From Ideas to Practice, Pilots to Strategy Practical Solutions and Actionable Insights on How to Do Impact Investing
1. Preface
From Ideas to Practice, Pilots to Strategy is both an attempt
– and an opportunity – to disseminate the best practices
and lessons learned from the first movers, early adopters
and bold innovators in the field of impact investing, with the
goal of further advancing the sector.
When we published From the Margins to the Mainstream:
Assessment of the Impact Investment Sector and
Opportunities to Engage Mainstream Investors in September
2013, we sought to add clarity to the field through a realistic,
current assessment. With over 10,000 people accessing
the report in the first two weeks, it became evident that we
touched on a strong need. However, given the relatively
small scale of impact investing, we realized that more than
clarification was needed. For active investors in the field,
to shift impact investing from a small part of their portfolios
to a full-fledged strategy requires operational and practical
knowledge. New players in the impact investing space,
looking to take it from a compelling idea to a real investment
approach, need to know how to get started in this nascent
and potentially rewarding sector. This codified know-how
and repository of best practice is currently as embryonic as
the sector itself.
Readers of the Margins to Mainstream report reached
out from far and wide to ask for advice on how to start
(or do even more) with impact investing. While we could
hypothesize and make suggestions, it is only experienced
impact investors who can speak with authority about what
does and doesn’t work, and why. With that in mind, we
curated this collection of short, action-oriented and insightful
thought pieces on how to put impact investing to work.
Because the sector is in a nascent stage and engages
diverse individuals, organizations and societies, no one
solution will apply to every situation. Rather, this publication
can serve as a trailhead and as a semi-trodden path for new
practitioners; but much more trail-blazing will be necessary
before the sector can call itself mature.
We advocate learning by doing, failing fast, synthesizing
feedback and quickly re-engineering shortcomings into
a more informed approach. Above all, we believe that
intentions (and certainly good ones) matter with every
action and step towards building a new sector. With these
principles in mind, we can collaboratively and proactively
ensure that the impact investing sector is on the best path
forward.
For the many key players whose wisdom and expertise
could not be represented here, we look forward to hearing
from you and, where possible, including your perspective
in future efforts to help bring the impact investing sector to
maturity
2. Introduction to the
Mainstreaming Impact
Investing Initiative
Nearly two years ago, at its Annual Meeting in Davos in
January 2012, the World Economic Forum convened
a discussion among mainstream investors and social
entrepreneurs on how to harness the hype of Impact
Investing. While the list of reasons why impact investing
would remain niche seemed overwhelming, bringing it into
the mainstream was too important an opportunity not to
pursue.
With this in mind, the Forum launched the Mainstreaming
Impact Investing Initiative. The first milestone – From the
Margins to the Mainstream: Assessment of the Impact
Investment Sector and Opportunities to Engage Mainstream
Investors– was released in September 2013 and provided
an overview of the sector, identified challenges constraining
the flow of capital, and laid the groundwork for mainstream
investors to begin a meaningful discussion on impact
investment. Most of the constraints identified fit into one
of four broad, overarching challenges: an early-stage
ecosystem; small average deal size; the fit within an asset
allocation framework; and double bottom line.
From Ideas to Practice, Pilots to Strategy is the second
publication in the Forum’s Mainstreaming Impact Investing
Initiative. The report takes a deeper look at why and how
asset owners began to include impact investing in their
portfolios and continue to do so today, and how they
overcame operational and cultural constraints affecting
capital flow. Given that impact investing expertise is
spread among dozens if not hundreds of practitioners and
academics, the report is a curation of some –but certainly
not all –of those leading voices. The 15 articles are meant
to provide investors, intermediaries and policy-makers with
actionable insights on how to incorporate impact investing
into their work.
Target Audience for Ideas to Practice, Pilots to
Strategy
This publication’s target audience includes three key groups:
(1) investors looking to start impact investing; 2) active
impact investors looking to expand impact investing from
a limited part of their work to a full-fledged strategy; and
(3) intermediaries, policy-makers and development finance
institutions whose support is vital for the sector’s growth.
Since large investors often have a proportionally large
influence on a sector, a key focus is on highlighting best
practices or frameworks from large asset owners and asset
managers.
Motivation and Scope of Ideas to Practice, Pilots
to Strategy
The report’s goals are to show how mainstream investors
and intermediaries have overcome the challenges in the
impact investment sector, and to democratize the insights
and expertise for anyone and everyone interested in the
field. Divided into four main sections, the report contains
lessons learned from practitioner’s experience, and
showcases best practices, organizational structures and
innovative instruments that asset owners, asset managers,
financial institutions and impact investors have successfully
implemented.
The strategic case for impact investing from the mainstream
investor’s perspective is the focus of “More than an Idea:
Creating the Case for Impact Investing”. This section
includes the following key messages:
– Reflecting environmental, social and governance (ESG)
standards in the investment process, across asset
classes and alongside traditional financial metrics and
competent risk management practices, can generate
superior risk-adjusted, long-term investment returns.
Moreover, inadequate ESG capability can lead to poor
financial performance.
– Institutional investors can shape markets and encourage
managers to design products with social impact. Recent
data indicates that many institutional investors look
to incorporate ESG standards into their investment
decision-making. However, so that impact investment
strategy becomes an institutional priority, decisions