As they become the dominant adults in society, millennials are interacting with nonprofits and causes totally differently than their predecessors.
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As they become the dominant adults in society, millennials are interacting with nonprofits and causes totally differently than their predecessors.

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As they become the dominant adults in society, millennials are interacting with nonprofits and causes totally differently than their predecessors.
Want to change the world? Here are five steps to take
By Ben Paynter, Fast Company, Sept. 20, 2018
After Hurricane Maria struck Puerto Rico in September 2017, chef JosĂŠ AndrĂŠs activated a network of chefs through two groups heâd foundedâWorld Central Kitchen and Chefs for Puerto Ricoâto set up mobile kitchens capable of feeding hundreds of thousands of survivors. (Heâs continued that work for other disasters, including those impacted by Hurricane Florence in North Carolina.)
But in order to be in a position to do that, AndrĂŠs has also continuously bet big, and learned from failures. The chef moved to the U.S. from Spain in his 20s and worked his way up to food-world icon status. After the Haiti earthquake in 2010, he joined response groups and saw that there was a need for a new kind of philanthropic effort, so he punted: World Central Kitchenâs broader efforts include building chef networks in impoverished countries to train workers, fund social services, and push for other life-improving changes. For instance, in Haiti, theyâve ensured school kitchens use cleaner fuels in their stoves.
AndrĂŠs is just one example of someone who has acted fearlessly to dramatically change the world. At its most broad, that umbrella could also include Corrie ten Boom, the first female watchmaker in the Netherlands, who put her ingenuity to use by building a hideaway for Jews seeking refuge during the Holocaust. It also envelops the very different antics of Airbnb founders Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia, who launched a company thatâs democratized the lodging industry and earned many more people a new source of revenue out of a moment of self-preservation: They initially offered up their own place because rent was due.
These examples and the universal themes they gesture toward form the thesis of a book entitled Be Fearless: Five Principles for a Life of Breakthroughs and Purpose by Jean Case, the CEO of the Case Foundation. The private nonprofit, which was formed by Case and her husband, former AOL CEO and chairman Steve Case, is not endowed but funded annually by the couple. Since 1997, it has made more than $100 million in donations to groups that primarily inspire entrepreneurial and innovative ways to make social change. As Case puts it: âWe like to say we invest in people and ideas that can change the world.â
Which ultimately raised a pretty obvious question: Regardless of circumstance, âSome [people] move forward and accomplish extraordinary things while others may not,â Case says. âWhatâs the difference?â
Be Fearless, which comes out in January but is currently available for preorder, is built on several years of Case Foundation research to find the answer. Overall, Case believes most âtransformational breakthroughsâ have five key elements in common, which she explores in different book chapters whose titles work like personal mantras: Make a Big Bet; Be Bold, Take Risks; Make Failure Matter; Reach Beyond Your Bubble; Let Urgency Conquer Fear.
âFearlessness is not the lack of fear, but rather the courage and the strength to overcome it,â says Case, who is also a former senior executive at AOL. Itâs a lesson she knows firsthand and also recounts in personable ways throughout the book: Before becoming a major philanthropist, for instance, Case benefited from charity, earning a scholarship to a prestigious school that her single mother otherwise couldnât have afforded.
Case hopes readers will see Be Fearless as âa playbook for someone who really wants to go out and change the worldâ in a variety of ways, including through business, nonprofit, individual philanthropic, or government work. Other people who Case profiles throughout it include Mellody Hobson, president of Ariel Investments, the largest minority-owned investment firm in the world, who follows a philosophy of investing in intentionally different-thinking people, and Bryan Stevenson, the attorney behind the Equal Justice Initiative, which has won important victories against unfair sentencing standards.
âIt is less about what sector you come from, and more about your fearless spirit of wanting to make a difference in this world,â Case says. âIn many cases, these are ordinary people who end up doing extraordinary things, much to the surprise of others, and often even themselves.â
âThis is really challenging every individual to get out there and make a difference in the areas that they care about, and that theyâre passionate about,â she says.
Jean Case, CEO of Case Foundation on the 5 Keys to Being Fearless
Case Foundationâs Short Guide to Impact Investing

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Applications are now open for the Women's Venture Xchange Africa
Applications are now open for the Womenâs Venture Xchange Africa
The Global Entrepreneurship Network (GEN) is calling on female entrepreneurs in East Africa to apply for the pilot program of the Womenâs Venture Xchange Africa.
The initiative, which is in partnership with the Case Foundation, the Mara Foundation, and the U.S. Department of State, is a mentorship and exchange program designed for female entrepreneurs based in Africa.
The mission for the programâŚ
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