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Yunus Social Business

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Yunus Social Business
IndustryImpact investing
FounderMuhammad Yunus, Saskia Bruysten, Sophie Eisenmann
Headquarters,
Germany
Area served
Brazil, Colombia, India, Kenya, Uganda
Websitewww.yunussb.com

Yunus Social Business (YSB) is an impact-first organisation with a non-profit impact-investing arm, Yunus Funds, and a corporate social-innovation consulting arm, Yunus Corporate Innovation. Both business units are based on furthering the concept of social business, as developed by YSB Co-founder and Chairman Professor Muhammad Yunus.

YSB was co-founded by Nobel Peace Laureate Muhammad Yunus, Saskia Bruysten and Sophie Eisenmann in 2011. Its stated mission is to "harness the power of business to end poverty and the climate crisis."[1]

History

Prior to co-founding Yunus Social Business, Muhammad Yunus pioneered the field of micro-finance through Grameen Bank in his home country of Bangladesh. Muhammad Yunus and Grameen Bank received the Nobel Peace Prize for establishing microfinance and trying to tackle poverty. Grameen Bank became the first of several social businesses that Muhammad Yunus founded.[2]

After Grameen Bank was established, Muhammad Yunus began to build other social businesses in Bangladesh. These included Grameen Shakti and Grameen Eyecare Hospital.[3]

Muhammad Yunus also began to create social-business joint ventures with other corporations. One example was the French FMCG company Danone, with which Muhammad Yunus co-founded Grameen Danone Foods. The joint venture produced nutrition-enriched yoghurt for children in Bangladesh.[4] Muhammad Yunus also worked on social-business joint ventures with BASF,[5] Intel,[6] Uniqlo,[7] Euglena[8] and G. Japan Sunpower Auto Limited.[9]

In 2008, Muhammad Yunus and future YSB co-founder Saskia Bruysten met at the London School of Economics, where Muhammad Yunus was giving a talk on the promise of social business. Later, they exchanged contact information.[10] This encounter led the former management consultant, Bruysten, to visit some of Muhammad Yunus' social businesses in Bangladesh. Bruysten then started setting up Grameen Creative Lab with a German entrepreneur, where her former BCG colleague Sophie Eisenmann later joined. In 2011, the trio agreed to co-found Yunus Social Business beyond Bangladesh.

Yunus Funds

Yunus Funds is the non-profit impact-investing arm of Yunus Social Business. It provides patient loans and post-investment support to social businesses in Brazil, Colombia, India, Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda. Yunus Funds covers the sectors Agriculture and Livelihoods, Health and Sanitation, Education and Training and Energy and Environment.

Social businesses financed by YSB

Tugende

Tugende is a social business based in Uganda that offers motorcycle-taxi drivers (boda boda drivers) the opportunity to rent their bike and ultimately own a motorcycle. As of 2022, Tugende has served 52,000 customers.[11] Yunus Social Business provided financing to Tugende in 2017. In 2021, Tugende went on to raise US$9.9 million in Series A funding.[12]

Impact Water

Impact Water is a social business based in Uganda that provides affordable water-purification systems to schools. As of 2022, Impact Water has installed water-purification systems at 32,517 schools, reaching 14.3 million students.[13] Impact Water entered YSB's portfolio in 2015. Impact Water paid off its loan and left the YSB portfolio in 2022.

Yunus Corporate Innovation

Yunus Corporate Innovation is the corporate social-innovation consulting arm of Yunus Social Business.

Yunus Corporate Innovation projects

Some of the projects that Yunus Corporate Innovation has worked on include: the Fight for Access Accelerator Accelerator with Reckitt;[14] the FLANE Accelerator for Female Entrepreneurship with Vodafone Institute;[15] MAN Truck & Bus Impact Accelerator;[16] the zero-waste social-business joint-venture Vishuddh with Cofresco of Melitta Group;[17] the social-procurement initiative Micro Hub with IKEA Social Entrepreneurship;[18] the social-procurement social-business joint-venture Campo Vivo with McCain.[19]

Social intrapreneurship research: Business as Unusual

Yunus Corporate Innovation has conducted qualitative and quantitative research into the business benefits of social intrapreneurship in collaboration with the World Economic Forum's Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship, Porticus, INSEAD and HEC Paris. These include "Business as Unusual: How Social Intrapreneurs Can Turn Companies Into A Force For Good", "Business as Unusual: The Playbook for Designing Social Intrapreneurship Programmes" and "Business as Unusual: Making the Case for Social Intrapreneurship".[20]

Social procurement research

Yunus Corporate Innovation has conducted research into the business benefits of social procurement in collaboration with SAP and BCG. These include "The Social Procurement Manual" and "A $500 Billion Market Opportunity for Real Impact at Scale".[21]

Country offices

YSB is active in six countries with local offices in Brazil, Colombia, India, Kenya and Uganda.[22]

YSB Brazil

In March 2013, YSB Brazil was launched, with Rio officially declared a "Social Business City". Yunus Negocios Sociais Brasil, as it is locally known, ran three cycles of accelerator programs in São Paulo and Rio in 2014.

YSB Colombia

YSB Colombia was created in 2011 originally as Grameen Caldas and officially became YSB Colombia in 2013. It currently manages a portfolio of three social businesses to date, including a joint venture with McCain.

YSB India

YSB India was launched in 2011 in Mumbai with seven social businesses have received financing.

YSB Uganda

In partnership with the African Development Bank, YSB Uganda began operations in November 2013, and the first local social businesses were supported in 2014.

