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A new book byย Clayton Christensen,ย Efosa Ojomoย andย Karen Dillonย is encouraging innovation and transforming the way the business world, governments, and NGOs think about global poverty โ€“ and the mutually beneficial ways they can tackle it together.

In โ€œThe Prosperity Paradox: How Innovation Can Lift Nations Out of Povertyโ€ (HarperBusiness, January 2019), the authors use numerous case studies to demonstrate how poverty persists not because of lack of resources but lack of market-creating innovations. As the case studies show, the business or entrepreneur who launches such an innovation in an impoverished nation can reap enormous profits while contributing to global development in a meaningful, sustainable way.

The authors begin by defining the role of entrepreneurs in developing market-creating innovations โ€“ new products or services that create consumers out of non-consumers. This may sound counterintuitive; firms generally focus on where they know there will be likely customers, not where they donโ€™t see any. But Ojomo, Dillon and Christensen โ€“ the father of Disruptive Innovation Theory and still the foremost authority in this field of thought โ€“ note that many of the most successful innovations in the world have created entirely new markets.

The Model T, the first car to be mass-produced, made Ford a global auto giant while generating massive gains in industries from tire-making to road construction. Millions of people who would not have driven before suddenly could buy their own cars inexpensively. Tolaram instant noodles were successfully marketed as a daily food staple in Nigeria due to their affordability and convenience. In both cases, innovators benefitted enormously from being the trailblazers in so-called โ€œfrontier economiesโ€.

In addition to offering a new perspective for the business world, the authors aim to influence the way governments and NGOs approach poverty alleviation. Rather than focusing entirely on โ€œpushingโ€ material resources into poorer countries, they must work with firms and entrepreneurs to develop the innovations which โ€œpullโ€ resources into those places.

Can your organization play a role in this evolution of thought? Can you see opportunity where others see nothing? Pre-order โ€œThe Prosperity Paradoxโ€ to see how poverty is not a barrier to growth but an opportunity to create new markets โ€“ all while benefitting millions of people.

How To Create Global Prosperity Through Innovation was last modified: October 30th, 2024 by Meg Virag