Beyond Organizational Scale : Sproxil Celebrates Launch Of Schwab Foundation Report

 The world is a better place because of the people who have made it so.  A portion of these people are social entrepreneurs; men and women using the principles of business to run organizations whose goal is improving the quality of life. Social entrepreneurs understand that the world is a network of complicated systems interacting with each other to give the results that many accept as reality. For many, the need to improve this reality is what inspires what they do, so they study, analyze and integrate themselves into the system to begin to influence it. 

The process of influencing systems is often riddled with bureaucracy, cultural resistance, and outright antagonism. Sometimes they start to see results, real life validation that the work they do is veritably changing an element of the system. Naturally following this is the desire to scale operations; geographically for example, so that more people can benefit from the solution, thus increasing its impact. However, in some cases that will never be enough. And while their organizations might be thriving by strict business definitions, the frustration that comes with this realization always leaves more to be desired.

Confronting the complicated and often resistant systems that stand in the way of social impact is difficult enough, but some social entrepreneurs are taking an even more subversive approach: seeking to change the system itself. Rather than brainstorming solutions that are scalable organizationally, these social change agents look at how their solutions can be structured to achieve systemic scale. It begins with a reorientation so fundamental that it sometimes requires a reworking of the business model itself or establishment of a whole new organization to address the problem.

In 2010 when Sproxil introduced its anti-counterfeiting solution to Nigeria, a pilot was run with Biofem, a leading pharmaceutical distributor. The results were so good that the Nigerian government didn’t only endorse the solution but implemented legislation that compelled manufacturers or distributors of certain pharmaceutical products to adopt the technology. 
If these results were scaled to cover the rest of the world, for instance, the pharmaceutical industry would be secure. However, even a cursory look at the number of products which can lead to fatal outcomes if their counterfeits are ingested still show millions of consumer products largely uncovered, not to mention the economic loss to brands. 

Even if all governments were as centralized and thus powerful as the Nigerian government, they could not compel every manufacturer to adopt consumer protection solutions. A new product needed to be created with which Sproxil could engage brands directly, with enough value added to incentivize them positively. With the Sproxil Champion solution, Sproxil can engage manufacturers of other consumer products on a much wider scale and influence the system to ensure a lot of brands can provide authentic products to their customers. This is one among many examples of systems thinking detailed in the Schwab report.

As more social entrepreneurs converge around the idea of ‘systems change’ the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship, in collaboration with the Bertha Centre for Social Innovation & Entrepreneurship, UCT  Graduate School of Business, has put together ‘Social Entrepreneurship and Systems Entrepreneurship: From Organizational to Systemic Scale’ an insight report launched on the 2nd of May, to help social entrepreneurs  understand systems change thinking. 

Alongside Sproxil, five other social entrepreneurship from various continents were researched, and their case studies, as well as core lessons from their examples,  are included in the report, which will be very helpful reference material for social entrepreneurs.
Sproxil is honored to have been among the six social enterprises that were the subject of this study. We would like to thank the Schwab Foundation, the Bertha Centre for Social Innovation & Entrepreneurship, and every person who put in the time or lent their expertise to this project. We hope this report inspires you to be systemic in your thinking so that we can generate even more innovative ideas for changing the world on a broader scale.

Sproxil’s Ashifi Gogo Presenting at World Economic Forum Annual Meeting

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

Sproxil’s Ashifi Gogo Presenting at World Economic Forum Annual Meeting

Social Entrepreneur Recipient Examines Business Role In Addressing Societal Issues

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Cambridge, Mass. (January 19, 2015) – Sproxil®, Inc., a leading provider of world-class brand protection, is proud to announce Founder and CEO Ashifi Gogo has been selected to present at the 45th World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos-Klosters, Switzerland this week.  Dr. Gogo will be one of five featured speakers in the highly anticipated Open Forum Session “Should Business Lead the Social Agenda” slated for Friday, January 23, 18:30 – 20:00.   The prestigious invitation to participate in the Annual Meeting is due in part to the Schwab Foundation recognizing Dr. Gogo as one of 37 recipients of the 2014 Social Entrepreneur of the Year honor.

According to the Meeting syllabus, the Open Forum Dr. Gogo is participating in examines how Businesses play an increasingly important role in the global system, and face growing pressure from millennial consumers and employees to align core operations with social impact. Can businesses help to find a solution to global challenges, and should these challenges really be tackled by businesses?”

Dr. Gogo is the primary inventor of Sproxil’s flagship solution, Mobile Product Authentication™ (MPA™), which allows consumers to verify that products they buy are genuine by using a mobile phone and a simple, free text message. The solution uses a scratch card method, similar to that used for replenishing cellular talk-time. This allows users to reveal a one-time-use code on products and text the code to a call center phone number. A response is dispatched from Sproxil, indicating whether the product is genuine, potentially fake, or stolen.

Leading pharmaceutical companies, such as Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Serono, IPCA as well as regulatory organizations in the emerging markets of Africa and India have been leveraging the MPA solution to protect consumers from taking potentially harmful counterfeit and substandard medications since the company launched in 2009.  To date, the MPA solution has been used more than 14 million times to verify that products are genuine.

The MPA solution can be used to verify any tangible item, and Sproxil’s solution is currently being implemented and used for products across multiple industries including skin care, supplements and vitamins, electrical cabling, automotive and motorcycle parts and agro-business, to name a few.

Over 40 heads of state and government, as well as 2,500 other leaders from business and society will convene at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting to discuss The New Global Context.

“It’s an honor to be invited to participate in the Open Forum discussion about the critical role businesses play in the Social Agenda, as well as being recognized as a Social Entrepreneur, joining a list of recipients that are dedicated to making positive, powerful differences in the world,” states Dr. Gogo. “It not only recognizes Sproxil’s work to combat counterfeit products, but also helps us gain recognition beyond the countries we currently operate in, so we can have a greater impact in regions most vulnerable to counterfeiting.”

“Each year the Davos Meeting brings together top political and business leaders from around the world to address critical global challenges. I am honored to join the dialogue,” he continued.

 

Contact:

Jeff Loucks, PR Manager, Sproxil

jeff.loucks@sproxil.com

+1 (781) 571-9330