Posts Tagged ‘ElegantRoots.com’

Yunus, Social Business, and Elegant Roots

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Creating A World 150x200 I just finished reading Creating A World Without Poverty by Muhammad Yunus, the gentleman who created micro-credit and won a Nobel Peace prize for his micro-credit work in Bangladesh. The book is the most inspiring business book I have ever read. Part One, especially, created a one-person think-tank brainstorm in this head.

Dr. Yunus is a visionary AND he’s a hands-on practitioner committed to transforming his homeland through outside-the-box thinking, flexibility and effective implementation. Brings to mind a modification of the old Sinatra refrain from New York, New York: “If he can do it there, we can do it everywhere.”

Do what? you might ask. Use business to tackle social problems. Micro-credit is an inspired notion and an effective reality. ElegRoo supports micro-credit through the totally great KIVA.org.

But we at ElegRoo are taking a lead from Dr. Yunus beyond micro-credit. In Creating A World Without Poverty, Dr. Yunus proposes the idea of “social businesses”, that is, businesses organized as for-profit enterprises, but whose sole goals are to achieve some social benefit. All profits are plowed back into the company. Investors receive no dividends, no profits whatever. They can expect to receive back their initial investment and will still own the company and direct its efforts.

A “social business” must compete head-to-head with ordinary for-profits by dint of the value of its products and/or services.

LuAnne Speeter reports that “[65%] of consumers believe businesses are responsible for having a greater social purpose beyond profit … that businesses have a shared responsibility to address and solve today’s social and environmental issues through a blending of social initiatives and business operations.”

But other attempts at formalizing business commitments to social issues, like B Corporations, are hybrids that attempt to serve two masters — social benefit and investor profit. Dr. Yunus predicts that, at some point, each of these hybrids will face a choice, and that investor profits will prevail. No such Hobson’s Choice can afflict a “social business” — investor profit motive is simply not present to diverge from the social benefit motive.

100% of the ownership of Elegant Roots agrees with these notions and believes also that the vision and mission for Elegant Roots [to promote social justice and eco-consciousness by providing a market for goods that further these goals] fits squarely within the notion of “social business” propounded by the good Dr. Yunus.

100% percent of the ownership has directed that ElegRoo management begin the process of formally converting Elegant Roots into a “social business.” Watch this blog for the ANNOUNCEMENT when the conversion is complete.

Don’t Make Eco-Perfect the Enemy of Eco-Good

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Twitter led me to an interesting blog likening environmentalism to religion: “Green Angst: why being green is like being religious”: The Clean Hippie

“This blog is supposed to be about being green and being normal at the same time. But a true environmentalist doesn’t buy anything but necessities. I’m sorry, but I like to shop, to blow dry my hair, to indulge in fried food every once in a while with friends!

“I don’t know how to do this yet, to walk that line. It’s what I’m going to have to work through. And that is what this whole blog is about!”

I couldn’t resist throwing my two cents in on this. Here’s my comment:

As far as being green and being normal — There’s no such thing as a No Impact life. Anybody who has a cell phone, a computer, has a book published, who eats, etc., has an impact. No Impact can only be a euphemism for a Sustainable Impact Life. Check out Daniel Goleman’s Ecological Intelligence. [and check out the series of blogs here about Ecological Intelligence] Most impacts are hidden from us.

Bottom line — there’s no reason you can’t blow dry your hair. Don’t let yourself be hostage to the imagined judgmental reaction of somebody who is probably carrying a fully charged iPhone and laptop, etc., who takes a hot shower, even if he/she only takes public transportation, or only rides a bike, these all cause an Impact.

And enjoy some fried foods once in a while with friends. Nutritional science has not finally determined even such things as the health effects of saturated fats. Just do it in moderation — once in a while. In some restaurants, in a nod to transparency, they’ll even disclose what kid of oil they use. Go to those restaurants — patronizing the ones with transparency is having a positive impact.

We designed Elegant Roots struggling with exactly these issues. ElegRoo Values. Our motto is: Buy Less But Buy Better. When you shop, if you “vote” with your dollars for purchases that align with your values, you will be encouraging manufacturers to improve their products. And you will be rewarding those who are doing good things.

