[1]
I sincerely hope for good weather in Oxford this week, since a number of my Acumen Fund colleagues (and numerous allies from throughout the 'base of the pyramid' community) will be attending the Forum. Then again, rain might be for the best - that way, no one is tempted to spend time outside, away from the excellent sessions. I am particularly impressed with this year's lineup, and its theme: social entrepreneurship: culture, context and social change.
If I had to choose, here are some of the sessions I would mark on my planner as "must-see". Unfortunately, some of them are being held simultaneously...so be sure to check out posted synopses online (see below for more info on blogging at the Skoll World Forum.)
On March 27:
Morning -
- The Internet, Mobile Technology and Cross-Cultural Communications [4]
(when Victor d'Allant, Katrin Verclas, Ami Dar, Premal Shah and Bruno Guissani are in the same room at the same time, you should be there too.) - Hybrid and For-Profit Business Models [5]
(related to my recent post [6]; panelists include Acumen Fund investee WaterHealth International [7] (represented by CEO Tralance Addy) and ally Liza Kimbo as well as BoP celebrity Priya Haji)
Afternoon -
- Empathy as a Tool for Social Impact [8]
(2007 Acumen Fund Fellow Jocelyn Wyatt [9] and her IDEO colleagues run an interactive workshop...can't wait to see the notes from this.) - Mirror, Mirror on the Wall, What's the Impact of This All? [10]
(Brian Trelstad talking about metrics and impact assessment? I may be fortunate enough to see this up close on a regular basis, but if you don't work at Acumen, you should check this out. Besides, Roger Martin - co-author of an excellent article [11]critical of social entrepreneurship's everything-to-everyone definition - will be there too.) - Addressing the Talent Gap [12]
(An under-heralded and incredibly critical success factor at the BoP: can you hire - and retain - good people? Acumen's Deepti Doshi will be speaking here - check it out.)
On March 28:
Morning -
- Replication and Scale [13]
(A recent blog post [13] about this issue over on NextBillion.net generated 1,000 reads and 13 comments in the space of a few days. The panel will feature Chuck Slaughter of LivingGoods [14].) - Growth Finance for Social Entrepreneurs [15]
(It's all about the money...and these 5 speakers - including E+Co's [16] Christine Eibs Singer - know how to make it flow to the right people at the right time.)
Afternoon -
- Plenary session with Paul Collier [17] - author of "The Bottom Billion" - if you're not convinced that this session will be worthwhile, read Ethan's review of Collier's book [18].
- Plenary panel featuring Acumen's Jacqueline Novogratz and David Bornstein, author of How to Change the World [19]
- Plenary session with Paul Farmer [20] - co-founder of Partners in Health - had the Skoll Forum somehow recruited Paul Polak [21] in addition to Collier and Farmer, then they would have completed a triple-play of brilliant, world-changing people named Paul. 'Settling' for Collier and Farmer is far from that - attendees are quite lucky.
The Forum is sold out - and has been for weeks - but that doesn't mean we can't follow along from afar. First off, Social Edge [22] will be blogging every session and sending a team of Berkeley scholars into the halls and coffee breaks to dig even deeper. In addition, I have asked my Acumen Fund colleagues to send me updates from the Forum. Hopefully Jacqueline, Brian, Ann and Deepti will post at least once...when they're not speaking on a panel, of course!
Full-time staff won't be Acumen's sole representation, however. Just as we did last year, Acumen is re-uniting its 2008 Acumen Fund Fellows cohort for a mid-year meeting, de-brief and short holiday. I've asked the Fellows [23] - Jawad, Catherine, Tricia, Wangari, John, Chris and Jon - to cross-post some of their mid-year reflections from their Fellows blog [24] on the Acumen Fund blog (which I'll cross post here on NextBillion as well).
Finally, as if the current Fellows weren't enough, Acumen's inaugural class of Fellows will be having a reunion in Oxford this weekend. Stay tuned for their reflections too.
(This post first appeared on the Acumen Fund blog [25].)