Other countries

YSB has previously been active in Albania, Tunisia and Haiti. YSB is no longer investing in these geographies.

Partnerships

COVID Alliance for Social Entrepreneurship

In 2020, YSB, together with the World Economic Forum co-initiated the COVID Alliance for Social Entrepreneurship. The initiative brought 100 social-impact organisations together to try to support social businesses.[23][24] The Alliance states that:[25]

Members of the Alliance commit to and call on their peers to stand by social entrepreneurs in their capacity as front-line responders to the health crisis and as pioneers of a green, inclusive society and economic system.

Unusual Pioneers

Unusual Pioneers is a social-intrapreneurship accelerator for corporations. It was co-initiated in 2021 by Yunus Social Business, the World Economic Forum's Schwab Foundation and Porticus. Participants in the 2021 cohort included social intrapreneurs representing Suez, Novartis, Unilever, Tata Trust, Accenture, ClubMed, Axa, Mastercard, and others.[26][27]

Take a Stake Consortium

The Take a Stake Consortium is a funding initiative by the Yunus Social Business and Waste Foundation, launched in 2021.[28] The consortium has been joined by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency and IKEA Social Entrepreneurship.[29] Take a Stake aims to close a funding gap in the WASH and waste sectors, initially in East Africa and India.[30][31]

Social Success Note

The Social Success Note was created by Yunus Funds, the Rockefeller Foundation and the UBS Optimus Foundation, aiming to finance underfunded sectors and populations. The Social Success Note is an outcome-based financing mechanism in which a commercial bank is incentivized to lend to social businesses by a donor, who provides a grant to the commercial bank representing market returns (in addition to the social business' loan repayments) when the social business meets predefined objectives.[32]

Core partnerships

BCG has been a core partner of Yunus Social Business since 2013.[33][34] BCG has provided YSB with pro-bono consulting projects, created a secondee programme where BCG consultants can work for YSB and provided pro-bono consulting projects directly to YSB portfolio social businesses. YSB is one of BCG's five global impact partnerships.[30]

Freshfields has been a core partner of YSB since YSB was first legally incorporated in 2011. Since then, Freshfields has provided pro-bono legal services to YSB on an ongoing basis.[30]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Yunus Social Business". www.yunussb.com. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  2. ^ "Grameen family of organizations", Wikipedia, 2022-10-18, retrieved 2022-10-28
  3. ^ "Grameen family of organizations", Wikipedia, 2022-10-18, retrieved 2022-10-28
  4. ^ "Grameen Danone", Wikipedia, 2022-05-09, retrieved 2022-10-28
  5. ^ "BASF gründet Joint Venture mit Mikrokredit-Gründer Yunus -" (in German). Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  6. ^ "Chip Shot: Intel Joint-Venture with Nobel Peace Prize Winner Dr. Yunus and Grameen". Intel Newsroom. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  7. ^ "Uniqlo teams up with Yunus". www.muhammadyunus.org. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  8. ^ "euglena Co". Business Call to Action. 12 May 2021. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  9. ^ "Yunus launches Joint Venture "G. Japan Sunpower Auto Limited"". muhammadyunus.org. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  10. ^ "SÄEN, WACHSEN UND WIRKUNG ERNTEN". Forbes (in German). 3 November 2020. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  11. ^ "Tugende". Tugende. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  12. ^ Kene-Okafor, Tage (2021-03-31). "Uganda's Tugende closes $3.6M Series A extension to meet the demand for its asset finance products". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  13. ^ "Impact Water". Impact Water. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  14. ^ "Reckitt's Fight for Access Accelerator". www.reckitt.com. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  15. ^ "F-LANE". Vodafone Institute. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  16. ^ "MAN Impact Accelerator". MAN Accelerator. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  17. ^ "Melitta Gruppe gründet Recyclingfirma in Indien". Melitta Corporate Site (in German). Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  18. ^ "Yunus Social Business last mile delivery". www.ikeasocialentrepreneurship.org. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  19. ^ "Designing a Social Business That Benefits the Core". BCG Global. 2021-01-08. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  20. ^ "Research". www.yunussb.com. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  21. ^ "When corporations and social enterprises work together, they can change the world". World Economic Forum. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  22. ^ "About". www.yunussb.com. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  23. ^ Meck, Georg. "F.A.S. exklusiv: Eine neue Allianz der Wohltäter". FAZ.NET (in German). ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  24. ^ "About - Global Alliance for Social Entrepreneurship". initiatives.weforum.org. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  25. ^ "COVID Alliance for Social Entrepreneurs". World Economic Forum. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  26. ^ "Unusual Pioneers | A program for social Intrapreneurs & their executives". Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  27. ^ "Why change-making intrapreneurs are a key source of renewable energy for businesses". World Economic Forum. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  28. ^ WASTE (2022-06-09). "IKEA Social Entrepreneurship joins Take-a-Stake to support WASH and waste entrepreneurs in Asia and Africa". WASTE. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  29. ^ "New partnership with Yunus Social Business". www.ikeasocialentrepreneurship.org. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  30. ^ a b c "YSB Annual Report 10 Years 2021 web.pdf". Google Docs. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  31. ^ Agoncillo, Julia (2020-03-26). "Financing the Water Sector – An Alternate Approach". 2030 Water Resources Group. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  32. ^ "Social Success Note Playbook: A blended finance tool for social impact". ANDE. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  33. ^ "BCG and the Yunus Social Business join in partnership". www.consultancy.uk. 2015-10-21. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  34. ^ "BCG's Partnership with Professor Yunus and His Social Business Network". BCG Global. Retrieved 2022-10-28.