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Our Staff Writers and Editors offer insights on the latest news, events, interviews and other happenings from the development through enterprise and base of the pyramid universes

Conference Report: The Private Sector's Role in Latin America

gOn Tuesday, I went to Georgetown University to attend a high-profile panel on "The Role of the Private Sector in the Competitiveness of the Latin American Region." The line-up of panelists included three former presidents (Vicente Fox - Mexico, Alejandro Toledo – Peru, Jose Maria Aznar – Spain), one former prime minister (Roberto Danino – Peru) and three prominent businessmen from Latin America and Spain (Stanley Motta – President of Motta International, Marcelo Claure – Founder of the Brightstar Corp., and Gustavo Cisneros, Chairman of the Cisneros Group of Companies). Quite the assembly of lauded economic reformers and successful business leaders.

The event was paired with the launch of a new online journal, Globalization, Competitiveness, and Governability (GCG), a joint project between Georgetown and Universia, an online space for university education resources across Latin America, founded and supported by Banco Santander.

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A Lesson for BoP Technologists: Put the Business Model First

Girls with OLPCA recent Wall Street Journal article documents the demise of Nicolas Negroponte’s dream of a $100 "one laptop per child" for millions of schoolchildren in the developing world. (Thanks to Ethan Zuckerman for pointing it out.)  To give Negroponte his due, the idea stimulated significant technology development and focused market attention on the need for low-cost computing devices for BOP markets.  And from an engineering perspective, it's a magnificent machine.

But the $100 price was never realistic; the market is dominated by small businesses and only secondarily by educational systems, and the project lacked a real business model, including such essential details as training and technical support.  (We've written about OLPC's lack of training and tech support time and again here on NextBillion.)

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Are Pedicabs a Bottom of the Pyramid Business Model?

Pedicabs in ChengduOver on The City Fix, author Benjamin de la Pena discusses  what a post-car future might look like - and he thinks it looks like a pedicab. Also called cycle rickshaws, pedicabs are green (human-powered) alternatives to motorbikes and cars, to be sure. But are they a "bottom of the pyramid" business, as de la Pena suggests?

Yes, BoP 'entrepreneurs' do rent/own and operate most pedicabs in the developing world. (Side note: check out this interesting article about the rickshaw bank.) To determine if they are really a BoP model, I asked myself - do pedicabs address the BoP penalty (price, quality and access)?

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The Tradeoff Between Growth and Innovation at the BOP

Indian EggsBusinesspeople tend to prefer predictable business environments to work in. However, in developing countries, business environments tend to be more unstable than in Western markets because of various unpredictable social, economic and political changes.

Since business plans depend on predictions about the future and the certainty of that prediction, the financial equation by which BOP firms decide where and how to invest will change fundamentally with respect to OECD markets. In this post I want to explore the dichotomy between market growth and innovation in relatively large BOP firms.

Thanks to scalable business models, pursuing market growth strategies is a short- term decision (1-3 years approximately).  On the other hand, devoting resources to innovation efforts or research and development, is a more long term decision (3-5 years depending on the industry).  Additionally, most BOP firms are especially constrained in capital due to illiquid capital markets.  Inefficient and corrupt bureaucracies and unpredictable law regimes do not help either.  How do they make a decision when assigning resources to innovation and growth strategies?

Measuring growth in BOP and OECD markets is relatively straightforward.  On the other hand, innovation tends to be a trickier concept.
The Economist published a ‘Special report on Technology in India and China’ on November 10th in which this was discussed. It concluded that "India and China’s precocious economies have done more piggybacking than leapfrogging."

What does this statement exactly mean?
In the BOP, innovation often entails an unusual combination of technologies and other components that generates value for the consumer. It does not normally involve capital intensive research (like that which may be done in western pharmaceutical or technological corporations) or complex supply chains.  BOP innovations are, for example, adding a torch light to mobile phones or developing wider washing machine pipes (for cleaning vegetables, you see).  Rebecca Henderson of MIT and Kim Clark of Harvard have coined the phrase "architectural innovation" to describe these kind of innovations. 

A recent report by the World Bank called "Unleashing India’s Innovation" (do excuse me for not having read it all yet, but it is 224 pages) found that for each industry there was a big group of underperforming companies operating far behind the industry’s vanguard. It calculates that India’s national output could be 4.8 times bigger if only that lagging group of companies were to absorb the existing industry knowledge. Moreover, it found that the recent growth in India (and, by extension, China and other developing economies) has involved in most cases piggybacking or catching up to the frontrunners rather than leapfrogging.

Innovation, because it involves catching up instead of pushing the industry’s boundaries, is shorter term in developing economies than in western economies. As a consequence, it only allows for shorter term and comparatively smaller extraordinary profits.

Furthermore, innovation at the BOP level involves a greater degree of experimentation and interaction with the customer than it does in Western markets. After all, as Tsinghua University’s Mr. von Zedwitz says in the Economist report, Chinese companies "can afford to waste some customers with an imperfect product, because there are always another 100m out there to whom you can sell version 2.0."  Although this may be an exaggeration, especially if the product is perceived to be toxic or useless (remember the Nestlé boycott?), the case does apply to BOP markets.

