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    • How We Made $2,000 in 8 Hours

      February 22, 2011

    • HELP US CHOOSE COLORS FOR THE VERSALETTE!

      January 4, 2012

    • What do you Want?

      October 3, 2012

    • See it First: The {r}evolution apparel Website

      July 19, 2011

    • The Last Post from All of Us Revolution

      November 15, 2011

    • An Update from K & S

      January 30, 2013

    • Closing a Chapter: Life Beyond {r}evolution apparel

      December 12, 2012

    • Congrats to our One Week Versalette Challenge Winner, Michelle!

      December 6, 2012

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      November 28, 2012

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      November 28, 2012

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  • HOW DID WE GET HERE?

    We've been writing on this blog since September, 2010. Check out the condensed version.

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Tagged: goals

Why You Have to Try Everything

The list of people we’ve talked to about sustainable fabrics is absolutely ridiculous:

A University of Missouri Professor.

A supermodel.

The Department of Agriculture.

Cotton farmers from California to Texas.

Wool farmers in rural New Zealand.

And it goes on.

After a thousand dead ends, we finally met the right person. Someone with answers — someone who can take our ideas and “turn them into reality,” for cliche’s sake. And I’ve realized that this is basically how life works. You try a thousand ridiculous things, and only after 99 percent of them don’t work out, something does.

In every aspect of life. Relationships. Jobs. Businesses. Hobbies.

Getting to where you want to be depends on trying everything. And if you don’t, you just might not end up where you want to be.

So you have to call strangers to talk about fabrics when you barely have enough knowledge to formulate questions. You have to email people 10 times. You even have to be willing to call the government.

And not just in your business or your job. In your life as a whole.

You have to date. A lot. And get rejected sometimes. And go on lots of job interviews. And take new classes about new things. Be doggedly persistent in new business ventures. And try everything you were ever interested in, because you never know when something will click.

Because when it does, it’s beautiful. {r}

{You’ll be hearing from us in Asheville next week!}

  • March 24, 2011
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Wearing Local for One Year: A Slow Fashion Interview {Part II}

Yesterday, we had the chance to interview Rebecca Burgess, the face of The Fibershed Project. She has committed to wearing clothes made only from materials sourced within a 150-mile radius of her home in California, and as her year of wearing local wraps up, we asked her a few questions about sustainable design and personal challenges.

{r} You are also an educator and textile artist. As designers wanting to make the best decisions for people and planet, what advice would you give us about entering the industry, compromise, and sustainability?

I highly recommend the mantra, ‘make do with what appears to be little.’

Start from the inside out. What do you really want to create  in this world? What do you ideally want to offer as a service or good to your fellow human? What is the systemic impact of your product?

When I reflect on the word ‘ideal’–  it reminds me how this project began… it was an ideal scenario… and the question existed… but can the ideal work?

Your ideal becomes your goal, and you move towards it. You take leaps, and risks, and sometimes you work with self-imposed limitation to get there. Ideal doesn’t land in your lap, you make it happen.

Now that I am closer than ever to my ideal scenario, I’m better informed about how I would want this to be scaled to become available to others in my community. Keeping with the ideals, the clothing would be a product of a human-scale, and deeply ecologically thoughtful processes.

The current caliber of ‘sustainable’ textile production is summed up by the owner of one particularly famous environmentally friendly clothing company (that I’ll remain nameless), who says, ‘The cost of manufacturing is inherently going to damage the earth, that’s why all business needs to have a pay-back plan to the planet.’

What that person is saying and accepting as truth is that we as humans are going to continue to have a material culture that does damage. The problem with that scenario is that we live on a finite planet, and damaging manufacturers cannot continue to expand on a finite planet. This clothing company is not inherently sustainable, nor is it doing anything to create a vibrant and thriving planet; ultimately all the money put towards conservation, and protection of the environment is at best, (in a historical snapshot), neutralizing the effects of an ever- growing manufacturing process that will eventually exceed all attempts at neutralizing.

I think the next wave of textile production will be looking at how to manufacture regeneratively. How to make the process a living, ecological model. Can you eliminate the concept of waste? If you can close your loops, and balance your carbon, then your system is as harmonious as the process of breathing. And, it will last the generations, and not simply be a blip on the screen towards ecological collapse.

