From the monthly archives:

March 2009

If you run a social entreprise or a sustainable/green business, check out this great list.  Business plan competitions are a tried-and-true way for a start-up to get visibility, invaluable advice, and that all important seed funding.

Ian Fisk runs The William James Foundation competitions in Washington DC.  He recently shared this list with this year’s judges (including myself) and I am happy to pass it on.

Each listing includes what Ian knows about deadlines, eligibility, and prizes, and contains a URL to the competition site.

If you know of other competitions, please add them in the comments to make this a great list, and I will pass those back to Ian.

Global Social Entrepreneurship/Sustainable Business Plan Competitions

Ashoka Citizen Base Awards http://www.citizenbase.org/bp_competitions

Ongoing; Winners receive funding and are linked to Ashoka’s network of social entrepreneurs.

Baruch College & Merrill Lynch IPO Challenge Entrepreneurship Competition http://zicklin.baruch.cuny.edu/bcec/college

First round in November.  Half the team must be Baruch students. $100,000 in cash prizes.

BiD Challenge http://www.bidnetwork.org/set-44007-en.html

Ongoing. Competitions in Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Philippines, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, and Jordon.

Brigham Young University Business Plan Competition Social Entrepreneurship Category http://socialventure.byu.edu

January 14th 2009
Applicants must be currently enrolled at Brigham Young (Provo, Hawaii, or Idado). $50,000 in cash and prizes.

Business Environmental Awards http://www.acterra.org/bea/index.html

January 30, 2009 For existing companies in the San Francisco Bay area. Some Non-profit organizations are eligible.

California Clean Tech Open www.cacleantech.org

June 17, 2009;  Prize Packages Totaling $600,000

Connecticut Venture Group www.cvg.org/contest.html

April; A team member must be at a Connecticut University.

Duke Start Up Challenge (Social Entrepreneurship)  http://www.dukestartupchallenge.org/about

February 19, 2009 At least one full-time Duke student.

Echoing Green http://www.echoinggreen.org/fellowship

September; Two year fellowships for emerging social innovators.

Eileen Fisher http://www.eileenfisher.com

June 1, 2009
Five grants of $10,000 for socially conscious, woman-owned businesses.

Tufts Social Entrepreneurship Business Plan Competitions

http://gordon.tufts.edu/leadCompetitions.htm (Application is via YouNoodle)

January 16, 2009;  One member of each team must be a Tufts student.

Florida International University Entrepreneur Challenge http://fiuchallenge.com

January 30, 2009 Open to all Southeast Florida Area Residents  and all FIU Students & Alumni.

Foster School of Business CIE Business Plan Competition http://bschool.washington.edu/cie/bpc/

April 2, 2009;  Entrants must be full- or part-time college students enrolled in Washington state.

Global Social Entrepreneurship Competition http://bschool.washington.edu/gsec

November 12, 2008; At least one team member must be a current student.

Global Social Venture Competition www.gsvc.org

January 21, 2009;  One team member must be a current graduate business student anywhere in the world, or have graduated with the past two years. Prizes worth $50,000.

Gonzaga University Hogan Entrepreneurial Leadership Program Business Plan Competition http://tr.im/htpI

February 26, 2009; Undergraduate and graduate students from Gonzaga, EWU, Whitworth and Washington State University. Prizes totaling $42,500.

Harvard Business School Business Plan Contest http://www.hbs.edu/socialenterprise/businessplan/

February 9, 2009; All teams must include at least one HBS second year student. Prizes totaling over $60,000.

Ignite Clean Energy Competition http://www.ignitecleanenergy.com/competition

March 2, 2009 A year-long training and competitive forum for entrepreneurs in the clean energy industry.

Investor’s Circle Call for Applicants

http://www.investorscircle.net/for_entrepreneurs/call-for-applicants

January 15, 2009

J.P. Morgan Good Venture Case Competition http://goodventure.org/home.cfm

February 12, 2009;  For philanthropic non-profit organizations.

JMU Sustainable Business Plan Competition www.jmu.edu/cob/cfe/business_plan.shtml

March 2, 2009; JMU students, faculty, alumni and local residents compete for up to $100,000.

LES (Licensing Executives Society) Foundation Graduate School Competition http://www.lesfoundation.org/graduate_student

March 4 2009; For licensing techologies. $10K in cash plus $45K in services.

MIT IDEAS Competition http://web.mit.edu/ideas/www/index.htm

April 15, 2009; One third of each team must be full-time MIT students. $50,000 in prizes.

McGinnis Venture Competition http://mcginnisventurecompetition.com

February 23, 2009; At least one graduate student must be a member of the management team.

NESsT Social Enterprise Competition http://www.nesst.org/competition/

No 2009 dates listed Civil society organizations from Argentina, Brasil, Ecuador and Peru.

NYU – Leonard Stern School of Business http://w4.stern.nyu.edu/berkley/bpc.cfm?doc_id=6306

October 27, 2008; All teams must include a Stern representative to compete. Cash prizes $100,000.

Oxford University 21st Century Challenge http://www.sbs.ox.ac.uk/21challenge/competition/

No 2009 dates listed. Must be a for-profit

Private Sector Development Research Competition http://www.ifc.org/competition

No 2009 dates listed.  This is an essay contest. Applicants must not be an employee of the World Bank.
Rice University Business Plan Competition

http://www.alliance.rice.edu/alliance/RBPC.asp?SnID=1616311824

International  – Jan 16, 2009. USA – Feb 13, 2009 The management team must consist of at least one graduate student. $700,000 in prizes.

