Anyone Join Me for $25 Million?

British billionaire entrepreneur, Richard Branson, put a $25 million reward on the table for a solution that will remove a billion tons of co2 per year from the Earth’s atmosphere.

Seems like a perfect opportunity to roll out my greenolution.com idea for tracking green-technology usage through a community-driven site with realtime tracking of money saved and co2 prevented alongside global goals for emissions reductions.

If only I had the web-programming knowledge necessary to design this database\user-interface for massive public adoption. Seems like such an connecting site would have the potential to drop 1B tons co2/yr easy.

update: if you’ve got the ability to roll this site out and are looking for a domain to do it on I’ll contribute greenolution.com – let’s just get this site rolled out. drop me a line if you want to collaborate.

Fundraising 2.0

One of my goals for 2007 is to raise $15 million for Kiva.org, a non-profit site that turns cash into microcredit then returns it to the lender. My first tactic was a potentially viral facebook group called “We’ll invest $25 in microcredit per 100Kth member”. Do the math and 300,000 members means $15 million raised.
The idea was based off the group “For Every 1,000 that join this group I will donate $1 for Darfur” that reached over 480,000 members within about 6 months. Unfortunately, after a couple weeks our microcredit group has only got 150 supporters and the momentum’s just not there. I’ve been brainstorming the challenge since day 1, and the best solution I’ve come up with involves a potentially lucrative web2.0 company that I don’t yet have the programming skill to create.

The idea’s similar to fundable.org, a site that helps groups of people raise money for their cause. Rather than require everyone interact directly with fundable.org, however, the site I envision allows people to embed a fund-raising gadget on their own site.

WikiFund

Look at the fund-raising gadget Wikipedia uses as an example.  It updates in real-time as donations are made, it’s easier for visitors to trust since it’s embedded right on Wikipedia’s site, and it’s successful at raising money (it’s got over a million in donations already!).

Imagine all the other sites\organizations that would love to have such a simple\effective fund raising application on their site, but don’t know how to program all the complex back-end processes to process transactions and post real-time updates to the web. If one website allowed people to register their fund-raising initiative with it and they were given a simple piece of code to paste onto their site to make it work it could benefit thousands of organizations. Take 1% of the money for providing the applet and you could be rolling in an automated revenue stream that could easily make a few families well-off.

Another function that would enhance the site’s success is allowing people to choose from a set of pre-made fund structures. Is this a one-time event like Wikipedia, or are you raising money via a 3-tiered structure (e.g. donate $25 per 100K members, up to 300K members total). I’m sure there are ten other creative\effective methods that could be used if you thought it through. Also, allow people to customize the graphic from some pre-set models. Do they want a horizontal bar like Wikipedia? or would a vertical bar embed better on their site? Perhaps an image of their choosing is slowly revealed as they approach their fund-raising goal.

To leave you with one last idea, such a site would spread the surface area of fund raising exponentially. Rather than hosting your fund-raising applet locally only, organizations could encourage their supporters to post the applet on their personal website, myspace profile, or w/e else they prefer.

Seems like a great idea to me. If anyone makes this happen please let me know. I think we could help Kiva raise $15 million with it – and that would be just the beginning…

Three Design Opportunities for a Brighter Future

Three entrepreneurial ideas have been churning in my head for a while now. Rather than hide them for some competitive advantage, I’d like to share them with you and possibly tackle them together. If sharing these ideas leads to direct competition, so be it. As my ideas are all triple bottom line business models at least the competition will move us forward.

Before reading the rest of this post, you’ll benefit greatly from watching William McDonough speak on the concept of design. As one example, McDonough puts you in the shoes of Thomas Jefferson charged with the task of designing the Bill of Rights. Feel ready to take on that one yourself? For better or for worse, we’re faced with similarly massive design problems today, and the solutions are far from clear. Together, however, I am optimistic we can design a better future.

My entrepreneurial opportunities follow. I estimate the solution to any of these challenges, taken to market properly, would be worth millions (if not billions) today.