Planting the dye plants, harvested later for dyeing fabrics

Leather in Fibershed: DIY

Local sheep used to make socks and legwarmers, among other things

Part of the dyeing process

{r} And the question everyone wants to know: When the year ends, what’s next for you and Fibershed?

The next wave for Fibershed is to expand out of my wardrobe, and begin to look closely at how we can create a bioregional supply chain that does no harm. We are celebrating the Fibershed as a whole, and bringing attention to our plans for the first ever, solar-powered, farm-based cotton and wool mill. We’re throwing a party on May 1st, and you’re all invited!

We are inviting people from everywhere — because we see a Fibershed as a replicable module. This isn’t just about our bioregion, its about the potential that exists in all regions!

As the personal challenge ends, I forsee Fibershed having a for-profit and non-profit wing. The for-profit wing will be a host of bio-regional fiber growers and processors working together to create the best possible garments. The non-profit wing will be working on R&D (research and development), and grant-writing to secure the funds to help develop innovative manufacturing systems — everything from rotational grazing regimes, so that farmers can get help to improve their soils, and sequester carbon, to developing closed-loop water systems in our fermentation indigo dye house.

It is all completely exciting, and the best part is, it’s already happening!

A huge thanks to Rebecca for sharing her expertise with us. Her story makes us re-think the boundaries of a seemingly-oxymoron, “sustainable fashion.” We encourage everyone to check out Fibershed and spread the word!

  • March 15, 2011
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11 Ways We've Redefined the Good Life

About a month ago, we were asked to participate in a new project that couldn’t have been more in sync with our own ideals and philosophies. The brains behind The 11 Project is a woman named Brooke Thomas, and her goal was to compile a magazine, both in print and online, that focuses on “redefining the good life.”

The 11 Project can best be explained like this:

In the words of Pamela Slim, “The conventional world order has blown up.” And yet we’re stuck with the same lingering ideas of what it means to be happy, fulfilled, and successful. [The 11 Project] is basically un-earthing all the awesomeness that human beings have to offer by seeking out people from a broad range of fields and backgrounds and talking to them about what they’re contributing to the world.

In the company of Chris Guillebeau and 11 other people who are rejecting the status quo and living on their own terms, we tackled the 11 challenging and thought-provoking questions that will make up the base of the magazine. We answer questions ranging from, “What do you think the pursuit of happiness is all about?” to “What’s your idea of Hell?”

11 people. 11 questions. And the launch issue, Outside-the-Box, debuts today on January 11th. You can check out our interview and the rest of the first free issue here (you can find us at lucky #11).

What does the “good life” mean to you? {r}

  • January 11, 2011
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11 Ways We’ve Redefined the Good Life

About a month ago, we were asked to participate in a new project that couldn’t have been more in sync with our own ideals and philosophies. The brains behind The 11 Project is a woman named Brooke Thomas, and her goal was to compile a magazine, both in print and online, that focuses on “redefining the good life.”

The 11 Project can best be explained like this:

In the words of Pamela Slim, “The conventional world order has blown up.” And yet we’re stuck with the same lingering ideas of what it means to be happy, fulfilled, and successful. [The 11 Project] is basically un-earthing all the awesomeness that human beings have to offer by seeking out people from a broad range of fields and backgrounds and talking to them about what they’re contributing to the world.

In the company of Chris Guillebeau and 11 other people who are rejecting the status quo and living on their own terms, we tackled the 11 challenging and thought-provoking questions that will make up the base of the magazine. We answer questions ranging from, “What do you think the pursuit of happiness is all about?” to “What’s your idea of Hell?”

11 people. 11 questions. And the launch issue, Outside-the-Box, debuts today on January 11th. You can check out our interview and the rest of the first free issue here (you can find us at lucky #11).

What does the “good life” mean to you? {r}

  • January 11, 2011
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A New Year, A New Us: How to Abandon Excuses

One day, Shannon and I were taking a walk, and started talking about yoga.

Me: “I’ve been wanting to take classes for so long! I just never do. I keep thinking that I will when I have money.”

Shan: “I know, me too…”

And then we talked about all the other things we’d like to do in life, but because of money, laziness, or time, we haven’t.

For example, some simple things from my list:
Do 30 sit-ups and push-ups every morning while listening to a feel-good song.
Take another photography class.
Spend a season snowboarding.

