Upaya announces its investment in Agrify Fresh, a Mumbai-based agritech startup with established market linkages to small and marginal farmers across four Indian states.
Upaya Social Ventures Invests in Waste Management Tech Platform WeVois
The Dignified Jobs Collaborative: To make an impact, not just any job will do
Upaya Social Ventures Invests in Home Decor Brand Sirohi to Create Jobs and Improve Incomes for Artisans in India
Patiently Coming Full Circle
Upaya Social Ventures Invests in Agritech Startup Pasidi Panta to Create Quality Jobs for Indian Farmers
Upaya Social Ventures Announces Successful Exit from Tamul Plates
Upaya Social Ventures today announced its exit from its longstanding equity position in Tamul Plates, an Assam-based social enterprise that produces and markets high-quality, all-natural disposable plates and bowls made from arecanut (palm) tree leaves, all while creating jobs throughout a sustainable value chain.
How we measure what matters: A framework for measuring job quality
Upaya’s impact measurement framework helps establish a common understanding across teams on the fund’s impact measurement approach. Our ambition is not just to strengthen our own impact performance but to generate insights and learnings for the ecosystem at large on the factors affecting job quality for the extremely poor.
Upaya Social Ventures Invests in Resham Sutra to Create Dignified Jobs in India's Silk Supply Chain
Upaya Social Ventures announce its latest investment in Resham Sutra, a New Delhi-based company that manufactures and distributes solar-powered silk spinning machines to rural women in India. Resham Sutra, which translates to “silk thread,” is aimed at replacing labor-intensive silk yarn production methods with reeling machines to eliminate hard labor and double a reeler’s productivity and income.
Alignment: Using Your Values to Invest in Social Change | A webinar series with Oiko Credit
Upaya CEO, Kate Cochran, joined Oikocredit CEO, Matt Eldridge and COO, Sara Shoff, to discuss how to use your values to invest in social change. Kate shared how she got into the impact investing space and what she believes is the secret to Upaya’s success since its founding 10 years ago.
The webinar premiered on Wednesday, July 28 and is available to watch on YouTube.
10 Things We Have Learned in 10 Years
Adventure Finance: Impacting Investing for Philanthropists
Kate Cochran, hosted a webinar, Impact Investing for Philanthropists, with Aunnie Patton Power, author of Adventure Finance, Caroline Bressan of Open Road Alliance, and University Impact’s Joellen Nicholson.
Upaya Social Ventures Launches Second Pool of Recoverable Grants
Upaya to partner with University Impact to raise $3 million to fund impact investments.
Seattle, May 10, 2021 — Upaya Social Ventures (Upaya) announced the launch of its second pool of recoverable grants, in partnership with University Impact (UI), an impact investment firm directing capital through the UI donor-advised fund to organizations and companies solving social and environmental problems. The $3 million Pool of Recoverable Grants II will fund Upaya’s investments in early-stage Indian companies that create jobs for people in extreme poverty.
Upaya pioneered the idea of bringing together philanthropic funds to create a pool of capital similar to a for-profit investment fund. The initiative combines grants from foundations and donor-advised funds to invest in a diverse portfolio of impact-driven companies. In addition to creating life-changing jobs for people living in extreme poverty, the donors to this pool can recover their philanthropic contributions along with a sliver of upside if the portfolio has positive returns.
Upaya raised its first $1 million pool of recoverable grants in 2019. It has so far successfully deployed investments from the first pool into 12 companies in India. Nine of the investments were finalized in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, a stark increase over Upaya’s average of two investments per year. The first pool of recoverable grants was recently recognized by Fast Company as a finalist for the 2021 World Changing Ideas Award.
Upaya is now raising a second pool of recoverable grants, three times the size, to meet demand for “missing middle” investments in small and growing businesses and create new jobs in poor communities hit hard by the pandemic.
“This facility is a natural bridge between traditional philanthropy and the growing industry of impact investing,” said Kate Cochran, CEO of Upaya. “When we raised our first pool of recoverable grants, we were gratified by the amount of interest we found from philanthropists looking to recycle their philanthropy. They can provide a grant that creates jobs in India, have it returned to them, and later make another grant to support clean energy in Africa.”
