Archive for the ‘Ask the Experts’ Category

The Road from Liberia to Gilt City

Friday, January 14th, 2011

nathan-richardson.png Nathan Richardson is the President of Gilt City, the local child of new (and wildly successful) luxury deals site Gilt Groupe. But he’s more than that. Throughout his career so far, he’s traveled from Senegal to Libera to Yahoo! Finance and Dow Jones. Big-hearted, intelligent and multi-talented (obvs), we’re proud to call him a friend here at TILE.

TILE: What’s it like working for Gilt? Is your wardrobe amazing?
Nathan: It’s a blast – we work really hard, move the ball forward every day, work closely as a team, and get to engage with some of the coolest restaurants, clubs, services and events in the hottest cities in America. Fair to say my wardrobe has been upgraded and the number of hoodies and fashion sneakers that I own multiplied like a gremlin.

TILE: In your career, you’ve worked at a bunch of different companies – from Citibank to Yahoo! Finance to Dow Jones online. How have these different experiences helped you in your current job?
Nathan: Every experience taught me a different set of skills that play into the diverse hats that I wear in a given day [at Gilt]. I learned about financial mechanics at Citi, about moving fast and being only as good as what you did that morning at Yahoo Finance (a healthy paranoia), and about the importance of brand & voice at Dow Jones.

TILE: You’re very accomplished in the business world, but you’ve also taken the time to help others – both in the Peace Corps and as the director of the International Rescue Committee’s Liberia Program. How do you balance these two passions?

Nathan: I joke that I am a humanitarian to fashion people – providing them great value on the luxury items that they have to have! All of my experiences have several things in common: the pace, the energy, and the need to be fully committed in a way that transcends a 9 to 5. I also stay involved with my Peace Corps family and the artisans I worked with at the Artisan Village of Thies. I’m also a big fan of the IRC’s work in Liberia, and I’ve returned several times to check in on projects that I am passionate about.

TILE: What’s the Peace Corps like? Would you recommend it to someone graduating from college?
Nathan
: Loved my experience in the Peace Corps – it is one of the toughest jobs you’ll ever love as the tag line says. I gained exposure to projects and accomplished more in those 2.5 years than you can imagine  – as well as gained lifetime best friends.

The Peace Corps’ three goals are to share American culture with the host country; learn about the host country culture and share it with America (Senegal is amazing!); and technical transfer – I was a small business volunteer with several serious projects.

TILE: What’s the best advice you would give to your teenage self?
Nathan: Wow – that’s a tough one. I would probably say broaden your horizons earlier, learn a language, and love the moment a bit more. What do I mean by that? I wish I’d learned Chinese and studied in China at an early age and also remembered to celebrate all the amazing things that were going on around me…

>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. To read more, click on Ask the Experts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or an expert you’d like to see interviewed? Just Ask TILE!

So you want to be a socially responsible investor?

Friday, January 7th, 2011

joel-solomon.jpg Joel Solomon’s career is somewhere between entrepreneur, philanthropist, and activist. His philosophy is that companies should focus on socially responsible growth – meaning they should care about their impact on their society and the environment, but not give up on making money. Since 1996, he’s been the president of Renewal Partners, a company focused on creating a “triple bottom line” economy. And he’s a pretty big dreamer – while most companies focus on a 10 or 20 year strategic plan, Joel has a 500-year vision about how the work of current generations is crucial. He was nice enough to share a bit about his plans and how you can play your part in changing the world.

TILE: What is socially responsible investing?
Joel: Socially Responsible Investing is about placing your money into companies whose products and services represent your values and beliefs. Every dollar you spend or invest is a direct vote by you for what matters in life and on the planet.

TILE: How can businesses make money and be socially responsible at the same time?
Joel: Business can make plenty of money by being good citizens of the environment – for their workers, and for the communities where they make products and in those where they sell them. Good ethics and planet-responsible behaviour* are fully compatible with making reasonable financial returns. In fact, clear values and true purpose, when combined with the tools of business and money, make a powerful combo that can drive social change.

