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#141 Regenerative Entrepreneurship: Scaling Impact Globally with Alfredo Matthew

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Manage episode 508991793 series 3337913
Content provided by Suzie Lewis. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Suzie Lewis or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

"What if the key to economic transformation lies not in bigger budgets or top-down directives, but in fostering community ownership and equitable systems?"

Alfredo and I discuss the need for more regenerative financial models and to start really working in small communities and joining together into a network of networks. Current models are very redistributive (e.g. taxing success, subsidisation for those with no access) but pre-distribution gives everyone a stake; if communities win, everyone wins and gains autonomy and agency.

We discuss the need for more diverse thinking and more equitable access to funding and business opportunities. Generating new ideas by combining what already exists and creating surplus value that can then move around is the key, but we need to do this better, faster and in collaboration. Building entrepreneur-led ecosystems requires prioritizing ownership, pre-distribution, and maintaining a human scale. It is easier to build from scratch, and this will be the challenge of transforming established institutions and organisations, but they will have to transition, whether they like it or not.

We know that innovation often stems from unconventional approaches and questioning established norms, where individuals without traditional backgrounds can bring fresh perspectives. Hitting “walls” in conventional paths can be a catalyst for divergent thinking, pushing beyond perceived limitations to realise that seemingly permanent constructs can be circumvented

Leaders need to step outside their echo chambers, we spend way too much time talking to people who look and think like us and we should be actively broadening horizons by reading, talking to people outside our immediate circle, and exploring new ideas.

This is not on one person or community, but is a generational effort to influence and impact the systems we seek to transform

Alfredo generously shares his intentional design principles, experiences and personal journey to setting up the world’s first shared prosperity community corporation (SPCC) operates at the intersection of workforce, education and entrepreneurship with a focus on equity, economic transformation and rethinking leadership.

The main insights you'll get from this episode are :

- Innovation comes from the fringes: when pursuing a goal, hitting a wall makes you realise you have to find a different way to get round things – these walls serve as ‘flexion points’ rather than obstacles on the path to a breakthrough moment.

- Community-based entrepreneurship makes innovation possible with few resources, as constrained resources force commitment, agency and risk-taking -asking for help from the right people creates something organically.

- Process of identifying an issue/problem and finding the most transformative thing to move forward and grow; this is generational work, starting small and moving through systems to aspiration.

- Design principles offer constraint, and the focus should be on ownership first (for ownership democracy and shared prosperity) for everyone to have an interest – distributed ownership is required for a regenerative economy.

- Current models are very redistributive (e.g. taxing success, subsidisation for those with no access) but pre-distribution gives everyone a stake; if communities win, everyone wins and gains autonomy and agency.

- Present VC models are designed around the founder and investors as opposed to everyone involved – a ‘winner takes all’ approach; pre-distribution means nobody does anything on their own, often building on others’ work and ideas.

- Humans evolved in small groups and that’s where we work best, small groups connected to other small groups: an ideal community has 150 members, with multiple communities – nodes – forming a network.

- Can bridging the economic divide be built into corporate transformation plans? It is easier to build from scratch than transform existing systems, but all institutions will ultimately have to transition whether they want to or not.

- Radical reform on an institutional scale does not work as the institutions expect; they are too bureaucratic and unadaptable, not just to changing systems but also to changing mindsets and paradigms.

- A contingency plan for possible implosion is to move away from institutions in order for humans to flourish in small communities, without the oppression of large institutions but also without the rejection of capital markets.

- Empowerment and humanism are a force for good, but capital is not bad – it is a tool that needs to be used properly, with systems and structures that work better together and involve people (more).

- Community-owned platforms in the age of AI need a niche to survive against catch-all LLMs, e.g. by creating a user interface for smaller communities, or accumulating local niche databases that have value, then federating with others.

- Regeneration = generate then regenerate; generating new ideas by combining what already exists and creating surplus value that can then move around, but we need to do this better, faster and in collaboration.

- Emerging challenges must be tackled using constant evolution. One example would be transforming the three biggest cost drivers in modern society – housing, education and healthcare – into local income generators by making them community-based (decentralized).

- A bold regeneration experiment for leaders would be to read, learn, talk to people outside their immediate circles, broaden their reach, seek diversity, explore new ideas, remain open-minded, flexible and adaptable, and pilot on a small scale.

