Title: Philanthropy Roundtable Presentation
1Philanthropy RoundtablePresentation
Entrepreneurship as a vehicle to college
preparation and access
Ajuah Helton East Coast Regional
Director ahelton_at_build.org 202.393.7071
2The Need
- High school dropouts are
- 4 times more likely to be unemployed
- Earning nearly 60 less
- 2.5 times more likely to be arrested
- For Americas low-income youth
- 60 will not graduate high school
- One in three graduates will enroll in college
- One in seven college matriculants will earn a
bachelors degree
3Mission
- BUILDs mission is to provide real-world
entrepreneurial experience that empowers youth
from under-resourced communities to excel in
education, lead in their communities, and succeed
professionally.
BUILD helps students from under-resourced
communities to graduate from high school and
enroll in college, by providing four years of
entrepreneurial education, mentoring, academic
support and professional development.
4History of BUILD
- Founded in 1999 by Suzanne McKechnie Klahr,
Stanford Law School graduate - Launched with 4 students at 1 school and initial
budget of 37,000 - Operating in CAs South Bay and Oakland and now
Washington, DC
5BUILDs Theory of ChangeProblem Intervention
Outcome
- Entrepreneurial education and training
- academic support/enrichment
- college-preparation coaching
- high-touch service w/ multiple adult role
models _____________________________________ - more future vision, motivation and
self-efficacy - increased personal and professional skills
- improved academic performance in school
- college access
6Why Entrepreneurship?
- Hallmark traits parallel and capitalize on
students strengths and experiences - Builds on students a-priori knowledge
- Direct application and extension of academic
subjects learned in school - Provides new layer of identity as young
entrepreneurs - Cultivates highly desirable skill-set for future
as entrepreneur or intrapreneur - Meets a financial need
7Current Program Size
- 370 students
- Eleven partner high schools
- Two incubators
- Separate headquarters location
- 19 full-time, 2 part-time staff in three cities
- Over 300 mentors and other volunteers
- 2.4M budget for 2007-2008
8BUILD Locations
- Peninsula Youth Business Academic Incubator
- Largest in the nation
- Serves four schools
- Oakland Youth Business Academic Incubator
- Moved into new facility July 2007
- Serves five schools
- Washington, DC Youth Business Academic
Incubator - Soft opening November 2007
- Serving 80-100 students September 2008
9BUILDs Core Values
- BUILD sees value and opportunity in marginalized
youth that others often do not. - We believe in accessing the innate brilliance and
savvy of ALL youth, even those disenfranchised
from the educational system. We cherish the
entrepreneurial qualities risk-taking,
perseverance, honesty, adaptability that
students who have struggled academically and
personally tend to develop, even if they are
harder to reach emotionally or more difficult to
position for higher education. We look past
problems and see untapped, unlimited potential. - BUILD views entrepreneurship as a vehicle to
higher education, not an ultimate destination. - We believe that studying and practicing
entrepreneurship requires students to cultivate
the academic, intrapersonal, interpersonal, and
professional skills they will need to flourish in
college and beyond. However, we view college
access and attainment, not entrepreneurial
success, as the end goal for BUILD students. We
would rather a students business fail but he or
she enrolls in college than have a student who
shines in BUILD but does not take that next step.
- BUILD matches high expectations for students with
a can-do problem-solving approach. - We believe that EVERY student can excel, lead,
and succeed. We do not allow any student to view
his or her socioeconomic background, ethnicity,
low-performing school, familial legacy,
linguistic challenges, or past academic
preparation as a reason not to perform well in
school or in BUILD. Instead, we strategize with
our students to turn their perceived THREATS into
OPPORTUNITIES upon which to capitalize.