TILE: Why do you do what you do?
Joel: My life is committed to respect for the hard work my ancestors did to give me my life, and to do everything I can to see that what matters most to me is available to future generations. Those commitments led me to make business and finance serve my long term goals. Every day I get to meet some of the brightest, most creative, most inspiring entrepreneurs and leaders in the world. That’s my reward for staying true to my values and purpose.

TILE: How do you think young people can play a role in philanthropy?
Joel: Young people with access to philanthropy should learn all they can about the issues of our times, especially those that touch your heart and mind the most. Ask lots of questions. Read. Get exposed. Volunteer in organizations you believe in. Find a career that expresses your true values. Learn all you can about the non-profit world. Ask for observer status at foundation meetings. Ask for a small grants budget so you can gain experience making decisions with donations. Seek mentors and experienced advisors. Attend conferences.

TILE: What’s the best advice you would give to your teenage self?
Joel: Commit to your own maximum potential to learn, lead, and live, such that your life and work make a positive impact for today and tomorrow. Follow your inner calling. Develop creativity. Do deep work on yourself, soon, and continually.
Develop pragmatic skills. Travel. Be compassionate.

* Please excuse our extra ‘u’s. Though he was born in Tennessee, Joel is now a resident of sunny Vancouver, Canada.

>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. To read more, click on Ask the Experts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or an expert you’d like to see interviewed? Just Ask TILE!

Changing the world from the bottom up: Rainforest Action Network Executive Director Rebecca Tarbotton

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

rebecca-tarbotton.jpg Rebecca Tarbotton, the Executive Director of Rainforest Action Network, is what you would call a “well-rounded” rabble-rouser. She’s been using the power of bottom-up organizing to make real change throughout her whole career. She started off as an environmental researcher working among indigenous communities in Canada, then spent eight years working in India, where she supported traditional food and farming practices and helped a women’s farming alliance grow from seven to 4,000  members. Her mind still on agriculture, she advocated for the new local food movement in the UK and then fought the genetically-modified crop invasion in California. At RAN, she’s helped show how the environment and the economy are inextricably linked. By pressuring the companies that fund environmental destruction, she’s helped create policies that change the way corporations do business in America. If you’re not inspired already, read on.


TILE: How did you first get started in environmental activism?
Rebecca: I always knew that I wanted to make change in the world, but I started out my career working in human rights and development abroad. While I was working in India organizing with woman farmers, I realized what an impact corporations have on people and ecosystems around the world, and how profoundly important it is to give local people a say in the decisions that effect their lives and livelihoods. That realization eventually brought me to Rainforest Action Network, where we focus on moving corporations toward better environmental and human rights practices.

TILE: What is the most pressing issue that Rainforest Action Network is working on?
Rebecca: RAN believes firmly that local, community driven solutions are the only way to save the planet. That’s why we’re working with communities around the globe to keep forests standing, fossil fuels in the ground and stop climate change.

TILE: What is the biggest challenge you face in your work?
Rebecca: The tension between building targeted, strategic campaigns that can make change, and building lifelong activists and a movement that’s inclusive and incorporates people from all areas of society. While both of these are important goals, they require very different strategies and resources. RAN historically has straddled these two goals very well, and we’re always looking for ways to improve the way we work.

TILE: What’s the best advice you would give to your teenage self?
Rebecca: Don’t worry too much about what’s you’re going to be, worry about what you’re going to do. It’s easy to get caught up in thinking too much about “career” and what you want your profession to be. It’s more important to connect with your passion and your motivations which will lead you to work that you want to do in a sustainable way.

TILE: How do you think young people can play an important role in the changing landscape of philanthropy?
Rebecca: Find causes that you believe in and get involved. Don’t use philanthropy as an alternative to action. Do both. Philanthropy is action – but your philanthropy will be more meaningful if you’re engaged in the work in the world.

>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. To read more, click on Ask the Experts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or an expert you’d like to see interviewed? Just Ask TILE!