RGK Center for Philanthropy and Community Service Social Innovation Competition www.utexas.edu/lbj/rgk/competition/index.php

February 20, 2009 Undergraduate and graduate level students from any 4-year university or college in the world are eligible to enter. $50,000  in prizes.

Seattle Pacific University Social Venture Plan Competition http://www.spu.edu/depts/sbe/svpc.asp

February 24th, 2009 Must include SPU student.$7,500 in prizes.

Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship www.skollfoundation.org/skollawards/index.asp

Several deadlines throughout the year: March, August, November.  Programs submitted for consideration should have a track record of no less than three years.

Social Enterprise Club Pitch for Change Competition http://www.pitchforchange.org/

January 30th, 2009; Participants do NOT need to have a completed business plan. They simply need to have a great idea that will have a significant social impact

Social Innovation Forum http://www.socialinnovationforum.org

Already chosen for 2009 Organizations and programs  in the Greater Boston area.

Stanford Social E-Challenge http://bases.stanford.edu/social-e-challenge/competition/ (Submit via YouNoodle.com)

February 17, 2009; Team must be at least half full-time Stanford students. $50,000 in prizes.

Students for the Advancement of Global Entrepreneurship (SAGE) World Cup http://www.sageglobal.org For High School Students

Tulane Business Plan Competition http://www.tulanebusinessplancompetition.com/

February 8, 2009 Plans can be either for profit or non-profit ventures. $20,000 in prizes.

University of San Francisco International Business Plan Competition http://www.usfca.edu/sobam/nvc/bpc/

January 7, 2009 $25,000 in prizes.

William James Foundation 2008-09 Socially Responsible Business Plan Competition www.williamjamesfoundation.org; www.williamjamesfoundation.org/sustainability;
www.williamjamesfoundation.org/dcprize

First round Deadline December 12th, 2008;  One team member must be or have been a student anywhere in the world in the past ten years. $60,000 in prizes, including special prizes for environmental sustainability and support of  the Washington, DC community.

Yale Entrepreneurial Society (YES) http://www.yesatyale.org/y50k.php

January 19, 2009 $50K in prizes.

Youth Social Enterprise Initiative http://www.ysei.org

Below 30 years old from Bangladesh, India, Malaysia, Philippines or Sri Lanka

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Reading a marketing e-mail from Loral Langemeier, a “wealth coach,” she makes a distinction between two kinds of people:

If you’ve been following my strategies, you already know that I believe there are two kinds of people:

(1) The Creators – Generators – Expanders

(2) The Restricters – The Dieters

Which kind of person are you?

I cringed — yikes, I just started a diet.  Will that harm my wealth?  The question answers itself — it’s a ridiculous assertion.

I am the kind of person who believes there are two kinds of people:  those who believe there are two kinds of people, and those who don’t.  This statement poses an unresolvable logical paradox.

I am the kind of person who believes truth is paradoxical.  So to me the truth about creating wealth involves embracing — not rejecting — that distinction.

Every successful entrepreneur I know is frugal.  Not frugal-cheapskate but frugal value-adding.   We learn to negotiate for the best deal while getting what we need to extend our vision and make it reality.

In short, we learn to live in paradox.  That is why entrepreneurs can sell their services with conviction when they are living on peanut butter and jelly.  “Dieting” doesn’t detract from their expansiveness, it fuels it.

My notion is consistent with research on peak performance.  Those at the top of their game unite seeming opposites — grace and bulk, beauty and brains, and frugality and expansiveness.   In fact, learning to bring in the opposite side of your nature into conscious use is what psychologist Carl Jung calls maturity.  And personal maturity is a necessary foundation for business maturity.

I stay away from Loral Langemeier and her ilk who would steer you toward an inferior way of being with money. I read the materials of those who preach the “two kinds of people” gospel, and I see those who place “wealth” above all other goals and seek to built followers who agree with that truth.

I just don’t agree with that view of money.  Money is what allows you to express who you are, give to the world, and receive from it in return.  Divorcing the dollars from the desire, well, is an inappropriate “love of money,” and you know where that leads….




Greed is Good?

by admin on March 3, 2009 · 2 comments

in Entrepreneuial Thinking

My stepson and I had an interesting conversation about “selling out.”   We were talking about musicians.  With the clear sight of a 22-year-old, he defined selling out as:

YOUR IN IT TO MAKE MONEY, NOT DEVELOP YOUR ART.

That set off bells in my head…the combination of idealism and cynisicm.  The clear understanding that creating based on what is within you is life-giving, and the notion that money corrupts everything about that clarity.

Money is just a tool.  So what is that statement really saying?

I think it is decrying a person being overly concerned with what others think…in this case, record producer.  It’s based on the notion that everything is a job that someone else defines.  It doesn’t allow for the myriad of tools — technology and socially — that are available to create one’s own destiny.

I think it is a huge mistake to over-generalize cynicism about money.

Thousands of artists — as well as lesser beings like me — figure out ways to earn a living that don’t result in losing their soul.  Deigning to live such a life takes effort, trial and error, and openness.  It takes a big heart willing to be broken and not give up.

I hope that his idealism wins out his the cynicism…because if it doesn’t, this beautiful, brilliant young man will be walking right into the same trap that imprisons most people, that there is an inherent conflict between how I earn my living and who I want to be.

Daring to think otherwise – now that is the ultimate creative act.

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