Those manufacturers are often small and they are pursuing a green or socially responsible vision and they need the support. Hence, you’re Buying Better. Supporting the visions of eco and socially responsible artisans/designers/small businesses is our mission at Elegant Roots. And we present their products with transparency, so shoppers can make informed choices. Check out our Designer Profiles. That’s why we present Gifts with Style and Relevance.

We shouldn’t make the perfect the enemy of the good — in other words, take steps to do better, recognizing that no one who is breathing can be perfect. But the better we do, multiplied by, say, a billion, makes a big impact.

Later.

Elegant Roots partner Artecnica Wins Award!

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

Artecnica, one of the designer companies on ElegantRoots.com, has won the Aid to Artisans’ 2009 Innovation & Visionary Design Award!

Artecnica was founded by Tahmineh Javanbakht, an Iranian-born painter and Enrico Bressan, an Italian born architect.  In its Design With Conscience line, the Los Angeles based design group enlists some of the world’s most acclaimed designers, like renowned Dutch designer Hella Jongerius, to team with artisans located with the help of Aid to Artisans to create thoughtful, meaningful works of household art that enrich and inspire everyday life.

Every Design With Conscience piece not only meets standards of design, beauty and ingenuity, but also adheres to environmental  guidelines in the materials used, the human resources contracted, the cost of transport and sustainability while ensuring the most qualified and worthy artisans are enlisted to produce inspired limited-edition objects for the home.

By working closely with local artisan communities, the Design With Conscience team encourages the survival of indigenous crafts while avoiding the mechanization of the artisan.

Elegant Roots is proud to carry Design With Conscience’s Beads & Pieces bowls, conceived by Hella Jongerius and handcrafted in Peru, providing talented artisans an alternative economic viability in a dangerous area of the world. The purchase of these unique works of art supports fair trade and the future of sustainable craft, including shared work and profit across borders, cultures, races and religions.

We offer our Congratulations to Tahmineh, Enrico and the Artecnica team for the 2009 Innovation & Visionary Design Award and for their leadership.

Find out more about Artecnica and its Beads & Pieces bowls here www.elegantroots.com/Artecnica-mid-5-p-1.html

Hasta,

Rob

The ER Blog Is Back! Chasing The American Dream, Part 1

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

I’ve been thinking about the concept of The American Dream for a long time — where it fits into our lives and where it should fit.

Lately things are driving me to write down some bones about it. The election of our new President. The currency of MLK’s Dream. The New American Melting Pot –  a palpably biological phenomenon. The Madoff and Blagojevich greed. The meltdown of our economy. The rise of Green. And amidst the turmoil, all the questions about how we should live — saving more, carrying less credit burden, buying less, buying local, being responsible.

So what exactly is The American Dream? How has it morphed over the years? And should we remake it?

Until the Great Recession, The American Dream seemed synonymous with Bling, McMansions, and  do-it-if-you-can-get-away-with-it. Disposable everything. Convenience, indulgence and soft comfort elevated to the highest values.

Has it always been that way? Wasn’t there a pastoral/bucolic day-gone-by where Life, Liberty and The Pursuit of Happiness meant simple physical, political and religious security joined with opportunity? I always assumed so.  Then I heard a reference to Democracy in America, attributing to its author, Alexis de Tocqueville, the observation that even back in the early Nineteenth Century, Americans were striving to accumulate things only to lose interest upon their attainment, eye always on the next acquisition. Maybe my vision of American values has been as mythological as George Washington’s I-cannot-tell-a-lie cherry tree.

These questions swirl around ElegantRoots.com since we sell quality gifts from around the world — eco-friendly and socially responsible, yes. Soulful, artisan-made, yes. Buy-less-but-buy-better things, yes. But still things. Green bling? What place for things in a New American Dream?

I’m taking input from heavy-weights the likes of John Zogby from The Way We’ll Be, Messr. de Tocqueville, Andrew J. Bacevich from The Limits of Power, Fareed Zacaria from The Post-American World, Thomas Friedman from Hot, Flat and Crowded, and who knows who else. Write to me — maybe I’ll be quoting you.

Til Next Time,

Rob Favole

Elegant Roots