Ending Extreme Poverty In Our Lifetimes: John McArthur, CEO of Millennium Promise

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

john-w-mcarthur.jpg Dr. John W. McArthur is the CEO of Millennium Promise, one of TILE’s biggest partner charities. Millennium Promise is entirely devoted to eradicating extreme poverty – specifically, they’re *the* organization that’s focused on making the UN’s Millennium Development Goals a reality by 2015. A big part of that work includes the Millennium Villages project, which supports integrated social and business development services in rural areas in 10 African countries, serving a half-million  people. Dr. McArthur is a Research Associate at the Earth Institute at Columbia University, and he also teaches at Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs.

TILE: How do issues relating to poverty in Africa affect young people?
John: The burdens of extreme poverty are pervasive, and hit young people especially hard. Well over a billion people still live on less than $1 a day. Roughly 8 million children won’t survive until their fifth birthday this year. Hundreds of millions of young people cannot even begin to pursue their dreams or get a job because their basic needs are not even met: they lack access to food, education, clean water and basic sanitation, and are at-risk for preventable diseases like malaria and polio.

But in the connected global society of the 21st century, the challenges in any part of the world are the challenges of every part of the world. For many reasons, the unjust outcomes of extreme poverty threaten our global stability, our natural environment, and of course our conscience. That is why it is so encouraging that young people around the world are mobilizing in such great numbers and refusing to accept that the needless and preventable suffering of others far away from our borders does not affect us.  And technology is only making these efforts easier every day, with websites like Kiva, Charity:water, Facebook, Twitter and others all helping to connect people and solutions in real time around the globe.

If we can eliminate the obstacles that prevent impoverished communities from capturing their potential, we will help strengthen not only those communities, but also the global community. Young people around the world have an excellent opportunity to help end extreme poverty in their lifetime and create an incredible legacy for their generation.

TILE: What’s the most important thing we can do to end poverty?
John: I think there are three things. The first is actually to make a decision in our own minds that we are committed to seeing the end extreme poverty. A sports coach once taught me that a commitment is just the one big decision you make so that you don’t have to make all the little decisions any more. Of course it doesn’t need to be a decision that takes over your entire life, but it can be a decision that helps guide thinking within one part of your life. So if we can all make that commitment and find ways to integrate it into our lives, whether we are going to school, working, or doing something else as our day-to-day priority, then I really do think we can be the generation to see the end of poverty.

Second, it is crucial to understand that, for the first time in history, we have the tools and know-how to end poverty in our lifetime. In pursuit of this critical goal, everyone has a role to play: students, faith-based groups, corporations, individuals, organizations and governments alike can all play hugely important roles in the fight to end poverty. For example, students can raise both awareness and funds on behalf of efforts to promote campaigns against malaria or for clean drinking water.

Third, it is important to learn about the Millennium Development Goals and the facts of extreme poverty in our world today, as well as the ways we can work together to end poverty.  Then, make it clear to your friends, family, social networks, and government representatives that achieving the Goals is important to you. You can amplify your voice through letters, campaigns and social media. Organizations dedicated to ending extreme poverty, such as Millennium Promise, have the tools to get you started.

TILE: What’s the biggest challenge you face in your work?
John: The biggest challenge is typically a blend of people feeling that extreme poverty is too big a problem to solve, and that because a problem and approach to tackling it exists today, those dynamics will be similar in the future. We constantly need to “unpack” problems to see why they exist and what can be done about them. The past decade has seen huge numbers of individuals and organizations make major breakthroughs that change the conventional thinking about how extreme poverty can be solved. Staying on top of all these success stories is a lot of work, but very important!

TILE: What’s the best advice you would give to your teenage self?
John: I am a big believer in a line by the poet Wallace Stevens, who wrote that “After the final no there comes a yes. And on that yes the future world depends.” I wish I had learned it earlier, since it reminds me that there will always be naysayers, but a commitment to persistence, hard work, and integrity can provide the energy that helps shape the real breakthroughs for better tomorrows.

