This week, Soapbox hears from Chuck Proudfit, founder and president of SkillSource, on ways small businesses can weather the economic storm and how moral compasses can affect the bottom line.
read full bio
SoapBlog 2 - Integrate Your Passion to Help Others with the Quest for Profits
Posted By: Chuck Proudfit
2/11/2009
Chuck Proudfit
Integrate your passion to help others with quest for profits
We spend a third of our lives at work, but for many people, work traditionally provides a disconnect between how people want to live their lives and what the marketplace demands. As I mature as a human being and business person, I see more and more examples that the best business practices are ethical ones with a moral underpinning-- and businesses which incorporate Christian (and other religious) principles succeed better than others focused solely on generating profits at any cost.
Having mentioned the 'C' in a business blog, I have to address one important point. Of course religions other than Christianity support a spirit of love, giving and help to others in need, but since I am a non-denominational Christian, I will stick to that perspective here. My giving strategies are applicable, however, to a wide range of people interested in "making a difference as well as a dollar."
What I'd like to address here is the formation of a "social enterprise," an innovative business model in which releasable profits are dedicated to causes that CEOs and business owners are passionate about.
To work hard and generate wealth solely for the sake of making money is an empty proposition. Any thoughtful person recognizes that over time, and that's partially why so many people retire in their jobs at an early age. Employees want to support their families and earn a good living, but they want to work at jobs that are significant, too. That's also why so many people can't wait to retire so they can volunteer at their local churches, synagogues and mosques and do what they really want to do with their lives.
One way to ignite enthusiasm among career workers is to connect them with their innate desire to aid causes larger than themselves. When employees are connected with a cause, they experience directly the impact philanthropy has on improving others' lives. It suddenly it becomes vitally important to be the best salesman in a company if you know excess profits go to aid orphans, or to help the poor.
Some employers incorporate philanthropy into their businesses model by matching employee donations with a corporate donation. This is a simple, yet effective way to encourage philanthropy among employees.
Other businesses, like Megen Construction, develop their own corporate-sponsored and funded nonprofit organizations for causes they believe in. I am privileged to help serve Evans Nwankwo, company president, organize his two-year-old NuWay Foundation into an agency that provides educational advancement, community building and economic development for the village of Awa in Nigeria. We've already invested in fresh water projects, school infrastructure, and health care projects. In the future, we envision a permanent facility that serves as a base of operations for more sustained assistance.
Hand-outs are passé; philanthropy in the new millennium is all about education, empowerment and implementing good business practices to have a long-term positive effect. The world may be hot, flat and crowded, but with technology it's also possible to reach millions of people instantly. This is a truly revolutionary gift.