Social Innovation, Inc., Jason Saul
Social Innovation, Inc., Jason Saul
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Social Innovation, Inc.
5 Strategies for Driving Business Growth through Social Change

Author: Jason Saul

Narrator: Mel Foster

Unabridged: 6 hr 58 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Ascent Audio

Published: 07/20/2020


Synopsis

Social Innovation, Inc. explodes the concept of social responsibility and empowers companies to take back control of the social agenda.  These days, its ok not to be purely altruistic. Consumers purchase hybrid cars not to show solidarity for the environment, but primarily to protect their wallets. Donors can use websites like kiva.org to make micro-loans to poor entrepreneurs--and get their money back with interest. Even Wal-Mart, the worlds largest retailer, didnt see a dime of return on hundreds of millions it has spent on philanthropyuntil it implemented its $4 prescription drug program in 2006. Since its inception, the program has generated more than $2 billion in savings for Wal-Mart customers, particularly the uninsured and Medicare recipients. The business impact has been tremendous: the $4 drug program skyrocketed sales at Wal-Mart and Sams Club pharmacies and attracted scores of new customers who, but for the $4 program, would not have walked into a Wal-Mart. What made Wal-Marts program extraordinary is that it was designed as a business strategy. The initiative had a much greater impact on health care than any grant Wal-Mart could make, and more important, it was sustainable.  To compete in this new economy, companies must find innovative ways to create economic value through positive social change. Social innovation is about making social change work for the business, not the other way around.  Social innovations differ from traditional corporate philanthropy and social responsibility initiatives in four fundamental ways.  Social innovations: 1) are primarily designed to produce business value; 2) leverage the machinery of the business to solve social problems; 3) are scalable and sustainable; and 4) often address market failures. 

Reviews

Goodreads review by Lucas on August 29, 2011

This was a controversial read for me. I began this book with the belief that companies should have a higher purpose beyond making money and that being profitable was a prerequisite for doing good over the long term through your business. Though this book did not directly contradict this notion, it w......more

Goodreads review by Thomas on May 03, 2020

I think Saul does an excellent job of setting the premise for driving social impact results by harnessing the power of business. While the book is about ~10 years old, the examples still made sense. One thing I kept questioning was how to ensure that social outcomes were built to continue to scale/b......more

Goodreads review by Nikita T. on May 08, 2012

"The unprecedented influence that corporations wield over society's natural resources, our health, our human rights, our standard of living, and our children demands that companies be held to even higher standards of responsibility than ever before." (177)......more