How Startup Companies Can Change the World

supernova_logo_nov09a.jpgWhile startup companies are often asked about their monetization and member strategies, it’s rare that they’re asked how they plan on changing the world. At today’s Supernova Conference in San Francisco, speakers attacked the subject of social chance and how it applies to business models, technological expertise and mass distribution.

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First up, director of Havas Media Lab Umair Haque, gave his presentation, “Constructive Capitalism.” Haque believes that only 5% of those within a given industry measure themselves in what he describes as “thick value”. He explains that one of the legacies of our economic downturn is the realization that our understanding of profit is based on “thin value” – a model that has not addressed economic harm from profit and growth. Haque’s answer to changing the current economic system is to change the way we think about profit. By employing radically different strategies and value sets, companies change the level of competition and instill “thick value” in entire industries.
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Pioneering blogger and entrepreneur Anil Dash drills down to one such strategy. His latest endeavor Expert Labs is a project that crowdsources expertise from the tech entrepreneur community to answer the questions of policy makers. Dash explains, “If we think outside of our insular communities and use a language that is respectful for all, we can create really transformative things.” Dash hopes that by finding new ways to filter expertise we can broaden the depth of information reaching those who make world changing decisions.

After giving a number of examples on how tools of production and distribution have been democratized through innovative technologies, Wired editor-in-chief and author Chris Anderson exclaimed, “If the past decade was about finding new post-institutional social models on the web, the next decade will be about applying them to the real world.”

It’s that time when we look back at the past year and reflect on our achievements and failures. As a startup entrepreneur, investor or technologist, how have you taken new business strategies and ideas of social change and applied them to your everyday work? Let us know in the comments below.

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