And a few things from Shannon’s:
Compartmentalize my time better, so I remember to leave time for “fun” things.
Start mediating again (in addition to the yoga).
Move to a new city, meet new people.

We are probably the queens of, “Just do it; excuses are for wimps.”

But we can be guilty, too. We have a vision of what we want our lives to look like “someday.” And we keep thinking that we’ll get there “someday,” and it will be great. When we have more of this or that, and we can do all those cool things that make up the cool people we want to be.

That day on our walk, I think we reminded each other that if we would just do those cool things now, our lives would be what we want them to be.

No more excuses. It’s a new year. A new us. More motivated for a more balanced life. More in tune with the present. More active. Dare I say, more “proactive” (I’ll be snowboarding in Colorado for the next few months, and Shannon is moving to hipster Austin at the end of January, both of us accomplishing our #3).

What have you been wanting to do in life? {r}

  • December 30, 2010
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Case Study: How to Escape the 9 to 5

As promised in our last post, this is the first in a series of case studies highlighting other 20-somethings who have escaped the 9-5 corporate culture and are pursuing their career and lifestyle goals.

Emily Belyea is my best friend from high school and has recently written off the ‘real world’ to pursue her own location-independent web design company. If you’re wondering if it’s really possible to break free, then read on.

{r}: Tell me about your first post-grad year. What did you do after you graduated? Did you have a plan? How did things pan out?

E: When I graduated in May 2008, I continued as a Marketing Assistant for a guitar company in Boston that I was already interning for. It was only a temporary position, but I told myself it would be permanent. I figured if I thought it was a perfect match, then so would they. At the end of the day, they didn’t have it in their budget to hire me full time and let me go.

With three weeks notice, I eagerly applied for positions in advertising, getting the same answer every time; “Sorry, we’re on a hiring freeze.” Aside from my frustration, I didn’t sense the natural adrenaline in myself that I normally get when applying for jobs, so I knew something wasn’t right.

My friend Shannon had been in Australia for about three weeks by the time I had left my job. Our emails back and forth were “I miss you.” “I’m having a blast!” “I’m miserable at home.” “I love everything about my life!” “I can’t find a job.” “I get paid $17 an hour to bartend!” The decision was right there in front of me. I had no job, no lease, no car and no boyfriend, so I booked a one way flight to Sydney.

{r}: Were you worried about missing out on climbing the corporate ladder and doing what everyone else said you ‘should’ do?

E: After I booked my flight to Sydney, an overwhelming peacefulness came over me. The irony was that while I was booking my flight, I was sitting in a hospital bed next to my mother, just a few hours before she went into quadruple bypass surgery.

I wasn’t worried about missing out on corporate culture because I was already starting to think it was a load of crap from my experience in interviewing-for-jobs-that-didn’t-exist. I wasn’t worried about finances, because I’m always worried about finances, so it was no different from any other day. My future plans to return home scared me a bit, because I was already thinking about what I was going to do with my life when I returned home from traveling.

{r}: Did you have any student loans? How did you pay them and other expenses while you were living in Australia for a year? What do you do for health benefits?

E: From the day I decided to go traveling, I had about three months to save money. I waitressed and worked as a spa receptionist, day and night, all the time, to save the money. Knowing that I could work in Australia meant that I could help supplement my living expenses once I got there, but Shannon and I were planning a big trip to New Zealand and Fiji, so I wouldn’t have an income for a month. I had to plan living and traveling expenses, student loans for a year, and a little extra money for padding.

I always make my student loans my first priority. Since I have to pay $160 a month, I stuck the first $2,000 I made in a savings account and set up an automatic monthly payment for the next 12 months. Once that was done, I could start saving for my trip. My goal was $3,000 and I ended up saving about $2,700 total.

{r}: What was your life like when you returned from Australia? What plans did you make?

E: I returned home in December of 2009 and was able to get my receptionist job back at the spa. My boyfriend, who I met in Australia, lives in England, and we were trying to figure out how to continue our relationship, while re-aggregating ourselves into the “real world.” I saved up enough money to visit him a few months later, and while I was there I scored an marketing internship in Central London. I was so excited that there was finally a solution to us being together again. Then I learned that I couldn’t accept it because Americans aren’t allowed to do any work, paid or unpaid, in the UK without a visa or work sponsorship. As the efficient ways of the corporate world go, they kind of apologized profusely as they shut their door in my face.

