In many ways, I struggle with what this blog is. How do I combine my personal interests, like
transportation and flying with my work, which is currently consulting? More often than not, this blog also serves as
my personal journal, which is weird because it’s public. And my story isn’t very exciting or
interesting, like people who are going through difficult times or working in
the foreign service and looking to share their experiences. But with all of the social media outlets that
I use like Yelp, LinkedIn, Facebook and increasingly Twitter, I have found that
while these provide outlets, they rarely provide a release or vent for my
feelings or concerns. I realize that
this means that a reader base is hard to accumulate because this thing veers
all over the place, but in a way I think that makes it more interesting.
One of my problems is that I mean to blog much more and get
behind and then the thing I wanted to talk about becomes the three things I
wanted to talk about or 10 things. Well,
this past weekend I had an experience that requires blogging. As a matter of fact, I’m typing this from
35,000 feet to a Word document just to make sure I get all of this down.
So I am a member of an online community called
Milepoint. The site was created by
frequent flier guru Randy Peterson, who’s an incredibly kind man originally
from Iowa. The site allows people who
belong to travel affinity programs (Starwood Preferred Guest, US Airways
Dividend Miles, Hertz #1 Club Gold, etc) to talk with each other and answer
questions and share ideas. These
questions can get really detailed, like what the best seat on a United 757 in
the international configuration in First class.
These are people who love flying and travelling and will build up miles
just so they can fly to Canada to see a friend for a weekend, because with this
group, you’re friends can be all over the globe. But this story isn’t really about Milepoint,
per se. Its about Milepoint’s
relationship with Kiva.
Maybe you don’t know about Kiva, or are vaguely aware. Kiva.com is a site that allows you to
microlend. This means that someone, in a
country that has no financial system (Zambia) or a country where banks won’t
give small loans to persons without a decent credit history (United States),
cannot get money. A typical loan on Kiva
would be $700 for Marisol in Paraguay who has a food stand near a factory and
wants to purchase a refrigerator to increase the types of goods that she can
sell. So I would go onto Kiva and lend
her $25 (default donation) I can also see who their field partner is, which is
the NGO that is providing them the money and support in country, in addition to
the repayment terms of the loan. Generally
the repayment terms are 6-18 months. And
I would get my $25 back in my account in random increments like $2.75 in April
and $4.50 in May. The video below is called Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Microfinance and it's pretty wild.
Now, unlike DonorsChoose, which is another fascinating and
awesome website that allows you to donate money to classrooms so they can buy
supplies that aren’t covered by the budget, you are loaning the money in
Kiva. With no interest. And the chance that the loan might default
because Marisol’s food stand might be destroyed or she might have a death in
her family and be unable to repay the loan.
Which means you don’t get your money back. But most of the people I know consider their
loan more of a donation anyway. You have
the option of withdrawing your Kiva funds as they are repayed, but over 90% of
users choose to recycle or reinvest them in other loans.
Various groups form Lending Teams on the Kiva website and
they “compete” to see who can recruit the most members in a month or who can
raise the most money. It’s not really a
competition because the act of giving is the reward, but people do like to see
their team do well and get some attention.
Milepoint has a team. An active
team. A really active team. In the last 2 months, I’ve made about $400 in
loans. Sounds like a lot. However in context, the Milepoint team of 650
people has raised $2.1 million dollars over 12 months. Fastest growing team in Kiva history. So, there was a meeting this weekend in San
Francisco, where Kiva is headquartered that brought members of the Milepoint
Team who could attend and Kiva Leadership and employees together. We of course, wanted to meet these people and
answer some questions we had and talk to them.
They wanted to find out who the hell we were that raised 2 million bucks
in a year and wanted to talk to us. It felt
like two odd groups sizing each other up.
Pause story…..
I think that passion is one of the most amazing things in
this world. Passion can allow people to
do things for little money, sleep or food or water forever. It’s like Maslow’s hierarchy gets
slapped. I had passion twice in my
life. I can tell, because my voice
catches in the back of my throat and I start to sound like Bill Clinton asking
people to picture a world…. The first was in college when I was working on this
concept called the Poughkeepsie Institute that was going to bring students from
Marist, Vassar, SUNY-New Paltz, Duchess Community College, the Culinary
Institute of America and Bard all together.
It currently existed in a class that had students from all six schools
and focused on issues in the local area.
But I envisioned a think tank, and a foundation that could bring in
capital from these schools, intellectual and monetary, to help revitalize a
city that had fallen on hard times. I
saw a building where students would come from all of the schools and mix with
each other, which didn’t happen normally.
I also imagined a place that could help the City of Poughkeepsie with
human capital in everything from investing to marketing. A mini-consulting firm pro bono consisting of
students and faculty who could help the city.
I even went so far as to meet with the Mayor, the Economic Development
Director to look at spaces in the city that were vacant and that the city was
interested in getting rid of for a song to get them developed. But then, the Vassar advisor put the kibosh on
the whole thing, angry that I’d struck out on my own and scared that the
program was getting out of his control.
And it was…people were believing.
It was a beautiful thing. But it
didn’t last and and ended up with me yelling “Go Fuck Yourself” and storming
out of the advisor’s office in tears.
The next time I felt passion was when I had this idea about
changing the way colleges raise money by being much more connected to their
alumni. I won’t go into it now, but it
lost steam when people didn’t return emails or calls, and those that did
basically said it wouldn’t work because the college gets decent money now
without much work.
Unpause…….
So about 45 of us met with Kiva on Friday and Saturday. I was already in San Francisco and so I got
to tour their office and attend a happy hour.