TILE: How do you think young people can play an important role in the changing landscape of philanthropy?
John: Philanthropy is becoming a bigger and bigger part of our society, and people are starting to practice philanthropy at younger and younger ages. I think the biggest way young people can change the landscape is by working together to support innovative approaches to still-unsolved global issues, especially approaches that leverage social networks, new technologies, quick sharing of information, and a real focus on results. The more we work together to get smart on the key issues and bring everyone together to solve them, the faster we will see the multipliers grow on each philanthropic dollar. Ending extreme poverty will likely be just one of the big problems today’s young generation solves in the coming years!

>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. To read more, click on Ask the Experts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or an expert you’d like to see interviewed? Just Ask TILE!

Public School Advocate Wendy Nadel on Following Your Passion

Monday, August 30th, 2010

wendy-nadel.jpg Wendy Nadel is the Executive Director of Yonkers Partners in Education, a non-profit dedicated to supporting access to and success in education for all Yonkers students and their families. She’s not new at working for the greater good; 25 years ago Wendy founded Volunteer Emory while she was a student at Emory University. She’s worked for the March of Dimes, run her own non-profit consulting firm, performed research on child poverty for Save the Children, and currently serves as a member of the Emory University Alumni Board and the Volunteer Center of the United Way. Sounds like she knows a thing or two about following your heart…

TILE: How did you end up where you are today?
Wendy: I became passionate about serving the world when I was in college and made the decision as a sophomore that I wanted to spend my career in the not-for-profit sector. Twenty-eight years later, I’m still here!

TILE: How does what you do affect the world at large? Why should I care about what you do?
Wendy: My organization, Yonkers Partners in Education, provides opportunities to low-income, inner city students that even the playing field so that they can achieve their dreams. Many kids who live in poverty don’t realize that there is a wide world out there for them, and we help them to navigate the road to a better life.

TILE: What is your favorite thing about working with a nonprofit?
Wendy: Our work makes a difference and helps to transform lives. Doesn’t get much better then that!

TILE: What’s the best advice you would give to your teenage self?
Wendy: Stick with a dream, even if it’s not totally clear how to achieve it. Often kids think they need to have it all figured out in college. I never had anything figured out but let my passion guide my career and it worked out beautifully.

TILE: How did you get into the work you are doing today?
Wendy: The great part about the last question is that one thing led to another. Through work I was doing for Save the Children Federation, I became passionate about education as a way out of poverty. I was approached by a head-hunter when this position became available and went for it and got the job.

>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. To read more, click on Ask the Experts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or an expert you’d like to see interviewed? Just Ask TILE!

Time to enter the real world? Blair Brandt will help you find a place.

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

blair-brandt.jpg Blair Brandt is the founder and CEO of The Next Step Realty. And at just 22, he’s responsible for managing all the different components of the business: he recruits and manages brokers and Next Step staff, develops relationships with clients, oversees PR and marketing, business operations, legal and financial matters, tax, web design and programming, investment and return on that investments for investors… pretty much everything. Blair spends most of his day meeting with people to seek collaboration, advice, cross-marketing opportunities, and so on. But he found the time to answer some of our questions, so check it out:

TILE: How did you come up with the idea for a service like this?
Blair: For the past four years, I worked as an assistant at a real estate firm while in Florida. There I noticed one crucial factor in the marketplace: the power of referrals and the importance of having good leads for a realtor.

Especially in bad times, having personal networks that could deliver you with quality clients was the way to continued success. SO, if we were going to set up a leads service, we needed to find a niche that we could specialize in and that could be ours.

We realized our niche when my friends from college started to call me asking if I knew brokers in the cities they were moving to for new jobs. So, while I was helping a few of my friends get matched up with the right brokers, my friend and future business partner Belton Baker picked up on what I was doing and said – listen, let’s market this to everyone we know, and everyone they know. We immediately saw the demand for an improved, streamlined housing transition from college to the real world.

TILE: What was your first apartment search like?
Blair: Our first apartment search actually went pretty well. We spent months recruiting the best real estate brokers for the job in major cities, and we really did some extensive interviewing and personal networking to make sure we were dealing with the right people. Once we started to get our clients, which happened more in a wave of hundreds than in any one single first search, the brokers were very well prepared to service the clients. Most of their clients were young professionals anyway and this is what they specialized in, but they hadn’t directly marketed their services to colleges – that became our business.

