Blog Guest User Blog Guest User

Bills and Passions

Blog post by Partner Sergio Reyes.

While in college, I had two types of jobs, passion jobs and bills jobs. My passion jobs orbited around the voluntary sector and reflected my personal interests: quality of and accessibility to education, social justice, advocacy research… Sometimes paid and sometimes not, these experiences were always fulfilling; should someone ask me the ubiquitous “what do you do?” question, I would always answer with my passion job.

While in college, I had two types of jobs, passion jobs and bills jobs. My passion jobs orbited around the voluntary sector and reflected my personal interests: quality of and accessibility to education, social justice, advocacy research… Sometimes paid and sometimes not, these experiences were always fulfilling; should someone ask me the ubiquitous “what do you do?” question, I would always answer with my passion job. My pay-the-bills jobs, on the other hand, gravitated towards the menial and uninspiring, but served an indispensable self-evident purpose. Ultimately, each taught me valuable lessons and opened the doors to opportunities I could have never imagined. Most importantly, they helped me understand which sort of career I wanted and needed after graduation. The only problem was that the wanted and the needed seemed irreconcilable.

What I wanted was to make a difference. What I needed was to make money. Given my educational and professional background, I felt confident I could achieve either, but the dynamics of the non- and for-profit sectors made it unlikely that I could manage both. My initial compromise consisted of a full-time bills job supplemented by personal volunteering and charitable contributions. This was a temporary relief, but when I learned that nearly 70% of employees in the US are either disengaged or actively disengaged in their job, I became worried again. The difficulty of negotiating my values with the culture of corporate America and the financial needs of a recent graduate fueled the beginnings of a quarter-life crisis.

Any Millennial who researches their options, striving to stay out of that 70% of disengaged employees, will came across ominous statistics but some may also provide solace. They may learn they are not alone: in the US, 94% of Millennials like using their skills to benefit a cause. Around the world, 87% of Millennials believe that the success of a business cannot be measured only by its financial performance, but 64% think businesses are focused solely on their own agenda at the expense of the wider society. As many as 56% of Millennials worldwide have ruled out working for an organization because of its values. As I weighed my options, it became apparent that my problem was not just my problem; it was my entire generation’s problem. What is the Millennial job-seeker to do?

In B Corps, I found my answer. B Corps are companies that focus both on profits and the public good; Kickstarter, Patagonia, and Ben & Jerry’s are prominent examples. According to B Lab, the third party nonprofit that grants the B Corp certification, “B Corps are for-profit companies [that] meet rigorous standards of social and environmental performance, accountability, and transparency.” Under this framework, people have come together at over 1,500 companies to use business for good. Today, I am proud to count myself among them.

Working at a B Corp has bridged the gap between bills and passion jobs. Rather than check my values at the door when I get to work, I can magnify my impact by collaborating with like-minded colleagues. In the investment banking industry, this can be quite substantial. Indeed, if three of the independent investment banks had given 5% of their 2014 revenue to the Against Malaria Foundation, they could have saved over 25,000 lives in a single year. Knowing this, our purpose is not just to help our clients achieve long-term success, but also to have a positive, lasting impact on the world. This sense of meaning provides satisfaction beyond a salary and drives true engagement and fulfillment.

Millennials like myself have been telling employers that we want to make both a living and a difference. As we become a larger part of both the consumer and employee pool, employers cannot help but to listen. B Corps are one of the ways in which they have responded, and thanks to this dialogue, businesses are treading a more compassionate path today. Across generations, we are growing increasingly conscious of our shared responsibilities, and in the process, we are dismantling the false dilemma that made us chose between money and purpose.

Sergio Reyes is a Millennial working at Keene Advisors, a socially responsible investment bank located in Newton, MA.

Read More
Press Coverage Guest User Press Coverage Guest User

The First Benefit Corporation IPO Is Coming, And That’s A Big Deal

News article quoting insight from Partner Luke Stephan.

"KKR could be just the tip of the iceberg (...) If the Laureate IPO is successful, it will provide a roadmap for institutional investors, family offices and individual investors who want to invest capital in businesses that generate a good return and make valuable contributions to society at large. And it will provide a strong counterpoint to skeptics that believe that businesses cannot access institutional capital unless they focus exclusively on maximizing value for shareholders."

Our partner, Luke Stephan, is quoted for his insight into the Laureate IPO in a Triple Pundit article available here.

Read More
Blog Guest User Blog Guest User

Can Private Equity Help Make Business Good?

Blog post by Partner Luke Stephan.

Laureate Education, an international for-profit university education provider owned by the private equity firm KKr, announced its intention to become the largest publicly traded benefit corporation in the United States.

One of the World’s Leading Investors Backs a Benefit Corporation

In October, Laureate Education, an international for-profit campus-based and online university education provider, announced its intention to become the largest publicly traded benefit corporation in the United States.  Benefit corporations are companies that incorporate a positive impact on society or the environment as part of their legally defined goal.  The announcement that Laureate intends to become the largest publicly traded benefit corporation is especially significant because Laureate is owned by KKR, one of the largest and most successful private equity firms in the world.  KKR was one of the chief innovators of the leveraged buyout in the 1980’s and is now pioneering a new kind of investment - investing in a company that wants to generate attractive returns for shareholders and also do good in the world.  If the Laureate IPO is successful, it will provide a roadmap for institutional investors, family offices and individual investors that want to invest capital in businesses that generate a good return and make valuable contributions to society at large.  And it will provide a strong counterpoint to skeptics that believe that businesses cannot access institutional capital unless they focus exclusively on “maximizing value” for shareholders.