{r}: How did you turn such a huge disappointment into something positive? What plans did you make to allow yourself to still go to England?

E: From my understanding of the UK visa process, I realized that I couldn’t work there unless I found an employer who thought I was better at the job than any other person residing in the UK. This, similar to the interviewing-for-jobs-that-didn’t-exist experience, served as a turning point.

In Australia, Shannon and I always talked about how there must be a way to dodge the 9 to 5, and to travel and be happy all the time. I’ve always had a love for design, and I’m inherently creative but had no useful skills to apply. Additionally, I had some experience with HTML code from an internship in college and knew that if I had enough practice, I too, could learn to design websites. I decided to hire a web tutor for 10 weeks for $300 and save up three months of living expenses to move to London. I could be with my boyfriend and devote time to setting up my own web design company.

{r}: How are you funding your lifestyle in London if you don’t have an income?

E: Since I can’t work to supplement my living expenses, I have to live very simply and cost effectively. I set aside $450 for my loans and an additional $3,500 for living and spending. I share the rent with my boyfriend in a neighborhood just outside of Central London ($100 p/week), grocery shop and cook ($40 p/week), use a pay as you go phone ($25 p/month), take public transport ($40 p/week), go to libraries instead of cafes to work (free), and then beer, coffee, curries ($50 p/week max). Additionally, I write articles for an online travel company, and that gives me an extra $100 p/month.

{r}: Tell us a little bit about your web design company, Emily Belyea Creative.

E: It’s a bit of a lifestyle and website design combination. I want to build sites for people who are trying to do the same thing we are. It’s great there are sites that provide free access to building a blog, but the free options don’t always do what you need them to do. When trying to build a brand and an online presence, you need to be able to put your logo where you want it, put photos where you want them, and use a color scheme that enlivens your brand. While most entrepreneurs and bloggers can’t afford the outrageous prices of design firms, I want to be a reasonably priced, creative option for them. We’re all in the same boat here, so why not help each other out?

{r}: What are your plans for returning to the States after your three months expire?

E: My plan for when I leave England is to dodge the Boston winter and continue to work towards my professional goals with Emily Belyea Creative. I’m going to need to work a waitressing or bartending job for a while until I can do this full time, but I’m excited about working towards that point. The nice thing is that I’m location independent, so I can live anywhere with Wi-Fi.

{r}: What are your hopes for your new business and what advice do you have for other aspiring small business entrepreneurs?

E: For right now, I just want to get my get my name out there. I want bloggers, entrepreneurs, and anyone who’s trying to create an online portfolio to know that there are options besides using a free template and hiring a big design company.

Now that the hovering “real world” job is out of my future completely, I can see things a lot more clearly. My advice to aspiring entrepreneurs is to just do it. Sitting on decisions until you’re absolutely positive it will work out, is just a waste of time. You’ll breathe easy knowing that you’re already on your way, and you’ll be surprised at how things work themselves out.

{r}: And finally, how do you overcome the fear of following the normal path that society has laid out and instead, following a path of your own? What can you say to people who are in the 9-5  and desperately want to get out?

E: I’d say do it, and bring a friend. It’s a lot easier to follow your own path when you have a group of supporters cheering you on, and it’s a lot more fun when you have people walking beside you. If you don’t find support from within your own community, don’t let it discourage you, because people won’t always understand and that’s just how it is. Instead, find the people out there that believe in this path and keep motivating yourself through their blogs and their projects. Since you’re here reading All Of Us, you’re already on your way :)

Emily launched Emily Belyea Creative on October 18th. To visit her website, go to www.emilybelyea.com You can also follow her on Twitter at @belyeadesignco {r}

  • October 20, 2010
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How We “Do It”: Escaping the 9 to 5

We recently received an insightful comment from a reader asking how we’re able to fund our unique lifestyles while also financing a business. She assumed that both Kristin and I come from very comfortable backgrounds and have our day-to-day bills taken care of. She also questioned if it was realistic for us to encourage other 20-somethings to ‘join the revolution’ and quit the 9 to 5 when she felt that only a select few, in privileged situations like ours, could afford to do that.

We really couldn’t fault her for her assumptions. This lifestyle does seem pretty unattainable if you consider the “typical path” society has laid out for us. This post is longer than usual, but it’s an attempt to explain the nitty-gritty for those of you wondering if we’re stashing trust funds.

