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Supporters Say Venture Philanthropy Still Thrives, Even if Reach Is
Limited
By Ben Gose
Palo Alto, Calif.
Some seven years
after "venture philanthropy" entered the language of modern philanthropy in a
Harvard Business Review article, such giving remains just a tiny slice of
foundation grant making. However, the roughly 200 people who gathered last month
at Stanford University to discuss venture philanthropy's future seemed relieved
that it has gained a toehold, even if a modest one, in the grant-making
world.
"This is a surreal experience to see all these people sitting
together talking about this issue and not simply piling on and attacking it,"
Jed Emerson, who for 10 years ran the Roberts Enterprise Development Fund (now
known as REDF), said during one session.
Venture philanthropy emerged
near the end of the 1990s stock-market boom, and was embraced by newly minted
technology executives who thought they had found a better way to support
charities. Although the details differ for each fund, most agree on this
approach: make long-term grants that support an organization's ability to carry
out its mission rather than financing specific programs -- and work
side-by-side with the charity to help it achieve measurable results.
The
revolutionary language of the early days of venture philanthropy -- which
rankled many officials at traditional foundations -- was largely absent
from the summit held at Stanford (though "stodgy" and "traditional foundation"
did end up in the same sentence more than once). Much of the discussion focused
on ideas that could best be described as conventional, such as collaborating
with government agencies to augment private dollars.
In 2002, according
to a study by Venture Philanthropy Partners, a fund in Washington, organizations
that practice venture philanthropy made grants totaling roughly $50-million.
That is less than 0.2 percent of total foundation grant making ($26.9-billion,
according to "Giving USA," the annual yearbook of American philanthropy) in the
same year.
Laura K. Arrillaga, director of the $19-million John Arrillaga
Foundation, in Santa Clara, Calif., which helped sponsor the conference, cited
those statistics in an opening address, but she argued that the influence of
venture philanthropists far outstrips their comparatively modest grant-making
budgets.
Ms. Arrillaga said her experience as a member of the Silicon
Valley Social Venture Fund, which uses a venture-philanthropy approach, had also
shaped her recent grant making at her family's foundation. "While venture
philanthropy may play a small role quantitatively, its potential leverage is
significant," Ms. Arrillaga said. "Tens of millions of dollars invested through
venture philanthropy can be used to influence tens of billions of regular
philanthropic investments."
***
The conference made one thing clear: Aside
from the basic outline, venture philanthropy means different things to different
people.
Some venture funds, including New Profit, in Cambridge, Mass.,
and NewSchools Venture Fund, in San Francisco, adhere strongly to the language
used by venture-capital firms. They want to find promising nonprofit groups that
can "go to scale" -- expand operations locally or around the country. And,
when appropriate, the funds look for an "exit strategy" (financial
self-sufficiency at the charity is the holy grail), so that they can redeploy
their capital with another organization.
But Lee Davis, co-founder and
chief executive officer of the Nonprofit Enterprise and Self-Sustainability
Team, a San Francisco group that uses a venture approach to support charities in
Central Europe and Latin America, said he had become skeptical about the concept
of "scale."
"If we push organizations to grow, the balance can be thrown
off," he said. "Sometimes small really is beautiful."
Others noted that
even if a charity grows in size and spreads around the country, thanks to the
support of a venture philanthropist, it may be no more financially
self-sufficient than when it started. The charity's revenue may not cover its
costs, and government and other grant makers may be unlikely to fill the void
when the venture philanthropist steps aside.
"Nothing fails like success
-- no matter what the idea -- when you're trying to add funders on
when it wasn't their idea in the first place," said Peter Hero, president of the
Community Foundation Silicon Valley.
That makes the notion of an "exit
strategy" especially challenging, he said. "Venture philanthropy may need to
return to some of the tenets of traditional philanthropy," he
said.
Officials at venture-philanthropy funds remain sharply divided on
whether they should take seats on the boards of charities they support. The
NewSchools Venture Fund does seek board seats, to demonstrate that it is just as
"accountable for success" as the organization it is working with, says Kim
Smith, the fund's co-founder and chief executive officer.
But officials
at the Robin Hood Foundation, in New York, believe serving on a charity's board
can make it difficult to remain objective when making decisions on grants. "It
unnecessarily complicates relationships, and it isn't the most-important tool in
the toolbox," says David Saltzman, the fund's executive director. "We're better
off helping them recruit good board members."
At another session, one
speaker challenged a venture-philanthropy principle that had generally been
considered sacrosanct: using quantitative metrics to assess results. The session
featured two grant makers: Vanessa Kirsch, president and founder of New Profit,
and Robert Levenson, founder and chairman of the Social Profit Network, which
seeks to link "social entrepreneurs" directly with individual
philanthropists.
New Profit adheres to the party line in the
venture-philanthropy realm: If one of its grantees fails to hit mutually
agreed-upon numerical goals in a period that can be as short as three quarters,
Ms. Kirsch would strongly consider ending the relationship.
Mr. Levenson,
meanwhile, seeks out individuals who are "really terrific" and gives them
virtual free rein. He doesn't attend board meetings, and he doesn't ask for any
reports. "You don't ask your dentist all the time, 'How do you know that's
really a cavity?'" Mr. Levenson says.
***
While many venture-fund executives spoke
candidly about their early missteps, the most pointed criticism of the day came
from Paul Brest, president of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, which
very much remains a traditional foundation. He called the "cost-benefit"
analyses that have sprung up in the venture-philanthropy world misguided. (REDF,
for example, created a formula called "social return on
investment.")
"The issue is not one of cost-benefit analysis," Mr. Brest
said. "The issue is whether you have enough sense of what you're trying to do to
be able to take risks."
He also criticized the term "engaged
philanthropy," which is used interchangeably by many experts with venture
philanthropy. The problem, he said, is that the term suggests engagement is a
worthy end in itself.
"Some organizations are very well run and don't
need our capacity building," he said. "They need our money."
Mr. Brest
concluded his prepared remarks by quoting from the soundtrack of Free to
Be...You and Me, a children's television special from the
1970s.
And some kind of help is the kind of help
That helping's all
about,
And some kind of help is the kind of help
We all can do
without.
***
The closing session featured candid
discussion about venture philanthropy's future. Katherine Fulton, a consultant
at the Monitor Group, in Cambridge, Mass., who specializes in philanthropy,
wondered whether the ever-curious technology executives who played such a strong
role in creating the venture-philanthropy movement would stick with the approach
until meaningful results begin to appear in 5, 10, or 20 years.
"One of
the big questions hanging over this arena is, 'Is this for real?'" she said.
"The dirty secret of good strategic philanthropy is that it's hard
work."
A member of the audience chimed in that more dollars will flow to
venture philanthropy when it can point to some clear-cut success stories. He
noted that investments in venture capital and leveraged-buyout firms took off in
the 1970s, after a small number of groups experienced extraordinary
success.
Christine W. Letts, who was a co-author of the 1997
Harvard Business Review article that helped define venture
philanthropy, predicted that the $50-million in grants that venture funds
awarded in 2002 would rise into the billions over the next 20
years.
"There are some incredible success stories," she said. "We need to
get them out in a way that's not seen as arrogant or
self-serving."
Copyright © 2004 The Chronicle of Philanthropy
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