YearlyKos: A culture of liberal entrepreneurship
by Shai Sachs, Fri Aug 03, 2007 at 11:45:18 AM EDT
My presentation at YearlyKos was yesterday morning at 9am, in the panel "Creating a Culture of Grassroots Giving". The powerpoint will be available, I think, on the Commonweal Institute site in relatively short order, and I'll link to it when the time comes.
To give you a brief rundown, I talked about "giving" in the sense not just of donating, but of giving one's talents to the progressive movement; in particular, in starting a business which uses one's talent to strengthen the progressive movement. I also talked about the fact that we don't have a base of people who have a personal stake in the progressive movement, and have money to donate regularly in the movement; my argument is that liberal entrepreneurship will help create that base. A lot of the presentation included thoughts I've already written throughout my series on liberal entrepreneurship, but there was a bit of new stuff.
In particular, I'm starting to think more seriously about what is needed, mechanistically, to support a for-profit, movement-building, entrepreneurial culture within our movement. There are four components to this culture, I think:
- An ongoing, regular, long-term discussion about problems the movement faces, and how to solve those problems.
- A program to recruit, support, and train young people to become entrepreneurs, similar to the Campus Progress/Young People For/New Organizing Institute machine.
- A series of avenues for channeling start-up money to young people: seed money from business plan competitions; peer-to-peer lending on prosper.com, integrated with blogosphere movement-building discussions; an angel fund for liberal entrepreneurs; and anything else we can think of.
- A few incubators for liberal entrepreneurs, which provide office space, professional support, and other logistical help to get a new business off the ground.
That last piece didn't make it into my presentation; I've kicked it around in my head before, but never, for some reason, really put it down on paper, until today. Consider it your special bonus prize for reading my blog posts.
There's more to talk about, but this is my running game plan for now. I think that first component is something I can really use this space to work on, and in fact, I already have, to some degree. Please let me know if you have some interest in that kind of content. Are you interested in a regular, ongoing, forward-moving discussion about problems that we have in the progressive movement, and what we can do to solve those problems? What are your thoughts on how we should structure that discussion? Please chime in!
Tags: liberal entrepreneurship, YearlyKos (all tags)









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