TILE: Why is your logo a giraffe? NextStep-logo-only.jpg
Blair: My philosophy from the time I started this company with Belton is that the transition from college to the real world is one of the most intense psychological and logistical bridges young people must cross. Of course, life offers countless challenges after graduation, but the change in lifestyle from student to adult is a rapid one for recent graduates. Graduates are often embarking on their first job and career, and in the meantime making all the other adjustments required in moving to a new city. We decided if we could help recent graduates by solving one of the problems – housing – we could develop our own niche market in the process. The giraffe  is symbolic and metaphorical because it represents the nature of our clients during this transition. Giraffes take some of the largest steps of any animal and they reach high. Our clients are similarly reaching high in their new beginning and taking a very large step into the real world and their first home.

TILE: What advice would you give your teenage self?
Blair: Dream big.

TILE: Can you tell us a secret about the real estate business?
Blair: It’s about specialized service, having an expertise in a particular process or niche, and building relationships with expanding networks of people. Most of what we do is personal networking. We started this business with a list of 500 students at college campuses to help spread the word, and the domino effect is beyond what we ever expected. First friends, then friends of friends, then friends of friends of friends, and before you know it, you are dealing directly with the public. If you can specialize in a certain real estate niche, associate yourself with that niche, and then use networks to create momentum, you can get something off the ground fast.

To see Blair talking in real life, check out his recent interview on Bloomberg TV: http://bit.ly/dlIxYM

>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. To read more, click on Ask the Experts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or an expert you’d like to see interviewed? Just Ask TILE!

Bernie Ferrari on Being Strategic

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

bernie-ferrari.jpg Bernard T. Ferrari is the Chairman & Founder of the Ferrari Consultancy, but before he became a professional strategy consultant, he’d been around the block more than once. Before establishing his consulting firm, he served for almost 20 years as a Director at McKinsey & Company. And before THAT, he was a surgeon and chief operating officer at a clinic in New Orleans. He’s racked up a B.A., an M.D., a J.D., and an M.B.A. during the course of his education, which we think makes him “Bernard T. Ferrari, M.D., J.D., M.B.A.” Bernie is a trustee of the Juilliard School and the University of Rochester, he’s a philanthropist, and he’s also a Life Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Not a bad man to ask for advice.

TILE: What exactly is a strategy consultant?
Bernie: A strategy consultant works closely with a company’s senior management to help address how, when, and where to compete. Strategy consultants are essentially professional problem-solvers brought into an organization to provide independent thinking and an outside perspective on business challenges.

TILE: How old were you when you got involved in philanthropy?
Bernie: I was in my 30s. At that time I was in medicine and most of my philanthropic work was associated with that profession. I donated mostly to research being conducted on major medical problems and diseases. Then later I started to broaden my philanthropic interests.

TILE: Do you have a personal mission or giving plan?
Bernie: My personal mission when it comes to philanthropy is to provide outstanding education to the most talented students in our country.  I am interested in helping to build an extraordinary educational system that takes very talented individuals and makes them even more impactful members of our society.

TILE: What’s the best advice you would give your teenage self?
Bernie: Avoid cynicism. To lead a happy and productive life, you must stay optimistic and channel your personal passions to address society’s challenges through your career or your philanthropy or both.

TILE: What’s your advice to someone who knows nothing about business but who wants to learn the ropes?
Bernie: I have three pieces of advice. First, read as much about business as you possibly can, particularly in the news and the business press. Second, hang around business people and people who talk about business, as those individuals can sometimes be your best learning resources. And finally, go to business school, either as an undergraduate or as a post-grad, so you can learn the fundamentals and get plugged into the business community.

>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. To read more, click on Ask the Experts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or an expert you’d like to see interviewed? Just Ask TILE!