How Shannon “Does It”

The Fall before my May 2008 graduation, I was meeting with a tutor several times a week to prepare for the LSAT. Then, less than two weeks prior to the exam, after I flushed almost a 1,000 dollars of my own money down the toilet, I told my tutor I quit. I never took the test, and instead, I bought a one-way ticket to Australia for the following September.

After I graduated, I moved home to Boston to save money for my big move. I waitressed at a popular bar in the city and by the end of the summer had saved up roughly $7,000.

The key to being able to travel for the past two years is that I don’t just “go traveling.” I’ve worked in every place I’ve been (except Southeast Asia). I’ve used my bartending wages to sustain my cost of living while using my savings to pay for flights and travel. Based on a $17-25 (Australian) wage with no tips, I could afford to live in a flat across from the beach and pay for all other expenses (food, nights out, touristy things).

I lived this way for six months in Australia, and in between, took vacations to New Zealand and Fiji. With the rest of my savings (and frequent flier miles), I spent two months backpacking and volunteering in Viet Nam, Cambodia and Thailand where the cost of living is virtually nothing.

I returned home to Boston in May with whole-hearted intentions of getting a “real job.” Instead, I (again) bartended in Boston for the summer and moved to South Africa in the beginning of October. So for four months, I didn’t have any rent or expenses, but I basically became a hermit. I didn’t go out, I shopped consignment, and I just focused on saving (my friends can attest). By the time I left, I had another $15,000 saved up ($5,000 came from selling my car) and found a share-house in Cape Town for about $250 a month. I also bartended three nights a week.

I’ve been very fortunate that my parents were willing to shelter and feed me for four months out of the year (three separate times) — I know there are others who don’t have that option. I’m also lucky to not have any student loans, and I’m covered under my parent’s health insurance until September 2011. Having said that, I was financially cut off the moment I graduated with a degree, so my day-to-day bills aren’t paid for by anyone but me.

When I returned from South Africa in June I came home with a $7,000 cushion. From there, I went back into my old routine, found a bartending job and started saving. I set a realistic goal for myself in the beginning of July — $12,000 saved, including the $7,000 cushion — and as of my last shift in the beginning of October, I exceeded my goal by $410.

Believe me, my summers aren’t fun, but changing my lifestyle for four months out of the year has allowed me to do some pretty awesome things for the rest of the time. It comes down to having different priorities: I’ve given up owning a car, buying a new wardrobe each season, and I don’t get sucked into having the latest trendy gadgets (my cell is a Samsung flip phone, one of the first models, I think). I’m able to live this lifestyle because I’ve chosen to value traveling and life experiences, and not material things.

How Kristin “Does It”

Before I delve into the hardships of living this “lifestyle,” let me first talk about the obvious privileges I enjoy.

I didn’t pay for college. I had a sizable scholarship, and my grandparents and parents paid for the rest. Because of this, I was able to save about $4,000 working throughout college.

My parents gave me a car (a 1996 model) to use during high school and college. After graduation, I sold it and kept the money. Not many parents let their kids do that.

I am incredibly lucky in many ways, the least of which is the money my parents have shelled out for me to have a great education and a comfortable lifestyle. Their constant support of my strange travels and crazy ideas, plus their confidence that I will always make it “work,” is the greatest privilege of all.

But it hasn’t always been easy. I change jobs a lot. I move a lot. I am lonely sometimes. There are high highs and low lows. I once joked with my roommate about scraping excess ranch dressing back into the bottle, because we were so poor.

I’ve worked some awful jobs and some great jobs. Like a bar in West Philly, where a guy got knifed while I was working there. Or another bar in Australia, where I was paid $44 per hour on holidays. This past year, I sat in an empty bar in New Orleans, making no money, on Mardi Gras day (which happened to be my 24th birthday). I missed all the celebrations I love this year, standing behind the bar dealing with drunks. But now, I’m sitting in a hotel overlooking Guatemala’s most beautiful lake.

After working for a year in Australia (and getting about $5,000 back in taxes), plus working for eight months in New Orleans with cheap rent, I’ve saved about $12,000. I have rarely made over $500 per week. But I’m also the queen of frugality, and I have shifted my priorities (from car to bicycle, for example) so that I can save money for my big dreams.

