Nonprofit plans an incubator to help green startups

May 16, 2011|By Diane Mastrull, Inquirer Staff Writer
  • Shari Shapiro, on the roof of her building in June 2009. To qualify for the Greenhouse Business Incubator, businesses do not have to be from this region, but they have to be willing to locate here for the incubator, Shapiro says.

You know what's harder than starting a small business? Starting a green small business.

Try finding financing when the premise of what you are all about - being green, or sustainable - isn't entirely understood by banks or investors, and there's no long track record on which to base success projections.

Add to that the ordinary technical challenges of any start-up: Developing a business plan. Getting the word out about products and services. Surviving.

Good news: Help is on the way. It's not a record-setting cash gift from a deep-pocketed philanthropist like Raymond G. Perelman. But it is assistance for local entrepreneurs who, on their path to financial success, are also willing to dedicate their business to doing good by environmental and social standards - otherwise known as the triple bottom line of people, planet, and profit.

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The Greenhouse Business Incubator would be the region's first specifically designed to cultivate environmental and social entrepreneurs, said its organizers, a group of professionals passionate about the sustainability movement and eager to help foster the growth of more like-minded businesses in the Philadelphia area.

To qualify for inclusion, businesses do not have to be from this region, "but they have to be willing to locate here for the incubator," said Shari Shapiro, a lawyer at Cozen O'Connor, where she specializes in green-building and renewable-energy issues, and cochairwoman of the board of Green Village Philadelphia, the nonprofit organization behind the incubator project.

Green Village, which consists of one paid staffer and a seven-member board of directors, is trying to raise $100,000 from foundations, the local corporate community, and essentially anyone willing to give.

The goal is to have the incubator ready to accept its first class of five companies in September. Once open, it is expected to be self-sustaining.

The physical space will be 2,000 square feet of prime city office space, the lease for which is soon to be signed, Shapiro said, declining to provide location specifics.

There, Internet, phone, copier, and conference facilities will be available for a fee under a month-to-month lease arrangement that has not yet been determined, said Green Village's executive director, Zoe Selzer.

In addition, professional support, such as legal, marketing, and accounting consultations, will be available, some for free.

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