Founder’s Statement

From my desk in Brussels, Belgium on yet another September 11

8 years ago today, a global event occurred which rocked the world as we knew it.  I was in East Africa on that day, and had coincidentally just discovered – via my interviews with Ashoka the previous week – that there was a rapidly growing industry out there of people like me who were stepping up to the plate to say, “We CAN affect major change in the world, and I have a plan for a part of it.”

Understanding that a social change industry was out there was the single most transformative piece of information I had ever received in my life to that point. For a social entrepreneur like me, who had been working alone under a rock to develop a change-creating internet presence from Uganda, it changed everything.

When the World Trade Towers were hit just a few days later, almost instantly, I understood 4 things at a very profound, soul-shaking level:

  1. Our Global Systems were crumbling and would continue to do so;
  2. The Social Change Industry was already laying the groundwork for new grassroots-driven systems to create a  change-driven economy;
  3. The Internet would become the dominant force for creating and ushering in new micro and macro operational systems for the planet.
  4. I wanted to help architect new ways for ordinary people everywhere to work collaboratively for change – each armed with our own pieces of the puzzle.

8 years after that first very viceral dramatization of how very fragile and weak our old global systems are, I see tremendous evidence that the Social Change industry has begun to penetrate and influence the daily decision making of consumers and governments.  We are no longer an industry, but a vibrant cross-dimensional sector of social enterprise, social investors, non-profits, for-profits, consumers, volunteers, beneficiaries and  supporters of our sector’s wide array of social change oriented products and delivery mechanisms.

We represent hope, and the world needs us.

I also see that we are just starting to understand a common need to be able to collaborate in more effective and meaningful ways.  At the SocialEdge website this month, Charles (HipBone) Cameron is hosting a discussion entitled:  Who will build a more efficient marketplace? For the record, I have been announcing online for months that as of 1 September 2009 I would be moving back into work-mode… My short answer to the SocialEdge question as I begin piecing the starting blocks together at internet4change.com is, “I’m ready to try, and I’ve got a plan.”

The ridiculous ambition behind that statement has caused me many sleepless nights of wondering, “Am I really the right person for this job?” At the end of the day, I see that I can, so I must.  I am currently reading “Founders at Work” by Jessica Livingston, and wrote an abridged version of the following statement on the title page earlier today:

It is our obligation as careholders of the new kind of world we hope to create, to recognize the need to invest and participate in developing new forms of governance – and that starts with governing ourselves.  As we collaborate more and more, the structures and systems within which we are accustomed to working will, by necessity, become stretched.  To collaborate with maximum effectiveness, we must find ways to make our old legal structures, our old moral boundaries, and our old economic models irrelevant to the task of mobilizing solutions.

I do not mean to suggest that we learn to work in a state of lawlessness.  On the contrary, we must each find the courage to understand and accept the current-system risks and constraints to innovation that we face, and start developing new norms for operating in the cross-dimensional space we share.

I foresee that if we work together to establish economically and administratively viable norms and systems for pooling our grassroots-level human talents, knowledge and financial capital, will we be able to kick social change into overdrive in my lifetime. The plan, of course, requires that we develop the plan collaboratively.

Because we can, we must. Cyberspace is not going away, and there are many tools here in this new reality to help us build what we need.   The piece of the puzzle that the Internet4Change concept offers is a framework for how we can start using our online tools to start viably collaborating more.

With the utmost respect for your unique small or large piece of the Better World Building puzzle, whoever you are, I invite you to participate in what’s happening at Internet4Change.com, as it continues to evolve.

I leave this now to go and watch the movie United 93 with my children, and spend some time discussing with them the importance of what the people on that plane did, the many lessons that September 11 taught us, how it affected me, and how it affected us all.   I engage with them tonight knowing that 8 years later, #i4c exciting global times ahead.

Looking forward to your comments and reactions.

#piece

Christina Jordan
Founding Collaborator
www.Internet4Change.com

  • i4c
    Charles, you pick up on an excellent point. I also see clearly that getting conversations going on more than one site at once is key. I actually think that's a function of the web that we need to be able to better create and manage as social entrepreneurs on a regular basis. One of the things I will be doing here is developing a model "profile" type page that uses existing web2.0 tools to help us do that. Thanks for embracing the idea at your SocialEdge event as well.

    Wilfried, lovely to see you here, my dear friend. Rest assured that a lot of my answer to "why" on most of the things I do comes directly or indirectly from my experience with changemakers like you and the challenges to engaging online that I know you face.
  • Wilfried van der Veen
    Hi Christina,
    Many greetings from our small Ugandan town, Kabale, !
    For a long time i have been wondering what all the activities of LIA, internet4Change etc where about. Having poor internet connection makes it often difficult to keep up with all the information flow. To be honest, your founders statement give me a complete new insight.
    it seems to me that your shift to Brussels has given you new and refreshing environment.
    I am still going on with Amasiko, wondering how to bring social change into this so terribly conservative environment and people main focus is on getting "money" only.
    Lets hope Amasiko can become a small piece in the Better World Building puzzle here in Uganda.
    Many greetings
    Wilfried
  • Charles Cameron (hipbone)
    Hi Christina:

    I just saw your response to the event on SocialEdge and hurried here to raed your post and thank you. I'm delighted, of course, that you visited the event and commented there, and also that you've posted here -- but perhaps the best part of all was your final phrase: "Let's discuss both here and there."

    I've been giving a lot of thought to what can bring a conversational site through the stages from isolated posts > frequent responses > friendly network of conversations > active community with collaborations afoot, and it seems to me that getting conversations going at more than one site at once is one key stage.

    At SocialEdge, we've had a joint conversation with the folks at Public Innovators, and now you've opened up a second possibility here -- I'm extremely grateful.

    I'm not sure yet what you are planning here, but I hope you'll keep us informed on both sites!

    Thanks again, Charles
blog comments powered by Disqus
i4c :: Internet4Change