Philanthropy [fi-lan-thruh-pee]: altruistic concern for human welfare and advancement on a local and global level. According to this definition, you are probably a philanthropist. As your average, everyday philanthropist this blog is a collection of relevant, timely articles for people like you and me, people who care about human welfare.
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Just Don't Get Paralyzed
If I take a break from reading about social issues, it's overwhelming trying to get started again. So many issues, so many causes. It's paralyzingly. But, sometimes the distance away gives me perspective. I noticed something interesting once I get started again.
Articles about issues alone make me feel hopeless and weigh me down with despair.
Articles about solutions that solve root problems give me hope and energizes me to do more.
This is why I love the New York Times online article FIXES. Fixes explores creative initiatives to solve major social problems.
The most recent article is on impact sourcing. The idea is to make it attractive for companies to outsource business processes to people in the developing world who come from impoverished or remote communities. Outsourcing is a $100 billion dollar industry, but costs have risen and companies are looking for less expensive alternatives.
"There is no shortage of work to be done. The world runs on data and each day it needs to be updated. Shopping companies need to revise business locations; voice transcriptions need to be corrected; videos need to be captioned; photos need to be tagged; government archives need to be entered into databases; receipts and mortgage applications need to be scanned and verified."
Two social enterprise companies providing impact sourcing, Digital Divided Data and Samasource are successfully employing workers in "microwork," with just a computer and internet connection, across Haiti, India, Kenya, Pakistan, Uganda and South Africa ― some of them living in refugee camps . Their clients include Facebook, Google and LinkedIn.
Work is at the core of human dignity. These two companies have found a creative solution for providing an on-ramp to the global economic superhighway for the world's most impoverished, restoring dignity and hope. Personally, these two companies fire me up and inspire me to believe the solutions are out there.
TAKEWAY #1:
Know which social issues articles motivate you and which don't. Read the ones that inspire you and don't feel badly about the rest.
For me, articles about inventive programs that create a market based solution get me inspired. You might find a different type of article inspires you. Just don't get paralyzed.
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