GoodCompany Group supports the WWF Switzerland Tropical Rainforest Challenge

Ennovent announces the winners of the WWF Switzerland Tropical Forest Challenge

December 17, 2012 – Ennovent and WWF Switzerland are pleased to announce the winners of the Tropical Forest Challenge in two categories, company and startup. Launched in May 2012, the WWF Switzerland Tropical Forest Challenge is a global initiative managed by Ennovent on behalf of WWF Switzerland to discover the best for-profit enterprises from around the world that have a positive impact on the conservation of tropical forest biodiversity.

New Capitalist Junto

Please join Philadelphia's creative communities, investors, and institutions on June 6th for a group discussion of the New Capitalist Manifesto and the creation of "thick value"

For This Social Enterprise Accelerator in Philadelphia, It's All About Rigor

Do social enterprise founders lack sufficient business rigor? Do they focus too much on the social part and not enough on the money part which, after all, is what fuels the venture (and makes investors happy)?And, as a result, are they doomed to found companies that can’t, in business-speak, scale or get big enough to help a lot of the people they want to help?

Purpose Meets Profit

If you're ready to quit your day job to focus full-time on your social entrepreneurship, apply to GoodCompany Ventures, a free, intensive, three-month program.

GoodCompany Ventures, a volunteer-run program headed by veteran entrepreneurs, investors, and lawyers, was founded under Resources for Human Development, a 40-year-old social enterprise from Philadelphia

 

To read the full article, please visit:

http://www.generocity.org/news/467

The City of Philadelphia Selects PublicStuff to Build Philly311 App

PublicStuff Founder and CEO Lily Liu said, “We are thrilled to work with the City of Philadelphia to build out their 311 service request tool. The project is especially meaningful to us since we launched our company, PublicStuff, in the City of Philadelphia and consider it home...The organization began in a Philadelphia business incubator, Good Company Ventures, which was sponsored by the Nutter Administration.

One-Stop Incubators Hatching Social Enterprise Startups

All startups are alike–and that includes social enterprises
Well, sort of.
Depending on the business, founders pretty much all need  help fine-tuning their plan, figuring out the best way to market, creating their technology platform. Or maybe they just want a place to work that’s not in a Starbucks.

To read the entire article, please visit:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/annefield/2012/04/20/one-stop-incubators-hat...

Press Release: Merger and Call for Applicants for 2012 Ventures Program

Download PDF Version

PRESS RELEASE:  Philadelphia, PA – April 12, 2012  –  GoodCompany Group is pleased to announce the launch of nation’s most comprehensive resource for social entrepreneurs.

GoodCompany Group Merger.  GoodCompany Group, a 501(c)(3), is the result of the recent merger of two non-profit organizations dedicated to serving social entrepreneurs, Green Village Philadelphia and GoodCompany Ventures.  Green Village has developed a residential incubator consisting of 5,000 square feet of Class A office space to house up to 40 social entrepreneurs and offers mentoring and consulting services to non-resident entrepreneurs.  GoodCompany Ventures is the creator of the country’s leading accelerator program for social entrepreneurs, as described below.

Hot Poop! Sewage heat to warm building

Last month David Henderson, managing director of XPV Capital in Toronto, told me about the overlooked value in wastewater, otherwise known as sewage: “Wastewater is a terrible name for wastewater. There are incredibly valuable resources in a wastewater flow: energy, nutrients, other materials, water itself,” he said. “There are phosphates in there, there’s energy in there.”Today a Philadelphia-based company, NovaThermal Energy, announced its first U.S. project to warm a building with heat from sewage.

Tapping into a constant resource: sewage's heat

Among the many renewable energy sources — wind, solar, hydroelectric, biofuels — there is one to which we all contribute that has not yet managed to attract the romantic advocates who have embraced other forms of green energy. We’re speaking about the gray river of warmth flowing right beneath our feet: sewage.

A Philadelphia company, NovaThermal Energy L.L.C., wants to heat and cool buildings by tapping into the constant, guaranteed heat contained in wastewater. The process is called sewage geothermal.

Phila. Water Dept. system derives building heat from wastewater

A wastewater geothermal system for providing building heat was scheduled to be unveiled at 1 p.m. Thursday at the Philadelphia Water Department’s Southeast Water Pollution Control Facility.The system, which has an output of 1 million British Thermal Units per hour, is located in the building’s basement, so it can access and transfer heat from the adjacent sewage channel. It was made by Philadelphia-based NovaThermal Energy using technology developed in China. NovaThermal holds an exclusive license to the technology, as well as U.S. patents on improvements it has made to the system.