tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962402423742010015.post225992457099880056..comments2023-12-21T05:22:29.098-05:00Comments on Cause Global: Social Media for Social Change: "Do" v. ThinkMarcia Stepanekhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00890455075715762494noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962402423742010015.post-24953119100843784282009-12-23T07:29:09.631-05:002009-12-23T07:29:09.631-05:00Yes, absolutely! But given this (some wonder), sho...Yes, absolutely! But given this (some wonder), shouldn't the social sector also need different approaches to measuring ROI? What do you think?Marcia Stepanekhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00890455075715762494noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962402423742010015.post-12634491867210957562009-12-23T05:24:41.565-05:002009-12-23T05:24:41.565-05:00Excellent article. From my own experience in the f...Excellent article. From my own experience in the field I can vouch for many commentators and practitioners seeing social entrepreneurship as the "magic bullet". It's the better aid by turning the BOP either into customers or (less often) into entrepreneurs and let them happily buy their way out of poverty. <br /><br />Best of all, the new social entrepreneurship paradigm lets us preserve the (capitalist) system. We can all continue shopping, we just have to make slightly more conscious purchasing decisions - the markets will do the rest.<br /><br />I'm firmly convinced it won't work that way. Business is not gonna save us, be it conventional or social. The social realm is something fundamentally different from the economic.Bijanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16108398377063862026noreply@blogger.com