Your money can change the world
The Impact Investor: Lessons in Leadership and Strategy for
Collaborative Capitalism offers precise details on what,
exactly, impact investing entails, embodied in the experiences and
best and proven practices of some of the world’s most successful
impact investors, across asset classes, geographies and areas of
impact. The book discusses the parameters of impact investing in
unprecedented detail and clarity, providing both context and tools
to those eager to engage in the generational shift in the way
finance and business is being approached in the new era of
Collaborative Capitalism.
The book presents a simple thesis with clarity and conviction:
‚Impact investing can be done successfully. This is what success
looks like, and this is what it requires.‘ With much-needed lessons
for practitioners, the authors view impact investing as a harbinger
of a new, more ‚multilingual‘ (cross-sector), transparent, and
accountable form of economic leadership.
The Impact Investor: Lessons in Leadership and Strategy for
Collaborative Capitalism serves as a resource for a variety of
players in finance and business, including:
* Investors: It demonstrates not only the types of investments
which can be profitable and impactful, but also details best
practices that, with roots in impact investing, will increasingly
play a role in undergirding the success of all investment
strategies.
* Wealth advisors/financial services professionals: With
unprecedented detail on the innovative structures and strategies of
impact investing funds, the book provides guidance to financial
institutions on how to incorporate these investments in client
portfolios.
* Foundations: The book explores the many catalytic and
innovative ways for for-profit and non-profit investors to partner,
amplifying the potential social and environmental impacts of
philanthropic spending and market-rate endowment investment.
* Business students: By including strategies for making sound
impact investments based on detailed case studies, it provides
concrete lessons and explores the skills required to enhance
prospects for success as a finance and business professional.
* Policy makers: Reinforcing the urgency of creating a supportive
and enabling environment for impact investing, the book
demonstrates ways policy has already shaped the sector, and
suggests new ways for policymakers to support it.
* Corporate leaders: The book includes essential advice on the
way business is and must be responding to a new generation of
Millennial clients and customers, with unique insights into a form
of value creation that is inherently more collaborative and
outcomes-driven.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Tables and Figures ix
Foreword by Sir Ronald Cohen xi
Preface xix
Introduction 1
Part One Key Practices and Drivers Underlying Impact Investing 17
1 Inside Collaborative Capitalism 19
The Roots of Collaborative Capitalism 20
The Collaborative Capitalism Pyramid 34
Three Core Elements of Collaborative Capitalism 39
Putting It All Together: Collaborative Capitalism in Action 44
Looking Ahead 56
2 Raising the Curtain on Impact Investing 58
Sizing the Market 62
Key Actors and Activities 66
The Fund Perspective 73
The Twelve Funds 81
Performance Numbers 93
The Impact Investing Fund Landscape 98
Part Two Four Key Elements of Successful Impact Investing 109
3 Impact DNA 111
A Means to an End 114
The Need for Clarity 117
The Impact Value Chain and Theories of Change 118
Getting Everyone Aligned 127
From First to Last: Measurement and Reporting 129
Bringing It Together: Sequencing the DNA of Impact Investors 138
Mission First and Last Approaches 141
The Mission First and Last Tool Kit 149
4 Symbiosis as Strategy 155
The Practice of Policy Symbiosis 156
Public Sector Innovation in Alignment with the Private Sector 158
The Public Case for Impact Investing 159
The Policy Symbiosis Tool Kit 181
The Five London Principles 191
5 The New Deal 196
The Terrain for the New Deal 196
Myths of Catalytic Capital 200
Four Purposes of Catalytic Capital 203
The Catalytic Capital Tool Kit 222
6 Multilingual Leadership 229
New Skillsets for New Leaders 230
Multilingual Leadership in the Research 232
Multilingual Leadership as Cross-Disciplinary and Collaborative 235
Defining Multilingual Leadership for Impact Investing 239
The Multilingual Leader: From Individual to Team to Firm 243
Building a Multilingual Team: Acquiring Multilingual Capacity 247
The Multilingual Leadership Tool Kit 249
Beyond Impact Investing 254
Part Three Looking Ahead: Trends and Challenges 257
7 The Writing on the Wall 259
8 Concluding Reflections 285
Ongoing Challenges for the Field’s Development 287
Using the Right Tool for the Right Problem 291
The Road Ahead 291
Impact Investor Resource Guide 293
Notes 308
Acknowledgments 324
About the Authors 332
Index 335
Über den Autor
CATHY CLARK is director of the CASE Initiative on Impact Investing (CASE i3) and a professor at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business. She also co-leads the Social Entrepreneurship Accelerator at Duke, part of USAID’s Higher Education Solutions Network. She is a leading authority on for-profit social entrepreneurship, impact investing, and impact assessment.
JED EMERSON is senior advisor to three family offices, each of which is executing 100% impact/sustainable investment wealth management strategies. He is also chief strategist of Impact Assets and a senior fellow with the Centre for Social Investment at Heidelberg University.
BEN THORNLEY is the founder and managing director of ICAP Partners and a strategic advisor to REDF and Pacific Community Ventures (PCV). He created the Impact Investing Policy Collaborative at PCV, with partners from Harvard University, and consults with Cal PERS and other leading financial institutions on the social and economic impacts of over $25 billion of targeted investments.