Head of WITNESS on Filming the Truth

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

yvette-alberdingkthijm.jpg Yvette Alberdingk Thijm is the Executive Director of WITNESS, an awesome TILE Human Rights charity. Yvette has ultimate responsibility for envisioning, conceptualizing and implementing WITNESS’ overall direction. She leads efforts to carry out the programmatic, organizational and funding strategies necessary to ensure her organization’s mission and health. She’s also responsible for overseeing the organization’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements. What a job.

TILE: How do issues relating to human rights affect young people?
Yvette:
All over our globe, we want the same things: access to education, clean water, non-discrimination. We want to be treated fairly and with respect; we’re global citizens and the future is ours – we need to protect it and the earth.

TILE: What’s the most important thing we can do to affect human rights around the world?
Yvette:
WITNESS says: see it, film it, change it! You’ve got the power. Tell your story. Get involved your community, neighborhood, school, and use your iPod or cellphone to document what’s going on around you and change it!

TILE: What’s the biggest challenge you face in your work?
Yvette:
All the injustice in the world can feel overwhelming. But anyone can make a difference and when we work together we can change a lot.

TILE: What’s the best advice you would give to your teenage self?
Yvette:
Get involved and stand up for what you believe in. Your voice is important. Make sure it’s heard and help others’ stories get out there.

TILE: How do you think young people can play a role in the changing landscape of philanthropy?
Yvette:
Young people understand what it’s like to be connected digitally, and can make a big difference easily through Twitter, Facebook and social networks – it’s a lifestyle: if you decide to care, people will listen and join you.

>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. To read more, click on Ask the Experts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or an expert you’d like to see interviewed? Just Ask TILE!

Founder of charity: water Explains What Happened

Friday, July 30th, 2010

scott-harrison.jpg Scott Harrison spent 10 years promoting chic events in New York City, but the lifestyle left him feeling selfish and empty. So he did what any late-night party type would do: he founded an innovative organization that provides clean water to communities in developing nations throughout the world. 1 billion people lack clean water to drink. But so far, charity: water has funded more than 2,500 water projects in 16 developing nations. Those projects will provide over 1,100,000 people with clean, safe drinking water. That’s cooler than any party we’ve ever been to.

TILE: Why should young people care about clean water?
Scott: Most of us never have to think about where our water comes from. We take it for granted, that we can turn on the faucet and it’s there. But right now, almost a billion people on the planet don’t have access to clean, safe drinking water. That’s one in eight of us. It’s a big problem – but there are simple solutions that can help change it.

It’s really up to all of us, all ages, to help. But I think there’s a unique connection with young people. 4,500 kids a day die from water-related illnesses. And half the world’s schools don’t have clean water or sanitation. When we tell kids this, they’re devastated. We’ve had kids raise tens of thousands of dollars to help build clean water projects all on their own. The will of young people that try to imagine living like the almost one billion without water is incredible. And I really believe that if young people act now, they can see the water crisis end in their lifetime.

TILE: How did you get started in this work?
Scott: I worked years as a nightclub promoter in New York until I finally realized that I was an incredibly selfish person and I couldn’t keep denying my responsibility to give back to the world. I served as a volunteer photographer on a ship that provided surgeries and medicine to people on the coast of Liberia. My experience there changed my life forever. Many of the diseases we saw on the hospital ship were a direct result of contaminated water and lack of sanitation. So I made it my mission to provide clean and safe drinking water to those in need.

TILE: What’s the most important factor that influences whether someone has access to clean water?
Scott: There are many. Money and lack of infrastructure, mostly. Much of the world’s clean water resides right under us, in aquifers too deep in the ground to access with a simple shovel. Some areas, like many in East Africa, require digging deep boreholes – it’s an expensive project that governments don’t (or can’t) provide and local people don’t have the money to invest in. But once these deep water wells are drilled, the pumps can be maintained by the communities, which can collect minimal dues and take care of the spare parts and small repairs.

For other communities, lack of education or training limits safe water access. Take Cambodia, for example, where there is plenty of groundwater, but most of it is too contaminated to drink. Here, we help fund reliable filtering technologies that purify groundwater to be safe enough to use. Our program requires training and the families construct the filters themselves so they know how they work.

