Atlantic

You are here

National Social Enterprise Feasibility Planning Workshop

Innoweave12:00pm - 2:00pm Eastern Time (9:00am - 11:00pm, Pacific Time)

Innoweave is pleased to partner with Accelerating Social Impact to offer a National Social Enterprise Feasibility Planning Workshop.

The workshop is designed to help leadership teams of 3-4 (including board members) start to explore a concrete opportunity or idea for creating a social enterprise by:

Assessing the market for their potential product or service Identifying potential customers Developing potential pricing structures
Identifying next steps to become launch-ready The Innoweave Social Enterprise workshop builds on the Innoweave Introduction to Social Enterprise webinar.

Register for the Social Enterprise Feasibility Planning Workshop

Teams may also view this pre-recorded webinar.

Event details:

When: Tuesday, November 17th and Thursday, November 19th, 2015
Participants are required to commit to both days (the workshop content will be spread over these two sessions).

Where: This distance workshop will be hosted via Cisco WebEx. A link to the meeting and workshop documents will be provided to successful applicants.

Deadline: Applications are due by Wednesday, October 28th, 2015. Space is limited. Successful applicants will be notified by Wednesday, November 4th, 2015.

Participating organizations will also be eligible to apply for implementation funding in January 2016 to engage a coach to help them with development following the workshop. To learn more about Innoweave Implementation Funding, click here.

If you have any questions, please contact us at info at innoweave.ca.

Transforming Policy to Build Strong Local Economies

Transforming Policy to Build Strong Local Economies3pm Eastern Time | Noon Pacific Time

Local economy leaders across the country are recognizing that in order to achieve our vision, we will need to rewrite the policies that shape our economy — policies that today often work against local, values-based businesses.  Many BALLE fellows and local economy leaders are already taking action, rewriting the rules in their own places to reorient the banking system, implement mission-based procurement policies, advocate smart land-use planning, and more.

Join BALLE for a preview of a new policy platform crafted by the Institute for Local Self Reliance in partnership with Localist leaders and BALLE Fellows. Stacy Mitchell of ILSR, Rebecca Melançon of the Austin Independent Business Alliance and Local First Policy Committee, and Eric Griego, BALLE Fellow and former New Mexico State Senator, will share the new policy platform along with tips for how to use this and other tools to elevate the public conversation in your own place.

In this webinar you’ll learn:

  • The core issues leaders are tackling across the country
  • How to set policy priorities and actions to achieve them
  • Shared resources for moving Localist policy forward.

Register for Transforming Policy to Build Strong Local Economies

Speakers:

Stacy Mitchell, Institute for Local Self RelianceStacy Mitchell, Institute for Local Self Reliance

Stacy is co-director of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance and directs its Community-Scaled Economy Initiative, which produces research and analysis and partners with a range of allies to design and implement policies that curb economic consolidation and strengthen community-rooted enterprise. Much of Stacy’s work has focused on two pivotal sectors of the economy: retail and banking.  Among the first to raise the alarm about the rise of mega-retailers in the 1990s, Stacy is a nationally recognized leader in the movement to counter their power.

Rebecca Melançon, Austin Independent Business Alliance & Local First Policy CommitteeRebecca Melançon, Austin Independent Business Alliance & Local First Policy Committee

Rebecca was a founding member of the nonprofit Austin Independent Business Alliance (AIBA) and served as vice president from 2002 until 2009 when she joined the staff of AIBA as Executive Director in March 2010. As an advocate for local business, she has served on Austin’s Comprehensive Plan Task Force, the Travis County Economic Development Subcommittee and hosts the Local Business Conference in Austin. Rebecca is a member of the Local First Policy Committee that worked with ISLR to craft the policy platform previewed in this webinar.

Moderator: Eric Griego, Fast Forward Consulting, former NM State SenatorModerator: Eric Griego, Fast Forward Consulting, former NM State Senator

Eric puts his two decades of experience in economic development and public office toward collaborating with local governments, foundations and community leaders to redevelop key parts of Albuquerque, New Mexico, and to create jobs and grow local businesses in some the state’s hardest hit communities. His Doctoral research and consulting work focuses on redefining community health to include economic resiliency, vibrancy and diversity. Eric served as an Albuquerque City Councilman, Assistant Cabinet Secretary for Economic Development, and a State Senator for four years.

Voices of New Economies: Opportunity for All

Voices of New Economies: Opportunities for AllAcross Canada and around the world, people are rising up to shape new economies.  Recognizing that the ecological, social and even financial costs of our current economic system are unsustainable, innovative leaders are finding different paths forward.

As part of the third annual New Economy Week, this session will challenge us to explore how we can scale promising social innovations towards larger systemic change. 

