All for Profit and Profiting for All

College students are starting for-profit companies that promote social causes

June 23, 2009 RSS Feed Print
  • Comment (1)

College students are known for their progressive thinking and desire to make the world a better place. Now, some are pushing past theoretical ideas and taking steps to put their money where their mouth is by starting for-profit companies that promote social causes.

While studying abroad in Paris during his junior year at Drexel University, Timothy Ericson was impressed by the environmentally friendly bicycle-sharing system he encountered. After doing some research, Ericson learned that the program had 20,600 bicycles, 1,451 stations and more than 42 million users, and he saw an opportunity to take the concept back home and make some money while promoting a healthier environment. “Hopping on a bicycle to go to school and work would be a great convenience for me,” says Ericson, 23. “But beyond the convenience factor, this system reduces carbon emissions, which is something I believe in strongly.”

Building a company with staying power was important to Ericson, so he and his co-founders, James Perkins, 25, and Jason Meinzer, 26, opted to incorporate CityRyde as a for-profit entity when it launched in 2007. “You have to make green to go green,” Ericson says. “We knew we needed to have a model that allowed us to sustain the business while still helping us save the environment.” After a year of planning and development, Philadelphia-based CityRyde has positioned itself as an authoritative bike-sharing consulting firm, offering services to companies across the U.S. and projecting sales of $1.1 million this year.

Recent Harvard grad Joe Green also believed that for-profit work was the best way to set up his socially minded venture, Causes. Launched as a Facebook application in May 2007, Berkeley, Calif.-based Causes enables users to create awareness for and donate to nonprofits, charities and even political causes.

“We thought hard about whether to be a nonprofit or a for-profit, because we really started the company with social aims in mind,” says Green, 25. “We decided on a C corp because ultimately we thought it would make us a more effective company if we could hire the best engineers, who typically want things like stock options.”

In addition to attracting high-quality employees, the for-profit company structure helped Green and co-founder Sean Parker, 29, raise capital. “People want to know that what they invest in is going to be sustained and is not going to need continuous infusions of cash,” Green says.

Today, Causes has more than 35 million active monthly users who have collectively raised over $6 million for various causes in the past year. This success has proven to Green that college students can make a positive impact through social entrepreneurship. “Our internal tag line is, ‘Anyone can change the world,’” he says, “and we really mean that.”

Joel Holland, 23, is the CEO of Footage Firm in McLean, Virginia. You can reach him at joel@joelkentholland.com.

Copyright © 2009 Entrepreneur.com, Inc. All rights reserved.

Reader Comments Read all comments (1)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

I applaud the zeal and the passion- that is the core of any business of any kind; they will come face-to-face with the clash of cash flow, regulatory gobblegook eggheads and everything else and the test of their metal will be can they adapt their "mission" so that their businesses survive long enough for them to accomplish something. It is not mission or profit, it is mission AND profit.

Gary of TN 7:49PM July 26, 2009

Most Connected Company

Find out how America’s best companies are succeeding by tapping big data, mobile solutions, social media, and crowdsourcing to adapt and compete in an increasingly connected world.

See the companies »

advertisement

Slide Shows

Best-Sellers to Help Your 2013 Finances

Seeking advice? Check out these acclaimed financial books.

10 Warning Signs of Identity Theft

About 10 million Americans fall victim each year.

Items You Should Buy Online

Skip the store to save money and time.

Latest Video

advertisement