Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
Six
steps to sustainable, community-based Natural Enterprise, from my book
Finding the Sweet Spot
I'm
in Denver for the weekend at the annual conference of BALLE,
the
international network of community-based sustainable businesses. The
reason I'm here is more about looking for ideas than personal
networking. One of the mandates I've taken on in my current work is to
make our association (the Chartered Accountants of Canada, equivalent
to CPAs in the US) champions of entrepreneurship and of new,
sustainable enterprise formation.
The
reason we're championing entrepreneurs is that no one else will.
It's an interesting paradox that the North American economy is driven
by entrepreneurs (virtually all new net employment in the last decade
has been in the entrepreneurial sector), not by big corporations, but
all the money and attention flows to the big corporations.
Entrepreneurs don't get bailouts, massive incentives to locate in your
community, or big unpublicized government subsidies. Universities say
they teach entrepreneurship but what they do is the minimum
('intrapreneurship') lip service to get big corporations to fund
'chairs in entrepreneurship' that let them hire and retain professors.
Economic Development Offices of governments at various levels are
designed to attract businesses (i.e. property and business tax
revenues) so their work for entrepreneurs is mostly low-budget,
low-value work like providing names of lawyers and accountants and
telling you how to get business licenses, incorporate and file taxes.
Accountants and lawyers (especially the smaller ones) will take on
entrepreneurs as clients, but generally are unenthusiastic and not
terribly helpful for businesses at the critical start-up stage. Bankers
(with the notable exception of credit unions) generally avoid
entrepreneurial businesses, and lenders of last resort are usually
vultures who create more problems for entrepreneurs than they solve.
BALLE founder Michael Shuman has written
about these challenges in his book The Small-Mart Revolution.
What's worse, in some progressive circles, the very word
'entrepreneur' is
suspect -- it's almost as if profit and enterprise are considered
necessarily exploitative.
If you've read my book, you know that what entrepreneurs need, more
(and sooner) than they need accountants, lawyers, marketers or
financing is:
Help to determine what
kind of work they're meant to do (something in their 'sweet spot')
Help to understand how
business fundamentally works (and how that's changing very quickly)
Help to find the right
partners (not
expensive consultants and suppliers with no stake in the enterprise)
Help to learn to do
excellent market research (to surface real unmet needs)
Help to learn to
innovate (so they do something sufficiently different from what's
already being provided, and hence are commercially viable)
Help to establish
strong business networks and relationships
Help to cope with
unexpected problems, and to become more resilient
Most of this assistance that prospective entrepreneurs need is
educational, but it's not the kind of learning that you can get sitting
in a classroom or reading a text. You learn this through conversation
and collaboration with other entrepreneurs, and you learn it by doing
it, and making (inexpensive, early) mistakes.
As I've written before, I've spoken to many universities about a course
curriculum that would entail students going out and visiting with
successful entrepreneurs, engaging in Q&A with the
entrepreneurs on how they addressed the seven issues above, and then
putting together and launching their own enterprise. No lectures, no
classrooms, no examination -- the measure of the course's success is
whether the students' enterprises succeed or not. The professors I know
are
enthusiastic, and I've had no trouble finding entrepreneurs who'd love
to volunteer their time to talk about and show off their businesses.
The problem is that the universities' business model is about filling
expensive class buildings with large numbers of students, and finding
work for, retaining and paying tenured professors, and my proposal
flies in the face of that, so when I talk with university Deans and
department heads, they are uninterested.
Same problem with high schools. You all know my opinion on the school
system -- it's anti-learning, bureaucratic, and
propagandizing. Most of those incarcerated there are bored, disengaged,
impatient and often angry. Even if we could get a good program into the
high school curriculum (which is doubtful) it's unlikely that the
students would pay attention or trust that it would be of any use to
them. My father is an honorary lifetime member of an organization
called
Junior
Achievement, an organization
whose objective is to introduce high schoolers to the fundamentals of
business and entrepreneurship. It's been around forever, and a lot of
volunteers have spent years working to make it a success, but it's
still marginal -- it's just too counter to the high school culture.