Idea 1: Climate Crisis, Sustainability and Green Technology

The fact that we face consumption rates far beyond sustainability is no longer controversial within the scientific community. We need a massive change and we need it now.

Many people take the political route to elicit change. Frankly, I have no faith that government alone can move fast enough to save us. What’s the alternative? Empower individuals.

In the next few years several green technologies will emerge that will save you money to use while saving the environment. One problem will be adopting them fast enough. It takes time for information to spread, and we can’t implement solutions we don’t know exist.

Background out of the way, here’s my idea: Create a website aimed at serving the the simplest, most effective means for maximizing sustainability at any given time. At the top corner of the site, put a panel that tracks how much money all the site’s visitors have saved in real time (think Traineo) by allowing users to report product usage & calculating their savings from the database.

Use that panel to set community-driven goals. Imagine a value of “$27,014,210.XY saved by our members!” XY is flying upwards. Right below that it reads “Goal: $38 million saved by the end of 2008!”

This site would gather some interest. People would be excited to check back and see the progress made. Teens would help their grandparents install new things to report it on the site & together the world would be motivated by measurable progress towards sustainability.

I’m actually already working on this very project. It’s at greenolution.com – as of this time of writing the site is only a placeholder until I finish the back-end. Competitors & collaborators welcome – my wish is just to see such a site in existence sooner than later. Let’s go!

Idea 2: Our current models for educational content suck.

I’ve already talked about this extensively so I won’t go into detail here. Take McDonough’s approach to design and combine it with a better model for educational content and you’ve got the potential to make millions. Whether you’re interested in designing the first prototype for a particular subject, or laying out a site where others contribute their expertise through a superior content framework, a solution here will be huge.

Idea 3: Establish ratings for educational content.

The internet presents an opportunity to advance education like never before. Companies like Microsoft and Google are building massive databases of educational content. At the same time, innovative organizations like Connexions are striving to create a global repository of educational curriculum by enabling anyone to contribute. With these sites offering increasingly massive amounts of educational information, we have no shortage of options to choose from. Given the choice between the hundreds of Geometry lessons available, the question we naturally must ask is which shall we use? Certainly one of these lessons is better designed and easier to understand than the others, the data we are missing tells us which.

Lessons designed by a better teacher likely outperform those of an inferior teacher. Lessons that leverage objectively superior learning methods from cognitive psychology likely outperform material that doesn’t. Lessons that are interactive and fun likely outperform those that are dry and passive. Yet the back of our textbooks don’t provide any bar graphs or otherwise persuasive evidence of their refined effectiveness over alternatives.

Information on the effectiveness of educational content is measurable, yet we lack a framework through which to interpret it. The design problem: create that framework.

As people’s awareness of objectively superior educational curriculum grows, so too will the monetary incentive, pace, and vigor in which cognitive psychology is studied. The increased emphasis on cognitive psychology will lead to further enhanced educational content, and an accelerating upward spiral for human education will emerge.

For my final thesis prior to graduating I reviewed current research in the learning sciences to identify the objective metrics for learning people are using. Several confounds emerge when you dig deeper into this problem, but in the end there is reason to believe we could create an effective solution. I won’t paste my whole assessment here; but if you’re interested let me know & I’d be happy to share the findings. Let’s make it happen!

Green is the New Black.

Brilliant talk by Majora Carter from the 2006 TED conference.

Worlds of opportunity exist for today’s workforce. As our knowledge as a race advances, so too does the nature of our work. Where lawn mowing services used to be the norm for early entrepreneurs, why not green roof projects?

It’s hard to have sympathy for those who don’t enjoy their jobs when such an abundance of fulfilling work is available. Carter gets paid to have fun. Why settle for anything less?

Web 2.0: Where Small Business Reigns Supreme

A radical evolution is taking place on the internet, and it’s called Web2.0. In 24 minutes, this brief documentary takes you up close and personal with the CEOs who are making it happen. This is the most concise explanation of Web2.0 that I’ve found. While the video loads, check out Seth Godin’s article Small is the new Big. In it, Seth lays out groundwork that will put the CEOs’ advice in context for you. (more…)

« Previous Page