The contributors will share big ideas and concrete examples of real solutions to further explore perspectives that they and others shared in Voices of New Economies, a report produced as part of Cities for People by One Earth and the Canadian CED Network.

The session offers inspiration for new possibilities that can bring us closer to a just, sustainable, and democratic society.

SPEAKERS

Hosted by Dagmar Timmer, Managing Director and Co-Founder of One Earth, the session will begin with an introduction by Michael Toye, Executive Director of the Canadian CED Network and Vanessa Timmer, Executive Director and Co-Founder of One Earth. It features insights from the following Voices contributors:

"We know youth are our future therefore investments to educate, mentor, and most importantly to ensure they are contributing to the decisions of today are invaluable.”

"Wealth comes from our capacity to invest materially, socially, and intellectually in the creation of institutions and infrastructure that support collective efforts to try and make the world a better place.”

"The capacity to choose what is best for you and yours and embrace it, not to take what you can because it is your only option, or the only thing you can afford.”

"The energy sector, which has traditionally been highly controlled, has immense potential to be revolutionized through new economic practices.”

  • Victoria Wee, Computer Science student, Stanford University

"Young people are the ingredient x to really carving out the future that we want.”

"At the core, new economies have to be focused around people and protecting public interests, not falling prey to short- term, profit-driven private interests." 

  • Alexa Pitoulis, Managing Director, OpenMedia

"How we interact with media has changed dramatically in the last 20 years.  Local ownership and control over Internet infrastructure is a key component to thriving new economies of the future."

WATCH THE RECORDING!

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

Accelerating Community Change with Collective Impact

Liz Weaver 8:30AM - 4:00PM

Join internationally recognized trainer and community builder Liz Weaver for a workshop that dives into the collective impact approach and how it can enhance the impact of community change efforts.

  • Learn how collaborative tables can organize for change
  • Explore how the application of the three preconditions of collective impact and the five conditions for community change can enhance your local efforts
  • Advance your community’s agenda with tools and techniques that move toward impact
  • Embrace the power of citizen engagement and collective impact

This workshop is for those who:

  • Desire new ways to lead, engage and transform your community
  • Want to learn about collective impact and how to manage or work within a collaborative team
  • Work on issues such as community engagement, health and well-being, poverty reduction, local government, community sustainability, neighbourhood renewal, crime prevention, youth development, citizen engagement, local food systems and other collaborative ideas.
  • Are contemplating the start-up or renewal of a collaborative initiative
  • Are a key supporter of community engagement and collaboration including NGOs, businesses; funders and national, provincial or local government

Register for Accelerating Community Change with Collective Impact

Why the Collective Impact Approach?

Increasingly, community organizations are engaging in collaboration as a means to try and solve some of the most complex issues that they face. But these challenging issues require a new approach, a new framework. In 2011, John Kania and Mark Kramer of FSG Social Impact Consultants wrote an article, Collective Impact, that changed how we look at collaboration. Collective impact provides a framework for multi-sector community-based roundtables to re-consider how community change should occur and what impact these efforts should have. This workshop will explore the application of the three pre-conditions of collective impact and the five conditions for community change efforts.

Keynote speaker and workshop facilitator, Liz Weaver, will provide exciting tips to help your collaborative table explore the concepts of community change and collective impact as we address complex issues. Liz will lead the group through the key questions collaborative tables need to consider before applying the collective impact framework and share with the group examples, tools and resources they can use to scale up their collaborative community change efforts. She will also lead us in conversations about the new forms of collaborative leadership required for community change today.

Throughout the day, you will explore the key concepts of collective impact, spend time in dialogue and work through tools and resources that will help you increase your collaborative's effectiveness. You will also have an opportunity to connect and exchange with each other during the workshop.

"Subsequent to 8 community members attending Collective Impact training, an amazing shift has occurred in our community. We now have a basis of understanding with a common language for moving forward on complex issues that no one single entity can solve in isolation. More importantly, a positive attitude with sincere enthusiasm to collaborate cross-sector has emerged!"  - Nora Smith, Delburne, Alberta

Drupal Website Developer Volunteer Opportunity

CCEDNet is looking for a Drupal Website Developer to help us update and maintain aspects of our website

  • Drupal 7 experience required (2+ Years)
  • HTML/CSS experience required (1+ Years)
  • Google Work Apps an asset
  • Nonprofit CRM experience an asset
  • Bilingual an asset

We only need this individual to volunteer for 2-3 hours per week (In-person not required)

Start time is ASAP

Please contact Tom Jakop through email tjakop at ccednet-rcdec.ca

Compensation: 
Volunteer hours
Start Date: 
Tue, 09/15/2015
Deadline: 
1 Nov 2015

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Atlantic