TILE: What’s the best advice you would give to your teenage self?
Scott: Go travel. It’s the most immediate and effective way to open up your mind and educate yourself on what’s going on in the world. If you don’t have the opportunity to travel, take advantage of everything that the Internet has to offer. Watch videos and documentaries, follow people you admire or can learn from on Twitter, keep up with them on Facebook. Technology has given us the chance to connect with people all over the world like we never could before. Tap into this. Figure out which issues ignite something in you.

TILE: How do you think young people can play a role in the changing landscape of philanthropy?
Scott: Young people want to actively participate. They don’t want to just write a check and call it good. They want to get deeply involved with what we do. One example – a nine-year-old girl named Riley Goodfellow from California. She asked her friends, family and church to help her fund a water project – she ate beans and rice for four months to prove she was serious – and ended up raising enough money for three (that’s more than $15,000). She’s not alone. Last September, we built a fundraising site to make it easy for people like Riley to join our mission. And since then, they’ve raised more than $2.5 million, all for clean water projects.

So how important are young people in changing philanthropy? Crucial. They get it done. They need little direction when they have passion for what they do. They just take care of it. The tens of thousands of mycharity: water members prove this. Every day, we’re excited to see more and more young people come up with creative ideas to fundraise for water projects. They’re changing the face of philanthropy by involving their personalities and their hobbies in giving and by trying to connect with those they help. It’s so exciting to see.

>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. To read more, click on Ask the Experts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or an expert you’d like to see interviewed? Just Ask TILE!

What Does Health Mean? Interview with Health Leads CEO Rebecca Onie

Friday, July 30th, 2010

rebecca-onie.jpg Rebecca Onie is the founder and CEO of Project Health, which recently changed its name to Health Leads. Health Leads is a TILE partner charity that operates Family Help Desks in medical clinics. These resource desks support healthy lives by connecting patients with key community and government resources. In 1996, during her sophomore year at Harvard College, Rebecca Onie founded Project HEALTH with Dr. Barry Zuckerman, Chair of Pediatrics at Boston Medical Center. A Harvard Law School graduate and a MacArthur “Genius Grant” Fellow, Rebecca leads the organization in realizing its vision of connecting low-income families to the resources they need to be healthy. Here she is:

TILE: How do the issues you work on affect young people?
Rebecca: There is a link between poverty and poor health. To break that link, Project HEALTH recruits motivated college students that work with families to make sure they get the help they need. It is a transforming life experience for our student volunteers. It changes their way of thinking, it makes them view healthcare differently, and may influence their political views or choice of careers.

TILE: What was the catalyst for you to start Project HEALTH?
Rebecca: When I was a sophomore in college I spent six months in Boston City Hospital talking with doctors about what they would give their patients in a perfect world. The doctors realized that the absence of essential services such as jobs, food, heat, and housing was having a larger effect on their patients than the medicines they were prescribing. A doctor can prescribe an antibiotic but if a family is living in a car, they’re not going to be healthy.

TILE: What is the biggest challenge you face in your work?
Rebecca: The organization’s time and resources are limited so we have to make strategic choices as to how to deploy those resources. We have to decide which opportunities to seize. There is a very fine balance between pursuing exciting big-picture opportunities and also making the work we do on the ground better and better each day.

TILE: What’s the best advice you would give to your teenage self?
Rebecca: I wish I knew how much change a single person can bring about. I didn’t realize how powerful one person with a vision can be. The world needs leaders! If you have an idea about how to make the world a more just place, you should pursue it vigorously. Listen to more experienced people around you, but don’t take no for an answer.

TILE: How do you think young people can play a role in the changing landscape of philanthropy?
Rebecca: Young people are the future of philanthropy. When you’re starting to think about your role in philanthropy, ask yourself two questions: 1) What am I truly passionate about?  And 2) How can I get involved? The best philanthropy isn’t just about giving money away. It’s about being really invested in the work that you’re supporting.

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