Can Social Enterprises Fill the Market and Public Sector Gaps in Tough Places?
Publisher |
Harvard University
Media Type |
audio
Podknife tags |
News & Politics
Categories Via RSS |
News
Publication Date |
Mar 15, 2022
Episode Duration |
00:19:41
This podcast was originally recorded on Friday, February 25, 2022, for the CID Speaker Series featuring Debbie Aung Din, Co-Founder of Proximity Designs. Debbie continued the conversation with CID Student Ambassador, Sohee Hyung, after an appearance at the virtual CID Speaker Series event. Growing a sustainable social business that achieves impact at scale is no easy feat. And leading an organization in Myanmar, with concurrent political, health, economic and environmental crises, presents acute challenges to deliver on your mission and strategy. Proximity Designs, a 17-year veteran social enterprise committed to boosting the incomes and well-being of vulnerable farm families in Myanmar, has matured and adapted through it all. Founded by HKS alumni, Jim Taylor and Debbie Aung Din (MPA '90) in 2004 to address poverty and market gaps faced by 70% of the country's population, Proximity has designed and delivered a portfolio of affordable agriculture technology, agronomy and financial services to over 1.2 million rural households. With Harvard CID, Debbie will share her journey in social entrepreneurship, what it takes to start and scale a social enterprise, how to create innovative products for the bottom of the pyramid and lessons on leading an organization during times of crisis.

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