Vancouver Sun

WHY NOT BE THE CHANGE AT WORK?

You can alter the world and still pay your bills, write Craig and Marc Kielburger.

- Craig and Marc Kielburger founded a platform for social change that includes the internatio­nal charity Free The Children, the social enterprise Me to We and the youth empowermen­t movement We Day.

In Central Australia’s sprawling outback, Mark Glazebrook met a 15-year-old boy straddling a bike — a typical teen pose but for the gas can strapped to his face. A sniffing epidemic had ensnared local aboriginal youth in the spring of 2002, and Glazebrook travelled from Melbourne to help.

He wasn’t with a non-profit. In fact, as BP Australia’s corporate social responsibi­lity manager, Glazebrook worked for big oil. It might have been his company’s fuel the kid was sniffing, so his first thoughts went to product design.

“I thought, ‘Why couldn’t we turn our technical skills into a technical solution?’ ” he told us.

Today, people don’t just want a job, they want a calling. Millennial­s hold out for jobs that satisfy personal values (moving back in with mom and dad in the meantime). And mid-career profession­als delay retirement in favour of career makeovers with purpose. After years on the clock, who wouldn’t want to help change the world at their day job?

At the same time, most workers can’t risk their steady income to start a social enterprise, or renounce materialis­m and move to Kolkata to volunteer. Many profession­als have mortgages or kids who insist on being fed regularly.

Social intraprene­urs like Glazebrook maintain job security and use the resources of large companies to tackle some of the world’s biggest problems. They protest from within, while on the payroll. This is the best of both worlds at work — with personal, social and economic benefits.

Glazebrook and his team leveraged the core competenci­es of the business to solve an entrenched social issue. Engineers spent six months grappling with technical issues, and the result was Opal, a fuel low in aromatic hydrocarbo­ns that made it impossible to get high from its vapours. Gas-sniffing plummeted by up to 94 per cent in the outback region. And in 2013, the Australian government voted to make the use of Opal fuel mandatory in remote areas across the country. In addition to saving lives, BP cornered the rural market.

Meanwhile, in rural Kenya, Vodafone executive Nick Hughes noticed that, although millions of people didn’t have bank accounts, everyone owned a cellphone. Many small business owners simply carried wads of cash to distant suppliers, a dangerous practice. Vodafone wasn’t eager to gamble its R&D budget on an entry into Africa’s banking sector, but Hughes pushed past the resistance to create M-Pesa, a mobile money-transfer system. Subscriber­s store or send money via text message, make transfers, and even pay their children’s school fees from remote areas. M-Pesa has been hugely profitable, and has even spurred smallbusin­ess growth in rural regions. In 2014, 87 per cent of Kenya’s $55-billion GDP flowed through its services.

As social intraprene­urs gain traction, global support networks like the League of Intraprene­urs are popping up to teach you “How to Change the World and Still Pay Your Bills,” according to one blog post.

Social intraprene­urship has crept into Canada more slowly than in Europe or the U.K., but nonetheles­s, it has arrived.

The League of Intraprene­urs recently launched a Canadian chapter, a profession­al network to support agents of social change at the office. Several organizati­ons offer fellowship­s for intraprene­urs with a social conscience, including Engineers Without Borders Canada and the School for Social Entreprene­urs Ontario.

Corporate social change can come from the bottom up, but if it still seems overwhelmi­ng, try smaller gestures.

A volunteer committee that gives back outside the office will improve the well-being of your colleagues. Ideas for energy conservati­on, recycling or improved efficienci­es would be better managed with a dedicated green team, and would save the company money.

Taking on leadership positions to tackle social issues will boost your job satisfacti­on and earn the respect of other leaders.

Become a social intraprene­ur.

Social intraprene­urs ... maintain job security and use the resources of large companies to tackle some of the world’s biggest problems.

 ?? BRENT STIRTON/GETTY IMAGES ?? With M-Pesa, the result of one man’s desire to improve life for people around him, clients in Kenya can make financial transfers via mobile phone operations.
BRENT STIRTON/GETTY IMAGES With M-Pesa, the result of one man’s desire to improve life for people around him, clients in Kenya can make financial transfers via mobile phone operations.

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