SER provides North American social entrepreneurs and nonprofit enterprise directors with practical news and information, business tools, and inspiration to help you improve the profitability and impact of social purpose ventures.

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Social Enterprise Reporter Back Issue PDF's Online: Volume II

Access Volume 2 of the Social Enterprise Reporter PDF back issue archive here:

SER 201 SER goes to British Columbia for the cover story "Vancity Credit Union: Taking a Risk on Entrepreneurs Who Make a Difference" by Tom White, and Part 2 of Jerr Boschee's Strategic Marketing Matrix for Social Entrepreneurs®--Segmentation Strategies.

SER 202 features a cover story on "Raising Capital: Regulatory Issues", by Allen Bromberger, Esq., and Part 3 of Jerr Boschee's Strategic Marketing Matrix for Social Entrepreneurs®--Expand, Nurture, Harvest or Kill?.

Social Enterprise Reporter Back Issue PDF's Online Volume I

Access Volume 1 of the Social Enterprise Reporter PDF back issue archive here:

SER 101 including the first of a three part series by Cheryl Dahle on REDF portfolio ventures, "Balancing Act: The Right Size Scoop of Ice Cream".

SER 102 including the second of a three part series by Cheryl Dahle on REDF portfolio ventures. Community Vocational Enterprises (CVE) and Community Gatepath, are highlighted in "Integrating Cultures: When Business and Social Outcomes Are Valued."

SER 103 including the third of a three part series by Cheryl Dahle on REDF portfolio ventures, "Making Tough Choices: When to Start A Business and When to Shut Down."

Social Capital Market 2009 Convenes 9/1-3 in SF

The Social Capital Market, the market at the intersection of money and meaning, is gaining strength and momentum. Join me at SOCAP09 on September 1-3, 2009 at the Fort Mason Center in San Francisco to learn from the people and organizations who are making it happen. Click here to register.

Inaugural Green Collar Job Corps Class Graduates

35 graduates of all ages and colors came on stage to pick up their green hard hats and diplomas last Monday from Laney Community College's 7-month Green Job Corps program in Oakland, CA. Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums was on hand to congratulate the graduates and to remind them of the historic significance of their achievement: "You are the new astronauts, going where others have not gone before: fighting poverty and pollution."

The Green Job Corps was an idea hatched back in 2007 by Van Jones and his colleagues at the Ella Baker Center. I had spoken with Ian Kim, the EBC Green Collar Jobs Program Manager and Raquel Pinderhughes before this idea received $250k in seed funding from the Oakland Public Works Dept. Read those 2007 interviews here:

Heinz College's Institute for Social Innovation Launches The Chronicle of Social Enterprise

The inaugural issue of The Chronicle of Social Enterprise, published by the Carnegie Mellon University Heinz College Institute for Social Innovation, is now available as a free PDF download at http://www.heinz.cmu.edu/download.aspx?id=767.

This issue profiles 20 affirmative businesses, plus stories about affirmative business incubators, the role of the federal government and the rise of the movement internationally. Affirmative businesses are social enterprises that provide jobs, competitive wages and career tracks to people who are physically, mentally, economically or educationally disadvantaged.

Green Collar Social Enterprise: a Perfect Storm of Opportunity

Now is the time for social entrepreneurs to come forward with new ideas for green jobs. With the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act stimulus, energy and green job bills, there is a perfect storm of opportunity that we may not see again. Nonprofits are well positioned to take advantage of local, state and federal connections when competing for grant awards and contracts to develop green job training programs.

2009 Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship

Having spent the majority of my career in the private sector, I have seen many conferences, but nothing quite like The Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship. The annual event at Oxford University’s Saïd Business School is an explosive cloud of inspired innovators bouncing against each other in a highly charged environment. While the inspiring program of speakers and panels creates an innovative buzz, the breakout sessions that fill every gap in the agenda throw delegates together and create a storm of ideas and collaborative action of epic scale.

Growing Home featured in Green For All video

Growing Home combines the best of social enterprise and green jobs. Using federally donated lands outside Chicago, Growing Home helps formerly homeless and drug addicted clients reconnect with the land by growing organic vegetables and selling them in the city. Growing Home was featured in one of SER's first issues, and my interview with the founder and ED Harry Rhodes is still online at
http://sereporter.com/?q=node/88.

PACE Lifts Energy Burden in Los Angeles County

Reprinted from Home Energy Magazine (www.homeenergy.org)

By: 

by Slavisa Spajic, Sion Ferrer, and Carol Gallant

Founded in 1976 to address the employment and job training needs of the Asian Pacific Islander (API) communities of Los Angeles, the Pacific Asian Consortium in Employment (PACE) has broadened both the services it offers and its target population to include all ethnic and immigrant populations within one of the nation’s leading melting pots. Los Angeles County is home to the largest percentage of both Hispanics and APIs in the United States. According to the 2006 Census, Hispanics make up 46.8% of the county’s population of 9,948,081, while APIs make up 13.4%.

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