A Worthwhile Charity to Consider

Paul Farkas

Administrator
Staff member
Dec 28, 2000
80,885
4,769
113
www.odwire.org
School/Org
Columbia University / PCO
City
Lake Oswego
State
OR
ODwire.org member Jordan Kassalow,OD,MPH is founder and CEO of VisionSpring.

Here is some additional information...

"VisionSpring Newsletter

OCTOBER 2008

The past few months have been some of the most exciting yet for VisionSpring. As you know, we changed our name in June from Scojo Foundation to VisionSpring and launched a $5 million prospectus to help us scale our operations over the next five years as we progress toward sustainability. This pioneering approach to social enterprise financing has received much attention lately, most prominently in The Wall Street Journal.
Click here to read the VisionSpring prospectus online. To request a hard copy or learn about how you can help, please contact Miriam Stone, Director of Business Development.

VisionSpring Featured in the Wall Street Journal

In “Starting Up: Funding Your Social Venture,” Diana Ransom points to VisionSpring’s prospectus as an innovative funding model. “Similar to a Wall Street prospectus, the document outlines risk factors, from currency fluctuations to natural disasters. Investors will receive quarterly reports. But unlike a traditional offering, VisionSpring's investors are only promised a "social" return on investment rather than lucrative financial returns.”
Read more at WSJ.com


From the Field

Rama Devi is one of VisionSpring’s top-performing Vision Entrepreneurs. With glasses sales frequently surpassing 100 per month, Rama Devi has been able to send her kids to better schools, purchase household items like a refrigerator, and invest in a motorcycle so she and her husband can travel more easily to conduct vision campaigns in other villages. Her secret to success? “Don’t be afraid to talk with your customers,” she says. “Be outgoing and speak directly to people about how clear vision can change their lives.”

VisionSpring News

This fall, VisionSpring welcomed Peter Eliassen to its New York staff as VP of Sales and Operations. Peter comes to the team with a diverse background of public and private sector experience, including at Unilever, Capital One, and in the Peace Corps."

One of the biggest challenges that HealthKeepers (our Ghanaian Vision Entrepreneurs) face when selling eyeglasses is credibility, writes Carrie Magnuson, VisionSpring's Franchise Partner Manager. It is often hard for communities to accept that one of their neighbors is qualified to conduct vision screenings and sell eyeglasses. VisionSpring and its partner, Freedom from Hunger, have worked together overcome this barrier by providing HealthKeepers with professional marketing materials, branded uniforms, and ongoing trainings to build confidence, as many of the women have never worked outside the home.

R

VisionSpring Senior Director Graham Macmillan is live blogging for NextBillion.net from the Social Capital Markets conference in San Fransisco this week.

Thank you

If you enjoyed what you read, consider forwarding this to a friend."


In the interest of full disclosure, Dr Jordan Kassalow is a partner in my former practice. See www.eyewise.com.
 
It uses "Vision Entrepreneurs" to go out into the "field" and perform screenings on "customers", to whom they sell glasses.

VisionSpring glasses are available for approximately $4 a pair. By taking eyeglasses out of the exclusive hands of eyecare professionals, VisionSpring is transforming eyeglasses into a basic consumer product. This mimics the same shift that occurred in the US over 30 years ago, when "reading" glasses became over-the-counter product available in every corner drugstore.

You consider this a worthwhile charity?

Is this a joke?

http://www.visionspring.org/how-we-work/why-eyeglasses.php
 
Time to get out into the real world

It uses "Vision Entrepreneurs" to go out into the "field" and perform screenings on "customers", to whom they sell glasses.



You consider this a worthwhile charity?

Is this a joke?

http://www.visionspring.org/how-we-work/why-eyeglasses.php

Is it better to have the vast majority of the impoverished in third world countries have no access to optical aids? Why not evaluate the program before commenting?

Comments pro and con are always appreciated.
 
Opinion molders who consider Vision Spring a worthwhile charity...

It uses "Vision Entrepreneurs" to go out into the "field" and perform screenings on "customers", to whom they sell glasses.



You consider this a worthwhile charity?

Is this a joke?

http://www.visionspring.org/how-we-work/why-eyeglasses.php


Interesting how those outside of optometry view this...

"VisionSpring Wins Prestigious $100,000 Aspen Institute Prize

On November 6th, Dr. Jordan Kassalow, Founder of VisionSpring, was selected as the inaugural winner of the John P. McNulty Prize at the Aspen Institute's 25th Annual Awards Dinner at the Plaza Hotel in New York City. Meant to celebrate the spirit and memory of Institute trustee John P. McNulty, the $100,000 prize supports extraordinary young leaders making creative, effective, and lasting contributions to their communities and will be given annually to an Aspen Global Leadership Network (AGLN) Fellow.

Kassalow, along with four other finalists, was reviewed by a distinguished panel of judges consisting of Virgin Group chairman and philanthropist Sir Richard Branson; Mary Robinson, the first female President of Ireland; and Olara Otunnu, the President of LBL Foundation for Children and former UN Under-Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict.

“The simple elegance of Jordan's solution to a basic human need—a franchise model to deliver eyeglasses which can extend the productive work life of the poor in remote rural areas—is unique and inspiring,” said Anne Welsh McNulty, an Institute trustee and the co-founder and managing partner of JBK Partners. “I think my husband, John, would have been very excited by the creative and sustainable business model of VisionSpring, by the number of women entrepreneurs VisionSpring has helped empower, and by Jordan's energy and persistence in dramatically expanding this project to multiple countries across three continents.”

I wonder if the AOA News will consider this newsworthy?