Posted by: Lilly | July 20, 2008

from NextBillion.net - How to Write About Failed Bottom of the Pyramid

My personal experience shows that learning from mistakes is the most powerful. This is also borne out by a large number of entrepreneurs as well as educational experts and organisational learning practitioners. However, true examples are rare. Thus, coming across the post below is very valuable.

How to Write About Failed Bottom of the Pyramid Ventures
Submitted by Rob Katz on July 17, 2008 - 09:47.
Published in: Microfinance | Miscellaneous

Like any business, base/bottom of the pyramid ventures fail - often. I have neither the space nor the inclination to list those I know of - besides, writers from Erik Simanis to Aneel Karnani to Anand K. Jaiswal have done some of the heavy lifting for me.

We don’t talk enough about failed bottom of the pyramid ventures. After all, what CEO wants to risk his company by talking about all the things they did wrong?

Answer: Matt Flannery. The Kiva CEO is incredibly forthright when discussing what they’ve done well and what they haven’t. His latest blog post is practically a how-to guide for talking about failure inside a BoP venture.

Ultimately, Flannery’s self-effacing and honest tone makes me trust him and Kiva more, even as he discusses huge loan defaults in their portfolio. Why does this work?

1. Know what you did wrong, and say it. Don’t equivocate. Matt comes out and admits - in plain English - that Kiva rushed into partnerships without sufficient due diligence.
2. Don’t blame others. Sure, the political situation in Kenya is tough, and corruption in many African countries is high - but Matt isn’t trying to pass the buck.
3. Be personal. Matt isn’t using corporate communications lingo - instead, he offers a “(sh**)list of partnerships that closed in bad faith.” Unprofessional? Only if you’re a corporate communications consultant. To the rest of us, this is honesty, plain and simple.

For maximum effect - and to learn from the master - read Matt’s post. While you’re there, subscribe to his Kiva Chronicles blog. You won’t be disappointed.

Responses

Learning by doing and by failing is distinctly the most valuable experience, Lilly! I can only add from the two partners who talked to me about “standard business practice” and who were certainly not as able as was necessary. And I can talk about the would-be CEO who was ever so concerned about my confidentiality agreements and who then complained that I was not willing to share my knowledge with him while withholding my computer…

So it’s about people and their integrity and our ability to discrimiate: in business, in bed and in between the places we share in our lives - no matter where on our planet, no matter whether we deal in dollars or other currencies.

If only currencies were issued and managed better! But that’s on my other blog…

Thanks for making interesting reading available as ever, Lilly!

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