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Case
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Reference no. 9-318-041
Published by: Harvard Business Publishing
Originally published in: 2017
Version: 27 August 2019
Revision date: 30-Sep-2019
Length: 30 pages
Data source: Published sources

Abstract

It is March 2017 and TPG, a global alternative investment firm with USD74 billion assets under management, has recently launched its inaugural impact investing fund - the USD2 billion Rise Fund. In an effort to 'take the religion out of impact investing', Mike Stone, CIO of Rise, has partnered with Chris Addy at The Bridgespan Group, a nonprofit consultancy, to develop an evidence-based methodology for quantifying the impact of prospective Rise investments. Together, they have come up with a framework that ultimately generates an impact multiple of money (IMM), a measure of the social value created by a company per equity dollar invested. If a company fails to meet the IMM threshold, Rise will not invest in it. The case finds Stone and Maya Chorengel (HBS MBA '97), Rise's senior partner for impact, debating whether to make Rise's first investment in EverFi, an educational technology company that offers a range of online educational programming to its K-12 school, university, and corporate clients.
Location:
Size:
Large
Other setting(s):
2015-2017

About

Abstract

It is March 2017 and TPG, a global alternative investment firm with USD74 billion assets under management, has recently launched its inaugural impact investing fund - the USD2 billion Rise Fund. In an effort to 'take the religion out of impact investing', Mike Stone, CIO of Rise, has partnered with Chris Addy at The Bridgespan Group, a nonprofit consultancy, to develop an evidence-based methodology for quantifying the impact of prospective Rise investments. Together, they have come up with a framework that ultimately generates an impact multiple of money (IMM), a measure of the social value created by a company per equity dollar invested. If a company fails to meet the IMM threshold, Rise will not invest in it. The case finds Stone and Maya Chorengel (HBS MBA '97), Rise's senior partner for impact, debating whether to make Rise's first investment in EverFi, an educational technology company that offers a range of online educational programming to its K-12 school, university, and corporate clients.

Settings

Location:
Size:
Large
Other setting(s):
2015-2017

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