Even without the money Shannon and I have saved, we think that starting a business is a viable option for anyone with determination. Money is an excuse, and so is time. Plenty of people with full-time jobs start businesses, for less than $1000. It’s all a matter of finding a business opportunity that’s right for your lifestyle and means.

We will “admit” to being privileged (of course most of us living in America with internet access are) but we will also say this: revolutionizing your life is something anyone can do, with the right ingredients — none of which are money.

If you’re still not convinced, we’re going to post a series of case studies within the coming months. We’ll highlight individual 20-somethings (some with student loans and debt) that have broken out of the 9 to 5 to follow an unconventional path towards fulfilling their dreams.

For anyone who wants to talk more about changing your lifestyle, please don’t hesitate to comment or e-mail us directly at shannon@allofusrevolution.com and kristin@allofusrevolution.com. We know we can figure out a way for you to break free. {r}

  • October 18, 2010
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Learning from the Experts: Craig Gonzales

Since launching our blog at the beginning of September, we’ve been blown away by the amount of support from people wanting to help us. Strangers have reached out from all over the world, offering advice based on their own experiences. Craig Gonzales is one of those people. He was kind enough to answer our questions about doing business in the developing world, and gave us some tips as we start our journey.

When Craig Gonzales began his PhD, his long-term career goal was “to save the world and get rich in the process.” Eventually, he realized that studying philosophy wasn’t going to lead him down that path, so he revamped his plan.

Craig spent the next year studying social enterprise and sustainable business models. During that time, he came up with a theory: for-profit businesses can increase the standard of living in the developing world. To prove it to himself, he decided to move to Ghana and learn more about the non-profit structure.

Craig worked for a fair trade NGO called Women in Progress/Global Mamas as an educator and researcher. He taught the Ghanaian women in the cooperative how to maintain their books, apply for loans and save money. He also conducted research to figure out the growth rate of income for the women (some had increased their yearly income by more than 1,000 percent in the three years they had been working!).

Unfortunately, Craig realized that although the women increased their earnings, their standard of living did not increase. With each woman’s success, every aunt, uncle, cousin and nephew came out of the woodwork with unpaid medical, school or food bills. While their extended families received a tiny influx of help, the women never rose above the poverty line.

Craig’s experience in Ghana convinced him that the NGO system was part of the problem — a “talent drain” so-to-speak. The smartest employees spent too much time trying to find money to keep the organization afloat, and the women were left only marginally better off. He left Ghana with his theory affirmed: for-profit businesses are the way to make a difference in developing countries.

Craig’s experience in the for-profit and non-profit sectors of business have gained him valuable insight that he’s taken the time to share with us. Here is his advice:

  • There are two of you and there are “clothing fairs” in the U.S. starting in January. Get a product line together ASAP and go to those exhibitions. Make a beautiful product, but make the design and prototypes as soon as you can. Then go to the U.S. and sell the crap out of it. January through February is when the stores buy stock and make relationships with distributors.
  • Don’t make your clothes “South American-y” (we don’t plan to). Make them look bad ass. Make sure what you sell is something you’d wear.
  • Trust each other without question. It is hard work. You need to rely on each other.
  • Make the business for-profit. Then spend the next six months building a back-end and selling the product. There is no reason a for-profit business can’t redistribute the profits to the workers/people.
  • Use the excess cash-flow to hire a really, really great partner. Offer to give equity to someone with a.) South American retail experience, b.) development/social enterprise experience, c.) the skills you don’t have.
  • Good people SHOULD cost money. You need to be making money to hire good people, get good equipment and to ensure quality products.
  • Don’t rely on charity or handouts. Rely on a great product, a great process, and quick delivery, all with fair wages and increased standard of living for all partners/workers.
  • Once basic needs are met (water, health, food, shelter), I believe the only way out of poverty is through economic sustainability.

Craig has recently started an education company in Bangkok, helping Thais gain admittance and scholarships into U.S. universities. His long-term goal is to provide social enterprise consulting and prove that he can make business work in the developing world. We wish him the best of luck! {r}

  • October 10, 2010
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Video: Your 5-Year Autobiography

Shannon shares one of her favorite techniques in applying the law of attraction and making it work for you.

What do you want to do in the next five years? {r}

Here’s a PDF to help get you started: Your 5-Year Autobiography

  • September 25, 2010
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