Students Tackle Global Challenges Through Business
At Brittingham Social Enterprise Lab, students improve lives through sustainability and profitability.
Three years ago, when Adlai Wertman devised the USC Marshall School of Business masters program for social entrepreneurshipa field using business strategies to address social challenges like povertyhe told himself hed be happy if 15 people applied to it. He got more than seven times that number. Turns out he was onto something. Because of its basis in business, the Brittingham Social Enterprise Lab is unlike any other social impact program. Its housed in a business school with a curriculum devoted to using those skills to solve global problems, explains Wertman, a professor of entrepreneurship and the labs founding director. Students create business concepts and apply those skills to improve communities from busy metropolises to small villages.
Business Plan: Building Farms in Angola

Taking Action: Amoes and two other USC students created Terra Limpa, a company that acquires land once filled with mines at below-market rates. They hire farmers to work the land and provide tools, seeds and fertilizer. The company generates revenue by selling the goods produced.
Business Plan: An Uber for Wheelchairs

Taking Action: Aldana hopes that with his app, which is still in the planning phase, people could book rides quickly and easily.
Business Plan: A Website to Inform and Educate Voters

Taking Action: BallotView signed up 10,000 users in 50 states during the November 2016 election and its creators aim to keep it growing.
Business Plan: A Water Filter Program to Support Entrepreneurship

Taking Action: Aqus sells water filters to villagers, who in turn can sell the clean water, turning them into water entrepreneurs. It operates in Nigeria, Pakistan, Ecuador, Vietnam, Indonesia, India, Ghana and Sierra Leone.
Business Plan: A Youth Development Program in Uganda

Taking Action: The experience led to Do Good Journals, Prados skill-building program for youth in Kyetume, Uganda. It helps young people sell handmade journals to fund their education.
Photos by Gus Ruelas