I guess my own journey from the dark side began when I left the City. I loved being a research analyst but once I drifted up into senior management (eventually as Head of Equities in Europe for Lehman Brothers), I became part of the world that I didn't find especially comfortable.
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By: Rodney Schwartz

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I guess my own journey from the dark side began when I left the City. I loved being a research analyst but once I drifted up into senior management (eventually as Head of Equities in Europe for Lehman Brothers), I became part of the world that I didn't find especially comfortable. Research analysis was meritocratic -- being a manager at an aggressive investment bank was anything but.

At the same time, I was getting to an age where existential questions began to feature and my four children were getting to an age where their questions about "the meaning of life?" became increasingly challenging. When you are dispensing moral messages aplenty, but work in an environment that is morally uncomfortable, your kids notice this disconnect; I was unwilling or unable to live such a bifurcated life. I felt the work I did needed to be something that was consistent with my values and would make my kids proud. It took me a while to figure out what to do.

Fortunately three simultaneous roles helped clarify things. I consulted at a world-leading investment bank, and I was Chair of one of the country's largest charities and also Chair of Justgiving. Let's just say that I found the first two dispiriting.

I realized the City and I were finished with each other, and that the governance issues at the charity raised questions. On the other hand, Justgiving was inspiring as a well-run business that was creating value for shareholders and customers. At the same time, it was generating enormous social impact (well over $3 billion in charitable donations has been facilitated through the website, making it the world's largest player). It became obvious to me that doing well and doing good were not mutually exclusive - and my life's mission became how to use my skills to "create 100 JustGivings". This was the genesis of ClearlySo.

ClearlySo is an unusual investment bank, which only raises capital for businesses with a high social or environmental impact. It does so from 700+ European institutional investors and the U.K.'s largest network of HNWIs. The businesses we assist range from early stage growth ventures looking for as little as £100,000 up to mature businesses and charities seeking £20 million or more. In addition, we are a placement agent raising tens of millions for impact investment funds. We have helped 50+ organizations; they have raised about £70 million in transactions in which we have assisted.

Putting the money to the side, what really gets me out of bed is the amazing work that is enabled by the capital we help to find. I am often moved to tears when hearing of the beneficiaries of the work our clients do - they all change lives for the better. Aduna's superfood products, for example, create sustainable livelihoods for farmers in sub-Saharan Africa, while Framework's innovative homelessness intervention models help some of the most vulnerable in society. What could possibly be more inspiring work?

What's unique about us is that we seek to bring impact into all investing. I don't see impact investment as a niche, but rather a way for all investment to be a force for good. Whereas others talk about an "asset class", I see social (and environmental) impact as the third dimension to all investing, alongside financial return and risk.

Our industry is booming as financial institutions and their clients begin to analyze and assess the impact of all their investments and seek financial instruments which explicitly take that into account. We are at the forefront of this movement and see ourselves operating at the edge between impact investing and mainstream pools of capital.

Looking back 10 or 20 years from now, ClearlySo will be successful if we do not need to exist. In such a world, it would be perverse not to consider the social, ethical and environmental impacts of all investments, and investors will be making conscious allocations on these three dimensions.

I also believe that in the years ahead the negative and positive impacts ("externalities") of organizations will be "internalized"; if you cause society pain, you pay the full price of that pain, and if what you do benefits society, you secure a large portion of that benefit. Under such a system we would all be better off; if I were Prime Minister I would implement this tomorrow.

These are some of the themes explored and celebrated by UK based social enterprise Pioneers for Change. Their inaugural 6-month Fellowship kicked off on 23 and 24 March, 2015 in London. Pioneers for Change is an initiative of Adessy Associates.

About Rodney:
Rodney Schwartz is CEO and Founder of ClearlySo. He leads the strategy and growth of the company. Rodney's background in equity research, investment banking and venture capital makes him an unconventional but authoritative champion for the social enterprise sector. Joining Wall Street in 1980, he rose to become the number one ranked financial services analyst at PaineWebber and then held senior management posts at Lehman Brothers and Paribas, before leaving the sector in 1997 to found the venture capital firm Catalyst.

A pioneer in the impact investment marketplace, he transformed Catalyst into a social business consultancy and in 2008 he launched ClearlySo. Rodney also teaches social finance at the Said Business School (Oxford), is Former Chair of Shelter and JustGiving, and serves on the board of The Green Thing and Spacehive. He holds an MBA and BA from the University of Rochester.

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