Benefit corporations are reimagining the way that business is done by fundamentally redefining what it means to be successful.  The benefit corporation ideology, “people using business as a force for good,” seeks to align shareholder and other stakeholder incentives to promote successful, sustainable business.  The benefit corporation movement, started in 2006, has been characterized by the likes of Patagonia, Ben & Jerry’s, Warby Parker, and The Honest Company to name a few. The number of certified benefit corporations is growing rapidly, increasing by 50% since May 2014 to over 1,575 today.  It includes companies across 130 industries and in 42 countries.  The benefit corporation community boasts impressive statistics from their member companies, ranging from sustainability metrics, to employee benefits, to women and minorities in management positions. However, public companies represent a small portion of the benefit corporation movement today, and there has been skepticism about whether benefit corporations make viable public companies (NYTimes, Fortune).  In the United States, several public companies have subsidiaries that have become certified benefit corporations.  Plum Organics, a subsidiary of Campbell’s Soup, incorporated as a benefit corporation in 2013 under Campbell’s leadership.  Ben & Jerry’s, which was acquired by Unilever in 2001 has been a leading benefit corporation since 2012.  In Brazil, Natura, the country’s leading cosmetic company became the largest and the world’s first public benefit corporation.  And in Europe, Unilever, which is the 3rd largest consumer products company in the world, is exploring becoming benefit corporation.

Access to traditional institutional capital in the United States, both public and private, could unleash the benefit corporation movement and cause a fundamental change in the global economy by making business more sustainable and better aligning businesses with the environment, their employees, their communities and ultimately their customers.  As more companies become benefit corporations and more capital providers learn about the incredible power of benefit corporations, capital will flow into the sector.  KKR could be just the tip of the iceberg.

The news that Laureate Education intends to become the largest publicly traded benefit corporation in the U.S. demonstrates that the benefit corporation movement is getting closer to reaching the critical mass needed to bring traditional investment capital to bear for other benefit corporations.  Once again, KKR has positioned itself to be a leader in financial markets.  This transaction is particularly important as it will serve as a precedent for other benefit corporation transactions in the future.  It will be heavily scrutinized and the merits of the benefit corporation movement will be tested; however, I am optimistic that it will be successful and that the benefit corporation movement will continue to grow and flourish.

Read More
Travis Borden Travis Borden

Thank You

Letter by Keene Advisors Founder and President, Travis Borden.

A sincere thank you to all the friends who helped support the founding of Keene Advisors in July 2015. We are off to a great start thanks to the trust, support and advice that you have given us this year and we are extremely grateful.

A sincere thank you to all the friends who helped support the founding of Keene Advisors in July 2015. We are off to a great start thanks to the trust, support and advice that you have given us this year and we are extremely grateful. Best wishes to all of you for a very happy and successful 2016!

We started Keene Advisors to provide clients with outstanding strategic and financial advice at a compelling value, and to be catalysts for positive, lasting change in the world.

We wanted to build a company that was committed to delivering a superior value proposition to clients, which to us means better service at a lower cost. And we sought to leverage our success and make a difference in the world by investing a meaningful portion of our profits in charitable organizations in our local communities and around the globe.

We saw three big trends that created the perfect storm of opportunity for a small firm with a big heart to transform the investment banking industry.    

  1. Investment banking was undergoing significant change. Three of the largest investment banks collapsed during the Great Recession. There was a mass exodus of senior bankers from established firms. A wave of new firms was formed. And talented young people were losing interest in investment banking.
  2. Technology was disrupting service businesses. Technology was transforming service industries by enabling new market entrants to provide new and better services to clients at a lower cost. Established competitors in the mergers and acquisitions advisory industry had not embraced technology in a meaningful way.
  3. The millennial population overtook baby boomers in the U.S. in 2015. Seventy-five percent of millennials want business to actively do more to help improve society. Purpose-driven companies are three times more likely to have engaged employees. And companies with engaged employees are more productive and grow faster.

From this vision Keene Advisors was born.

We realized that to compete as a small firm in a highly competitive industry we needed to offer clients something unique. So we developed a technology platform that enables us to provide high quality, consistent advice and execution; reduce or eliminate non-value added costs; significantly lower our service delivery costs; and pass along the cost savings to our clients. We believe that our combination of high quality, consistent advice and execution at a low cost is unique in our industry. And we believe that our strong values and desire to be catalysts for positive and lasting change allow us to attract and retain incredibly talented and highly engaged employees that deliver better service to our clients.

In keeping with our vision and purpose, our team met in November to decide how to allocate our profits for 2015. Everyone gets an equal vote in determining how our profits are allocated every year. In 2015, we made investments in, and donated our time to, charitable organizations in the Boston area and around the globe that are having a positive, long-term impact on the world, including:

Our donations provided: 1,110 long-lasting insecticidal nets to protect nearly 2,000 people from malaria; food-based micronutrient fortification for one year to 809 people; food, clothes and critical supplies to child refugees of the Syrian conflict; funding to support sustainable water projects in developing countries; clothes and supplies to children in the Greater Boston area; and 450 meals to people in need in the Greater Boston area.

Thank you for your help supporting our efforts!  

From your friends at Keene Advisors

Read More