Find out more about Alfredo and his work here

https://www.sharedprosperity.co/

https://www.linkedin.com/in/alfredomathew/

https://www.alfredomathew.com/

  continue reading

142 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 508991793 series 3337913
Content provided by Suzie Lewis. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Suzie Lewis or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

"What if the key to economic transformation lies not in bigger budgets or top-down directives, but in fostering community ownership and equitable systems?"

Alfredo and I discuss the need for more regenerative financial models and to start really working in small communities and joining together into a network of networks. Current models are very redistributive (e.g. taxing success, subsidisation for those with no access) but pre-distribution gives everyone a stake; if communities win, everyone wins and gains autonomy and agency.

We discuss the need for more diverse thinking and more equitable access to funding and business opportunities. Generating new ideas by combining what already exists and creating surplus value that can then move around is the key, but we need to do this better, faster and in collaboration. Building entrepreneur-led ecosystems requires prioritizing ownership, pre-distribution, and maintaining a human scale. It is easier to build from scratch, and this will be the challenge of transforming established institutions and organisations, but they will have to transition, whether they like it or not.

We know that innovation often stems from unconventional approaches and questioning established norms, where individuals without traditional backgrounds can bring fresh perspectives. Hitting “walls” in conventional paths can be a catalyst for divergent thinking, pushing beyond perceived limitations to realise that seemingly permanent constructs can be circumvented

Leaders need to step outside their echo chambers, we spend way too much time talking to people who look and think like us and we should be actively broadening horizons by reading, talking to people outside our immediate circle, and exploring new ideas.

This is not on one person or community, but is a generational effort to influence and impact the systems we seek to transform

Alfredo generously shares his intentional design principles, experiences and personal journey to setting up the world’s first shared prosperity community corporation (SPCC) operates at the intersection of workforce, education and entrepreneurship with a focus on equity, economic transformation and rethinking leadership.

The main insights you'll get from this episode are :

- Innovation comes from the fringes: when pursuing a goal, hitting a wall makes you realise you have to find a different way to get round things – these walls serve as ‘flexion points’ rather than obstacles on the path to a breakthrough moment.

- Community-based entrepreneurship makes innovation possible with few resources, as constrained resources force commitment, agency and risk-taking -asking for help from the right people creates something organically.

- Process of identifying an issue/problem and finding the most transformative thing to move forward and grow; this is generational work, starting small and moving through systems to aspiration.

- Design principles offer constraint, and the focus should be on ownership first (for ownership democracy and shared prosperity) for everyone to have an interest – distributed ownership is required for a regenerative economy.

- Current models are very redistributive (e.g. taxing success, subsidisation for those with no access) but pre-distribution gives everyone a stake; if communities win, everyone wins and gains autonomy and agency.

- Present VC models are designed around the founder and investors as opposed to everyone involved – a ‘winner takes all’ approach; pre-distribution means nobody does anything on their own, often building on others’ work and ideas.

- Humans evolved in small groups and that’s where we work best, small groups connected to other small groups: an ideal community has 150 members, with multiple communities – nodes – forming a network.

- Can bridging the economic divide be built into corporate transformation plans? It is easier to build from scratch than transform existing systems, but all institutions will ultimately have to transition whether they want to or not.

- Radical reform on an institutional scale does not work as the institutions expect; they are too bureaucratic and unadaptable, not just to changing systems but also to changing mindsets and paradigms.

- A contingency plan for possible implosion is to move away from institutions in order for humans to flourish in small communities, without the oppression of large institutions but also without the rejection of capital markets.

- Empowerment and humanism are a force for good, but capital is not bad – it is a tool that needs to be used properly, with systems and structures that work better together and involve people (more).

- Community-owned platforms in the age of AI need a niche to survive against catch-all LLMs, e.g. by creating a user interface for smaller communities, or accumulating local niche databases that have value, then federating with others.

- Regeneration = generate then regenerate; generating new ideas by combining what already exists and creating surplus value that can then move around, but we need to do this better, faster and in collaboration.

- Emerging challenges must be tackled using constant evolution. One example would be transforming the three biggest cost drivers in modern society – housing, education and healthcare – into local income generators by making them community-based (decentralized).

- A bold regeneration experiment for leaders would be to read, learn, talk to people outside their immediate circles, broaden their reach, seek diversity, explore new ideas, remain open-minded, flexible and adaptable, and pilot on a small scale.

Find out more about Alfredo and his work here

https://www.sharedprosperity.co/

https://www.linkedin.com/in/alfredomathew/

https://www.alfredomathew.com/

  continue reading

142 episodes

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