10BUILDs Core Values
- BUILD operates at the axis of absolute authority
and unconditional love. - We believe that BUILD instructors and staff have
to command absolute authority with students while
constantly demonstrating profound respect and
love for them. We can not practice authority
with no love because blind control without
student-centered rationale oppresses instead of
manages. We can not govern by love with no
authority because without high behavioral
expectations, boundaries get crossed and
classroom dynamics become impossible. We can not
vacillate wildly between the two poles because
contradicting messages result in confused
students who can not meet our expectations. - The BUILD program is different from most high
school programs. - We believe that a BUILD class should look, sound,
and feel different from other classes. When you
enter a BUILD class, students should LOOK
engaged, interested, and entertained. The class
should SOUND interactive, interpersonal and
high-energy. The interaction between BUILD
students and adults should FEEL familial,
respectful, warm and honest.
11BUILDs Guiding Principles
- Entrepreneurial Innovation We continually
challenge one another and refuse to accept the
status quo. We remain responsive to trends and
adapt quickly to new situations. - Teamwork We remain committed to working
together productively, drawing on one anothers
skills, celebrating our successes together, and
enjoying each other as people. - Belief in the Power of Youth We believe that
all students can and will excel, lead, and
succeed in their businesses, academics, and lives
outside of BUILD, and we commit to BUILDs Core
Values. - Relentless Pursuit of Excellence We are
resourceful, efficient, strategic, organized, and
compassionate. We work hard to achieve the high
expectations we set for ourselves personally and
professionally. - Strengthening the BUILD Family We recognize the
unique contributions of every member of the BUILD
extended family (staff, students, families,
teachers, school administrators, mentors,
volunteers, and the community at large) and we
seize opportunities to expose our various
constituencies to one another for the positive
transformation of all.
12Ideal BUILD Student
- Lives in an under-resourced community with
under-performing schools - Is of an ethnicity typically under-represented in
college (e.g., African American, Latino, Native
American) - Will be the first in their family to attend
college - Eligible for free or reduced lunch
- Not participating in academic preparation or
enrichment programs
13How We Reach Them
- Recruiting in 8th grade classrooms
- Program information sent home
- Business Plan Competitions
- Siblings, friends, other family members
- Partnerships with other organizations (e.g.,
BizWorld, Compass)
14Entrepreneurs 1 (E1)
- Ninth grade students attend BUILD in-classroom
for 7-10 hours per week for the entire academic
year - Curriculum includes
- Fundamentals of business
- Time management
- Goal setting
- Organization
- Professional communication etiquette
- Students create business teams of 3-5 members,
and develop comprehensive (20-30 page) business
plans. - At end of year, BUILD Youth Business Plan
Competitions held at the Stanford Graduate School
of Business and the Haas School of Business at
the University of California at Berkeley.
15Entrepreneurs 2 (E2)
- Sophomores meet after-school in BUILDs Youth
Business and Academic Incubator, for 3 hours per
week for the entire academic year. - First hour focuses on academics, working with
Academic Program Manager - Teams begin to operate their small businesses
- Present to Venture Capital Advisors to secure
BUILD-sponsored funding - Curriculum includes negotiations, business ethics
and more - To stay in BUILD, students must maintain a 2.0
GPA.
16Entrepreneurs 3 (E3)
- Juniors meet after-school in BUILDs Youth
Business and Academic Incubator, for 3 hours per
week for the entire academic year. - Curriculum includes advanced topics relating to
college selection and preparation - Essay writing
- Interviewing
- Financial aid
- Standardized test preparation
- To inspire and inform the students, BUILD
organizes and leads students on college tours. - To remain in BUILD, students must maintain a 2.7
GPA.
17Entrepreneurs 4 (E4)
- Seniors focus shifts from running businesses to
selecting and applying to colleges. - With the help of BUILDs College Counselor,
students - Identify stretch and safety schools
- Write admissions essays
- Prepare college applications
- Package their BUILD experience into a portfolio
- BUILD also collaborates with parents and
guardians to explore students scholarships and
financial aid options.
