Category: Entrepreneurship

  • IntoActions and Social Good Brasil collaborate with the Miller Center for Global Impact

    IntoActions and Social Good Brasil collaborate with the Miller Center for Global Impact

    First Encounter with GSBI

    I still remember the first time that I visited Santa Clara University, the Jesuit University in Silicon Valley, just south of Stanford, in August of 2005. It was the second time the University’s Global Social Benefit Institute (GSBI)—now the Miller Center for Global Impact—had invited local investors, donors, advisors, mentors, and guests to its Investor Showcase. It was an amazing event where 20 social entrepreneurs from around the world pitched their ideas for their social enterprises.

    I was focusing my work on the use of innovation in learning at the time. One of the projects that stood out was Asociación Ajb’atz’ Enlace Quiche, which had developed low-cost, bilingual, intercultural technology centers for indigenous communities across Guatemala. The project, headed by Andy Lieberman, was not only selected to participate in GSBI’s 9-day In-Residence Program in Silicon Valley. It had also won the Microsoft Education Award at the Tech Awards, organized by the Tech Museum of Innovation in Silicon Valley. This was an amazing track record.

    GSBI 10 Years Later

    Now, 10 years later, GSBI has become a global leader in supporting social entrepreneurs from around the world. GSBI’s programs help these entrepreneurs develop innovative solutions that provide a sustainable path out of poverty. Andy is now heading GSBI’s New Program Initiatives.

    GSBI Programs

    These initiatives include the Boost Program, a 3-day workshop for start-up stage social entrepreneurs to learn business fundamentals and improve their strategic thinking. The key benefit of this program is the creation of a business plan that demonstrates impact, growth, and long-term financial sustainability.

    Other programs that GSBI offers include:

    • GSBI Online – a 6-month long program for early stage social entrepreneurs
    • GSBI Accelerator – a 10-month long program for mid-stage entrepreneurs, including a 9-day residential phase in Silicon Valley

    You can learn more about the GSBI programs here.

    Expanding GSBI Boost to Brazil

    Over the past 12 months, Andy and I have been exploring ways to expand GSBI’s Boost Program to Brazil. Last week, with the support of the eBay Inc Foundation, GSBI was able to bring two members from Social Good Brasil (SGB) to Silicon Valley.

    Social Good Brasil is the leading accelerator program for social entrepreneurs in Brazil. IntoActions has collaborated closely with Social Good Brasil since 2013, providing capacity-building programs in Human-Centered Design (HCD) for over 250 social entrepreneurs participating in Social Good Brasil’s program.

    We are very excited to work with both organizations to leverage GSBI’s programs and strengthen social entrepreneurship across Brazil.

    Fernanda Bornhausen, Co-Founder, and Barbara Basso, Coordinator, Social Good Brasil Lab. Image Credit: © IntoActions. Photo by Reinhold Steinbeck

    Social Good Brasil at the Boost Xchange Workshop

    Barbara Basso, the Coordinator of the Social Good Brasil Lab, and Fernanda Bornhausen, Co-Founder and Volunteer President of Social Good Brasil, joined directors and staff from six other organizations in a three-day Boost Xchange workshop where they learned the ins and outs of the program in order to adapt and implement it later in the year in Brazil.

    Organizations that participated in the GSBI Boost Xchange Program in addition to Social Good Brasil included:

    • Alterna Impact, Guatemala
    • Child and Youth Finance International Ye! Community, Netherlands (Partners in Ghana, Kenya, Philippines)
    • Momentum Project, ESADE Business School, Spain (Partners in El Salvador)
    • Marquette University Social Innovation Initiative, USA
    • Minga Social Enterprise Arena, Israel
    • POSiBLE, Mexico
    Participants in the GSBI Boost Xchange Program. Image Credit: © IntoActions. Photo by Reinhold Steinbeck

    “We have been working with IntoActions since 2013. They are our lead partner concerning the methodology behind our accelerator program. They have challenged our participants to question their assumptions, adjust their mindsets, and apply new tools and techniques to develop better solutions. In the process, our participants quite often redefine what the real social problem is that they want to address, or who the actual users are.”

    Carolina de Andrade, Executive Director
    Social Good Brasil
    Florianópolis, SC, Brazil

    IntoActions trained over 250 early-stage entrepreneurs in human-centered design over three years, partnering with Social Good Brasil, Brazil’s largest social-technical accelerator, training

    Featured Image: © 2019 IntoActions. Image by Reinhold Steinbeck

  • Innovation Labs for Early-Stage Entrepreneurs and Young Graduates in Saudi Arabia

    Innovation Labs for Early-Stage Entrepreneurs and Young Graduates in Saudi Arabia

    Building Innovation Capacity

    Since 2021, IntoActions has led a series of multi-week Innovation Labs for early-stage entrepreneurs and emerging innovation leaders from Saudi Arabia. These hands-on, immersive, team- and project-based programs have been delivered in both Riyadh and Silicon Valley.

    The Innovation Labs are designed as intensive learning experiences that combine real-world challenges with practical tools drawn from design education and the learning and cognitive sciences. Participants work in teams, learn by doing, and apply new ideas directly to authentic problems.

    Innovation Lab Participants in Riyadh. Image Credit: © IntoActions. Photo by Reinhold Steinbeck

    The primary goal of the Innovation Labs is to equip young Saudi graduates and early-stage entrepreneurs with practical strategic innovation skills and the confidence to apply them in real-world contexts.

    Key Learning Objectives

    By the end of the Innovation Labs, participants are able to:

    • Explain the four phases of the design thinking process and how they connect from start to finish
    • Frame real-world challenges by observing users, conducting interviews, and questioning initial assumptions
    • Use idea-generation techniques to move beyond obvious or first-pass solutions
    • Create low-fidelity prototypes—such as sketches or simple models—to make ideas tangible and learn quickly
    • Communicate ideas through clear, human-centered stories that engage and motivate others
    • Build confidence in their own creative abilities through rapid, low-risk experimentation
    • Practice a curious leadership mindset by using questions to challenge assumptions and unlock others’ ideas
    • Build trust and psychological safety by listening carefully, staying present, and knowing when to step in—or step back
    • Apply an integrated approach that connects strategic thinking, human-centered design, and implementation
    Innovation Lab Participants in Riyadh. Image Credit: © IntoActions. Photo by Reinhold Steinbeck

    Featured Image: Innovation Lab Participants during a field visit in Riyadh.
    Image Credit: © IntoActions. Photo by Reinhold Steinbeck