Opinion: Nicholas Robinson, corporate affairs general manager, Contact Energy
Akina's social enterprise accelerator Launchpad will come to an end next month. It will be the culmination of six months of hard work for eleven teams who have been focused on growing their businesses and addressing some of the biggest social and environmental problems facing our communities.
The Launchpad has been a unique experience for all involved, including for us at Contact. We entered into partnership with Akina because we wanted to invest in the potential of social enterprise as a means of helping our communities. We also saw the opportunity try something a little different; to work in a new way to develop our people, to share our knowledge, and to build a new kind of partnership through the Launchpad.
What we came up with was the Launchpad development programme for Contact staff. We put eleven of our people into Launchpad to lead the support teams charged with guiding and mentoring each team. While the programme hasn't quite wrapped up yet, I can already see the impact it's having on our people involved.
The opportunity for Contact people was to experience real learning in action. Working with their venture teams they're often at the heart of some hefty challenges in building a business from scratch and how this impacts the bigger picture. This means lots of reflection on their own style, constantly working on the relationships they have with the teams, being able to back themselves when there is ambiguity and solve problems together as a team - rather than them having to know all the answers! This means honest relationships and communication is constantly front of mind. In future we'll also continue to watch them bring back some great new ways of doing things, so at Contact we can be more agile, innovative and less corporate!
One of the themes coming through in the feedback is that social enterprise is different to traditional business. While many of the planning elements and the growth process remain the same, the way that decisions are made, the core values of the organisation, the principles underlying business processes, the pace and the interactions between the business functions and the social or environmental functions of the enterprises - they're different.