized proportion of time spent in a segregated world, engaging with people similar to me, often in the ways I am least interesting.

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