18Student Demographics
19BUILD Headquarters Staff
- Suzanne McKechnie Klahr, CEO Founder
- Entrepreneurial Teaching Award from NFTE
- Ashoka Fellow
- Dual degree from Brown University JD from
Stanford Law School - Jennifer Sigler, Chief Operating Officer
- Significant experience from PriceWaterhouseCoopers
and AOL - MBA and MA in Education from Stanford University
- Barbara Bellissimo, Director of Development
- Twenty years of marketing, fundraising and
entrepreneurship experience - BS from The Wharton School at the University of
Pennsylvania
20BUILDs Program Team
- Hillary Aitken Fernandes, Peninsula Site Director
- Formerly of InsideTrack and Princeton Review
- BA from University of Oregon MA from Stanford
University - Chantal Laurie, Oakland Site Director
- Previously with KIPP Foundation, also taught 4th
grade with Teach for America - BA from Georgetown University
- Ajuah Helton, East Coast Regional Director
- Former BUILD entrepreneurship instructor, also
managed entrepreneurship programs at UC
Berkeleys Haas School of Business and The
Entrepreneurship Center in Philadelphia - BA from Clark Atlanta University and MSEd from
the University of Pennsylvania
21BUILD Board of Directors
- Affi Ansari SVP, Comerica Bank
- John R. Berthold CEO, The Altos Group
- R. James Ellis Lecturer in Management, Stanford
Graduate School of Business - Eldridge Gray Managing Director, Goldman Sachs
- Emiko Higashi Managing Director, Tomon Partners
- Thomas J. Ivey Partner, Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher Flom LLP - Robert Katz President, Robert L. Katz and
Associates - Suzanne McKechnie Klahr CEO and Founder, BUILD
- Jean Kovacs President and CEO, Comergent
Techologies - Francisca Miranda Deputy Superintendent,
Sequoia Union High School District
22Recent Accomplishments
- Suzanne McKechnie Klahr invited to join Ashoka
Fellowship - iWear CEO featured on BizKid TV program
- 7 BUILD students honored by Merrill Lynch
Growing Up CEO - But most importantly
23Success Metrics
- Student retention 74
- Student business aptitude 114 improvement
- Student written skills 83 improvement
- SAT scores 254-point increase after BUILDs SAT
prep - High School Graduation 100 of BUILD graduates
have graduated High School - College Admissions 100 of BUILD graduates have
been admitted to college
24Where Do They Go?
25How Individuals Help
- Donors
- New site launch costs 300,000
- Sponsor a student 4,500 per year
- Textbooks for one E1 class 2,500
- Mentor training session 1,000
- College trip 500 per student
- Volunteers
- Mentor 1.5 hours per week
- Business Plan Judge 4 hours per year
- Guest speaker 1 hour per visit
26Future Plans
- 10 Sites by 2017
- Criteria for New Communities
- Community need
- Availability of potential site director
- Bandwidth of executive team and staff
- Community and school district support
- Financial resources
- Local political landscape
- Competitive environment
- Compatibility with growth plans
27Potential Sites
- Create regional centers for BUILD
- Oakland II
- Boston
- San Jose
- New York
- Pittsburgh
- Baltimore
- Los Angeles
- Chicago
28BUILD Supporters
29Student Enrollment vs. Costs per Pupil
2007-2008 cost per pupil does not include 198K
in D.C. planning costs.
30Assumptions for Growth
- Year 0 10K feasibility study funded locally
- Year 1 100K provided by 10 local supporters
- Funds majority of plenary-year costs
- Donors will seed site Advisory Board
- Year 2 300K commitment to green-light an
official site launch - Year 3 Site fully funded by local supporters
- Development Manager hired in Year 3
31Next Step Evaluation 2008-2009
- Opportunity to systematically study BUILDs
impact on student, family, school and community
levels - Chance to further develop quality measurement
tools that are sustainable over time and allow
for on-going expansion of the program - Goal to evaluate the cost of BUILD vs. the cost
to society to not have BUILD
32- Teaching entrepreneurship to high school
freshmen is all about high expectations. It is
about giving a real-world context to students who
might otherwise not be motivated to do well in
math and English classes. Whether or not these
students become entrepreneurs as adults is
unimportant. What they have learned is that they
can develop skills and take on challenges beyond
their own expectations. -
- Gordon Lewin
- Trustee, Sequoia Union High School District
- 2007 BUILD Business Plan Competition Judge
33Ajuah Heltonahelton_at_build.org 202.393.7071www.b
uild.org