It was over $3 cask ales at the Public House that I began to suspect
this weekend was going to be different.
The people from Kiva I was talking to were just amazing people. Many of them had left their jobs paying a lot
more in the private sector. They were
fun and committed and I wondered if I lived in San Francisco, if we would hang
out, even if I never worked at Kiva.
Over the course of the 2 days, we brainstormed with them and
they shared with us their visions and their concerns about growth and remaining
true to their mission while expanding into new areas. Kiva introduced the ability to microlend to
the United States a few years ago, and that caused some anger among their
lender base who thought that the U.S. with it’s large collection of wealth
should be the last country that Kiva should launch in. However, as the Occupy Wall Street movement
has shown, that awesome amount of wealth is quite poorly distributed, no pun
intended. The manager of their US
portfolio, spoke about how unlike international microfinance, the goal in this
country was to get people loans to help them establish credit and a history of
strong repayments and then to graduate them to the existing financial
system. She was pretty kick ass. She got extra points for knowing about the
Eastern Shores of Maryland and Virginia.
People are really generous on our team. So generous in fact that Kiva has had to
modify their systems to allow for greater lending. One of our members, was tired of clicking the
$25 when he really just wanted to fund all agriculture loans in Africa for
$100,000. Think about that. Even more awesome is that as a team we
concentrated our money lending over the weekend for maximum effect, dubbed a
money bomb. This bomb was devastatingly
effective. It brought in $300,000 in 48
hours. As an international team we benefit
from being able to count the days by starting in Asia and ending in
Hawaii. It’s cheating, but I don’t think
anyone minds. That $300,000 is more than
any team has loaned in a month! It’s staggering to think about actually.
So here I sit, at 35,000 feet, having finished my breakfast
in First Class. (Review: Frittata A-,
Potatoes: B, Sausages: C+) On the way to the airport at 5:45 AM, I had already
sent emails to the Kiva founder, Matt Flannery, and the Kiva President, Premal Shah, and their Development Manager, Erin Geiger trying to keep the conversations
and relationships going and to let them know that I’m all in. I’m a relationship person and just like in
work, I believe you can tell a lot from a person by who they surround
themselves with. The stunning thing to me about this weekend is that before
Thursday, I supported Kiva to help Marisol buy a refrigerator. And now I want
to support the organization that is Kiva.
I want to help Chelsa and Betsy and Josh and Martin, and Maika and Ali
and all of them. I have no idea what
this means, to be honest. I’m not sure I
would want to work for them. I’m not
even sure what I could do for them, asides from being someone in the office
that everyone liked, but in that way, I might as well be a dog. I have skills but they generally revolve
around dealing with people and managing people, which Kiva seems to have under
control. I’m not even sure that have any interest in keeping a connection with
me that’s more personal than my relationship as a lender to their borrowers and
MFIs(Micro Finance Institutions).
I just know that based on my previous signs
like my voice kept catching in my throat, and crying as I type this, that I’m
hooked. But there are much, much better
tears than they were 13 years ago. I
feel like the Double Rainbow guy.
So worst case, I don’t get responses from Matt, Premal or
Erin. And I end up just connecting to
them through one-way methods like their blog or their Twitter handle. I’d be okay with that, because they have
given me something so magical, even for such a short time. They have reminded me that there is nothing I
can’t do. And they have reminded me how it
feels to be with like minded people. And
to bring it back to 13 years ago, I’ll need profanity again. It feels really fucking awesome.
P.S. I have this post
topped out at 4 pages. I’m curious if
anyone got this far, and if they did, what were their thoughts on the
story. Was it too long? Did it make sense. This has sort of been a kind of stream of
consciousness thing, so I’m not sure that it is interesting to anyone, besides
me. And even I simply needed it as a
place to put my feelings into words.
P.P.S. I need to tell
you about Charlie Schumacher, but that will be another post. I gotta wrap this up. The woman across from me is wondering why
this business guy is working on a document for the last hour and has suddenly
begun to cry. Thank God I’m not
brown. They’d probably detain me.
P.P.P.S. (Seriously, this is actually gramatically correct) Premal emailed back, thanking me for the friendship. I got it when I landed at the Charlotte Airport. I also got the last seat for First Class on my next flight. I'm taking all of these things as a sign that I'm on the right track.
8 comments:
"I’m curious if anyone got this far, and if they did, what were their thoughts on the story."
Lovely, gcc. And it's why USAID would've been very, very lucky to have had you.
But, uh, it's 3/11/12, not 10/11/12.
best,
David TimStuff
Once again(in the name of full disclosure it's your Mom and Step Father) we are doing Bill Clinton voices ourselves because we are so moved by your intimate sharing. As you clearly have discovered, IT IS the journey. The destination will sort itself out by the decisions you make and not only will we be eager to follow you on your blog but in much more detail when you PHONE HOME. We could not love you or be more proud of you.
Thanks - I couldn't be there b/c am 8k miles away (sigh tough to have so many great choices) but you gave me a feel of what it was like. Thanks
Hey, for those commenters, please go to this link: http://www.kiva.org/invitedby/graham6611
You can get a free $25 to loan to someone halfway around the world and maybe get a little hooked in the process.
Wow. If there were more people like you in the world...oh, what a world it would be!
Hey man, great thorough post about the fantastic weekend we had! It was a blast meeting you, and I'm glad I managed to track down your blog :) You're on it, because all I've done is take down some notes about the weekend and start drafting a post!
By far one of your best posts, babe. So happy you've found something that brings you so much passion. Kiva is lucky to have a member like you. Thank you for reminding all of us about finding our passion in life.
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