There is no political party in North America that authentically shares
the interests of entrepreneurs. There is no money, influence, public
sentiment or political advantage to be gleaned from this cohort. Like
the working poor, entrepreneurs are disenfranchised and have no seat at
the tables of lobbyists and decision-makers.
So what are we to do? If governments and politicians don't care (they
don't yet realize
that their economies rise and fall with the success and failure of
sustainable small enterprises, and that support for these enterprises
has 30 times the return on investment of large corporation subsidies),
big businesses are hostile, and schools and universities can't help,
who are the prospective sustainable entrepreneur's allies? Who cares,
or should care, about entrepreneurs?
The short answer is: people in communities.
Sustainable community-based enterprises create and keep local jobs,
keep the money in the community, provide goods and services customized
to local needs, and cause less pollution and waste than the
multinational corporate oligopolies. They also contribute more to the
GDP (if you think that's still a useful measure of anything).
The problem is that people in communities aren't organized, aren't
wealthy, and aren't informed. Most don't appreciate that they could
succeed (by every measure) in their own small sustainable enterprise
far better than in their current wage slave job. Few know how important
small enterprises are to the economy, or can imagine how uninnovative
our society would be without the impetus of entrepreneurs. What can you
do to address a need that hasn't been recognized by those who need it?
To launch a true sustainable entrepreneurial movement, we need to
figure out three things:
How can we teach
millions of people a survival skill (namely, how to make a living for
yourself) that many groups don't want them to learn (they want us kept
helpless and in thrall to the job market), and that most don't even
realize they need?
How do we then help
these millions to self-organize into Natural Enterprises?
How do we avoid
successful entrepreneurs quickly cashing out their businesses as soon
as they get a lucrative offer from a member of a multinational
corporate oligopoly?
I don't think books are enough to solve the first problem. Nor are
social networking tools the answer to the second.
The truth about human nature is that we don't change our minds or our
behaviour until we believe we have no choice. When the economy really
collapses, wiping out whole industries, currencies, and wealthy
conglomerates, the choice for millions, as it was in the 1930s, will be
between entrepreneurship and starvation. Only when this happens will
people scramble to find ways to learn entrepreneurial skills, and to
find business partners.
We are heading into a period of great economic uncertainty, turbulence
and volatility. The job market for the next two decades is likely to go
"wildly sideways". By that time, the centenary of the last Great
Depression, other crises like the End of Oil, the End of Water, global
political upheaval and climate change will combine with the crisis of
an overextended economy (unsustainable personal, corporate and
government debt levels, exhausted natural resources, whipsawing
interest, inflation and currency rates, and plunging consumer spending
and confidence) to produce a prolonged economic inferno. The resultant
massive unemployment will spur an entrepreneurial explosion out of
desperate necessity. After some initial stumbles, we'll see a change as
profound as the Industrial Revolution. The community-based economy will
be born, and it will be entrepreneurial by default.
That doesn't mean my association's championing of sustainable
entrepreneurship now is futile. People may 'get' the 'sustainable' part
(and make their businesses, of all sizes, greener, simply because it
makes good business sense), without getting the 'entrepreneurship' part
-- and that would be much better than nothing. And enough people
(especially boomers and new entrants to the job market) will make the
effort to learn entrepreneurial skills because, for these substantial
cohorts, wage slavery is already ceasing to be an option -- the wage
slave jobs are rapidly being offshored. When they realize that MBA
schools don't teach entrepreneurship (and change too slowly to start
doing so), they'll use online and real-world resources and
relationships to teach each other the necessary skills, and
self-organize. And my association will be poised to provide a platform
and resources for them to do so.
One way or another, a sustainable, community-based entrepreneurship
revolution is coming. Sooner or later, we'll have no choice.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
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