Anyhow, innovation is more closely connected to the market and is still being developed even as it is sold (like a computing beta version of sorts). This creates a strong link between the company’s market access and the innovative products. Therefore, additional profits from the new product will be more tightly dependent on successful growth strategies.

Finally, most BOP markets, like the developing countries they are in, are experiencing very strong growth. It must also be noted that volume is a crucial factor in achieving sustainable profits at the BOP level, since sales margins tend to be very thin.

Companies that decide to take advantage of current economic growth (which will tend to stabilize in the future) without innovating at all will have a competitive advantage over those companies that are currently setting aside a portion of their profits for research. In economic terms, other things equal and taking into account decreasing marginal returns, the opportunity cost of innovation will tend to be higher in BOP markets because foregone growth is greater here than in OECD economies.

In non-economic terms, a company will tend to get a bigger ‘bang for the buck’ if it chooses to spend more of its resources on growth strategies than on innovative products or processes. Even if an abnormally innovative firm strikes gold, due to its smaller volume, it would tend to be bought or absorbed by more growth oriented firms when they recognize the value of that innovation (this is also what happens with plenty of successful Silicon Valley start-ups).

To summarize, in the BOP:

  1. The innovation process is less complex and closer to the market.
  2. Innovation currently entails piggybacking, not leapfrogging, so profits are smaller and shorter-lived.
  3. The final outcomes tend to be easier to copy by competitors because they are simpler and easier to understand (and also due to non-enforced property rights, but that’s another story!). Innovations therefore entail competitive advantages for shorter periods.
  4. The opportunity costs of innovating are higher because the foregone growth is bigger.

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American Thanksgiving Break - Back on Monday

For those of us in the United States, tonight marks a tradition - the tradition of Thanksgiving traffic.  This is especially true on the eastern seaboard, where air and car traffic get particularly bad as families attempt to gather and celebrate the holiday.

So, since NextBillion.net is based in Washington DC, we're taking a few days off.  Who knows, we might just log on and do some blogging from the airport or while stuck in traffic - you never know.

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The Mobile Data Wave Begins

A new report from Vodafone shows that data revenue topped 1 billion pounds this past year, not including text messaging revenues. Moreover, data revenues grew 49% over a year ago, compared with 7% for voice and 9% for messaging. Think of this as a measure of the growing use of internet-based mobile services, clearly the next big thing in mobile telecommunications.

So what does that have to do with the Base of the Pyramid?  A lot.  True, most of Vodafone’s revenue now comes from the EU, although that is starting to change rapidly as the company focuses its investment on emerging markets. But an article in the Economist, A Bank in Every Pocket?, reinforces what we have been arguing (in The Next 4 Billion:Market Size and Business Strategy for the Base of the Pyramid and elsewhere on this site)—that mobile phone banking is starting to take off. 

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Acumen Fund Launches New Web Site, Fellows Blog

Acumen Web Site ScreenshotTime to update your RSS feeds: Acumen Fund has launched a new, RSS-compatible web site (the site is a re-design of their previous effort).  In addition to being syndication-friendly, the new site is rich with stories, photos, videos and lots of dynamic content.  I like how they've organized things around their three pillars: capital, knowledge and talent.  For more on this three pillars approach, check out my post from the annual Investor Gathering last week.

While you're checking out the new Acumen site - be sure to read Jacqueline Novogratz's recent Pakistan and India journals, by the way - also add Immersion to your RSS feeds or bookmarks.

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Genesis: India's Premier Social Entrepreneurship Competition

Genesis 2008Genesis is a social entrepreneurship competition that aims to bring together social entrepreneurs, students, NGOs, innovators, incubators, corporations and financiers and encourage them to come up with innovative ideas which are socially relevant and feasible.

The competition is hosted by the India chapter of Asia-Pacific Student Entrepreneurship Society at IIT Madras.

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Are We Making a Difference? Measuring the Social and Environmental Impacts of Small and Medium Ente

New Ventures logoGuest blogger Mareike Hussels is Latin America Manager for New Ventures. Prior to joining WRI, Mareike worked with the United Nations Environment Programme Finance Initiative (UNEP FI), where she was responsible for outreach to financial institutions in Latin America. Mareike pursued her undergraduate studies at the University of Passau in Germany and holds an MA in International Relations and Development Studies from the University of East Anglia in the UK.

By Mareike Hussels

"I feel like a hamster in a wheel, trying to respond to all kinds of different reporting templates for environmental, economic and social impact." This quote is from Ben Ripple, founder of Big Tree Farms, a specialty ingredients company sourcing from farmers in Bali. He feels that the pile of data that his company has to collect for aid agencies, international NGOs, investors, and other sponsors is never-ending.

Ben was speaking last week at the Triple Bottom Line Conference in Paris, where WRI organized a panel on monitoring and evaluating non-financial impacts.

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Guest Post: Learning Humility at the BoP Learning Lab

Jocelyn WyattGuest blogger Jocelyn Wyatt leads IDEO's base of the pyramid design efforts. Before joining IDEO, Jocelyn was a member of the inaugural class of Acumen Fund Fellows. As a Fellow, Jocelyn worked for Advanced Bio-Extracts (ABE), a leading manufacturer and cultivator of artemisinin, a key ingredient in the most effective treatment against malaria. She holds a MBA from the Thunderbird School of Global Management.

By Jocelyn Wyatt

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