This spring, the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies (F&ES) will become a TerraCycle collection site, joining thousands of other organizations around the world in diverting waste from landfills.
To tackle this litter problem locally, Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena, home to the National Hockey League’s Predators, has teamed up with the Nashville Clean Water Project and upcycling companyTerraCycle to collect and recycle cigarette butts discarded at the sports and concert venue. The arena is one of the first venues in North America to launch a recycling program for this traditionally difficult-to-recycle material.
Rethinking what is trash is key to TerraCycling. TerraCycling is a concept that is less then 10 years old but has spread to more than 20 different countries and is now rooted and growing in the local Lincoln County community.
Running a business is never easy but the measures of success are clear: profitability; customer satisfaction; a growing customer base; employee engagement and satisfaction; and your satisfaction all come to bear on your success.
However, assessing performance is even more difficult for businesses that exist to make money and make the world a better place. Are you and your customers clear about your company’s social purpose? Is your company making a meaningful difference with respect to the social change its hope to achieve? Have you achieved the right balance between profit and purpose?
As the number of social purpose businesses continues to rise, these questions are becoming more material. A 2013 study by Georgia Levenson Keohane for the McGraw Hill Financial Global Institute shows social entrepreneurship of all kinds are increasing significantly in the United States. In the United Kingdom, a 2011 study by the Policy Research Group at the University of Durham revealed that there were approximately 68,000 social enterprises in the United Kingdom, an increase of more than 400% since 2004.
Are the social entrepreneurs who run these enterprises up to the task of running a business with purpose? Bill Drayton, founder of Ashoka and widely considered the father of modern social entrepreneurship, has said that the kind of social entrepreneurs he was seeking — passionate, resourceful, system-changing innovators who could fix static social, political and economic equations — are extremely rare.
It’s easy for social entrepreneurs to be lured into a false sense of possibility by what large corporations are doing. For example, PepsiCo has “Performance with Purpose,” but it is also a large profitable corporation whose success doesn’t depend on its social mandate.
Most social purpose businesses are small and new and, to be successful, their owners need to maintain a sense of purpose even when they’re laying awake at night worrying about cash flow.
TerraCycle, founded in 2002 by Tom Szaky, is a company with a social purpose: eliminating the idea of waste. The company collects difficult-to-recycle packaging and products and repurposes the material into affordable, innovative products. It built a reputation as a world leader in the collection and reuse of non-recyclable, post-consumer waste and in February, North America’s largest waste management company, Progressive Waste Solutions acquired a 19.9% interest in the company.
Decision-making for social purpose businesses is complex. In what ways does a decision drive social change and build business value? What are the social consequences of making more money? How should the return on investment be measured? The paradox of social purpose businesses is that the most important measures of success are rhetorical.
In 2001, when I launched Impakt, I had four interrelated priorities that were the foundation of the business I wanted and they are still the criteria that inform how we measure performance:
1. Only do work with purpose and have the courage to walk away from opportunities that pay the bills but compromise the calling;
2. Work with people (employees and clients) you genuinely like and respect;
3. Compensate people fairly;
4. Have fun.
In the past 13 years, I’ve found out that profitability is qualitative Impakt is profitable when we have approximately equal results in each of these areas. I’ve also learned that it’s really hard not to apply conventional approaches to an unconventional business.
For example, most companies are able to pinpoint how much revenue and profit they envision and work backwards to operationalize these objectives. Applying the same approach to a social enterprise simply won’t work because more profit may not deliver more purpose and more purpose isn’t necessarily profitable.
It is possible to be profitable and loose your sense of purpose; it is also possible to be widely successful and not be profitable. Social entrepreneurs need to define their own measures of success and stick to them.
“Since their U.S. launch in September 2009, our Frito-Lay sponsored TerraCycle bag brigades have diverted over 23 million of our post-consumer snack bags from landfill. The program expanded into Brazil, Mexico and Israel in 2012, collecting more than 6 million bags in just one year. The program now operates 70 brigades in 22 countries.”
A representative from Terra Cycle, who partners with Capri Sun, to help recycle Capri Sun pouches, stopped by and helped us make a tote bag. My first experience with making a Capri Sun bag was interesting.
TerraCycle is a New Jersey-based upcycling firm that collects “difficult-to-recycle packaging and products” from organizations like schools and repurposes the waste into new sellable products, according to its website. The Georgetown University Student Association Senate passed a bill establishing a Georgetown TerraCycle collection program.
Sign up for cash back programs – Sign up your school for the TerraCycle program – if it’s not already registered – and have your children recycle their Little Bites pouches each lunch hour. Visit
www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades.html to find a listing of other lunch items TerraCycle collects.
One such program is The Recycle...Reuse...Replenish Earth Day Campaign which encourages school children to recycle their Entenmann’s Little Bites Pouches with TerraCycle, resulting in cash back to the school.
This year, as Earth Day approaches April 22, schools can organize aluminum can drives and participate in cash-for-schools programs based on recycling lunch packaging. One such program is The Recycle...Reuse...Replenish Earth Day Campaign which encourages school children to recycle their Entenmann’s Little Bites Pouches with TerraCycle, resulting in cash back to the school.