Upaya is partnering with UI to fund the $3 million pool. UI’s unique Triple Donor Advised Fund allows individuals to make a charitable contribution with an immediate tax deduction and then recommend grants and impact investments from the donor-advised fund over time.
“Partnering with University Impact in this second pool allows us to extend this opportunity to individual donors who don’t have a family foundation or donor advised fund,” said Cochran. “UI makes it easy for donors to engage in exciting projects and for organizations like Upaya to expand our work.”
Upaya is aiming to close the $3 million Pool of Recoverable Grants II by December 2021. Grants will be drawn down from the pool over a five-year period, and 100% of the funds will be used for investment capital. The pool will fund Upaya’s investments in India as well as a potential geographic expansion. Grants will be repayable to donors based on overall portfolio performance, up to a return of 5% over the original amount.
Cochran will join Joellen Nicholson of University Impact for the DAF Salon on May 11, 2021 at 1pm PST to discuss how philanthropists can use a DAF for impact investments.
More information about Upaya and how to participate in the pool is available at www.upayasv.org/prg.
ABOUT UPAYA SOCIAL VENTURES
Upaya Social Ventures is fighting extreme poverty through dignified jobs. Founded in 2011, Upaya provides investment and consulting support to early-stage businesses aimed at creating jobs for the poorest of the poor. Upaya’s continually growing portfolio of impact investments has created over 21,000 lasting, dignified jobs. Endorsed by ImpactMatters as a high-impact, cost-effective nonprofit, Upaya’s teams in Seattle and Bangalore are committed to a goal of helping entrepreneurs create reliable jobs for 50,000 people in India. Please visit www.upayasv.org for more information.
ABOUT UNIVERSITY IMPACT
University Impact (UI) is an impact investing firm that funds early-stage organizations solving pressing social and environmental problems, while creating the next generation of social impact leaders. UI hosts the unique Triple DAF, a donor-advised fund that helps donors fund nonprofits and social ventures by targeting their charitable giving towards outcome focused organizations around the world. UI’s DAF is supported by a global team of trained undergraduate and graduate student associates from the U.S., South Africa, U.K., and India who are immersed in hands-on learning experience in impact investing and philanthropy that they can use to do social good throughout their careers. Please visit www.uitripledaf.org for more information.
Let's Acknowledge the Real Value—and Cost—of Measuring Impact
Recent findings reveal a sharp increase in investors who are systematically reporting on the impact of their portfolios. We should not, however, rest on our laurels until we remove the roadblocks that are preventing smaller, lesser-resourced investors from fully adopting impact measurement and management (IMM) practices.
Answering The Question, ‘How Do You Help People Too Poor For Microloans?’ - Forbes.com
Devin Thorpe of Forbes asked our CEO, Kate Cochran, how Upaya helps people too poor for microloans. The answer? Stable, dignified jobs. Read the full article here!
Why the Impact First vs Finance First Debate in Impact Investing Shouldn’t Be a Debate
More of our fellow impact investors are proudly pronouncing that they are deploying their capital to have impact and that their financial goals are more modest. These “impact first” investors are moving out of the defensive crouch that seemed to characterize this approach in the early years of the industry.
Upaya Social Ventures Partners with Villgro to Incubate and Invest in Job-Creating Social Enterprises Through Villgro’s iPitch 2019
Upaya has partnered with Villgro as an Investment Partner for Villgro’s iPitch 2019 program. iPitch is a discovery program aimed an identifying the most impactful social ventures in India.
UPAYA FUNDAMENTALS: Finding Our Heroes
Moving beyond scale: the importance of capturing feedback from your target audience
Pioneering Capital Must Feed the Growth of the Impact Economy
In our collective quest to grow the impact economy, we should not lose sight of the full set of actors, tools, and methods that are needed in concert to effect disruptive change. Namely, we must not overlook the earliest stages of social enterprise innovation, the so-called “Pioneer Gap” that still remains stubbornly under-funded.