This article was first published on Generocity.
Morgan Berman, founder of MilkCrate, has a few tried and true tips, which she calls “Morgan Moments,” for better social entrepreneurship.
On the first day of Net Impact’s national conference, held last week at the Convention Center, the MilkCrate founder and ceramics enthusiast shared them with a room of wannabe entrepreneurs during a panel on the topic.
It’s OK if there’s another company similar to yours that’s making money, even if you’re not. “That means you’ve got something that people want to pay for,” she said.
Instead of trying to get a ton of small businesses to give you small amounts of money, try to get one big one to give you a huge amount of money. Scholly has done this really well, Berman pointed out: The scholarship-finding app gets universities and executives to sponsor downloads for many people.
Berman heard from companies that they wanted a tool to track their employees’ social and environmental impact. So she made it — a paid, gamified version of MilkCrate’s app called MilkCrate for Communities.
Earlier in the day, B Lab cofounder Jay Coen Gilbert’s keynote addressed the growing popularity of B Corps and other triple-bottom-line businesses.
“We know not every company is going to be a certified B Corporation,” he said, “But everybody can be like a B Corp.”
Doing so matters in the long run for attracting both talent and customers. We’re looking forward to seeing more local founders take this to heart as Philly moves closer to becoming the “B Corp capital of the world.”