December 6, 2018

What Is Impact Investing and Why Should You Care?

The Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN) defines impact investing as investment into companies, organizations, and funds with the intention of generating social or environmental impact alongside a financial return. The exact impact will depend on the investor's goals, while the financial returns can range from below-market to market rate.

Why Do We Care About Impact Investing?

Solving our biggest social problems requires private capital:  The United Nations estimates a need for $3.9 trillion a year between now and 2030 to meet the Sustainable Development Goals. Philanthropy and government funding is not enough to meet this need and will require an additional $2.5 trillion a year to fill the gap.


Private capital has played an important role in social impact success stories: For example, the green revolution in agriculture and the development and delivery of life-saving vaccines all required private investment alongside philanthropy and government.

Now is a critical moment for the impact investing field: As more investors become interested in exploring impact investing, the risk of "impact washing" (a fund or company portraying itself as impact focused without actually having impact) becomes much higher. This is largely because there is still little agreement about what actually counts as an "impact investment." Now is the time for new and existing impact investors to be thoughtful and intentional about defining what they mean by "impact."

Different Types of Impact Investing:

The chart below plots different investment types based on expected financial return and the approach to impact.



Expected financial return: Investors and funders can have expectations ranging from complete loss of capital to market rate return (which varies widely, depending on context). This "returns continuum" includes everything from investments that result in market rate returns all the way to grants in which there is at least partial cost coverage. Impact investments do not have to be market-rate, also known as non-concessionary, to be an impact investment, but investors often expect some financial return. Some investors, however, may choose to accept a lower return as part of their strategy to unlock impact. This is in contrast to a pure grant or philanthropic gift, where investors don't expect any financial gain.

Approach to impact: At its core, impact investing expects to create social impact. This impact exists on a spectrum from passive to evidence-based:

  • Passive: Investors aim to produce social or environmental impact, but impact is not the primary aim of the investment. As a result, the investors do not hold themselves accountable for impact. Despite the lack of intent, some investors will still label investments in this category as "impact investments"
  • Intentional: Investors actively attempt to solve a social or environmental problem through the investment's mode of production (e.g., creating a good or service generating fewer carbon emissions than other benchmarks) and/or directly through the product or service (e.g., opening a primary healthcare clinic in a rural community). In these cases, however, the investors generally do not base the investment on demonstrated evidence of impact, rather on instinct and intuition
  • Evidence-based/field leader: Investors actively attempt to solve a social or environmental problem through the mode of production and/or through the product or service. The investor also bases investment decisions on demonstrated evidence of social or environmental impact (for example, on a published peer-reviewed study that demonstrates the effectiveness of a like product or service). Many of these investors also choose to share their practices more broadly through key venues (e.g. investor networks and conferences) and publications. It is important to note that there does not need to be a study done on the company's specific product/service for an investment to be evidence-based. (Examples: Root Capital, The Rise Fund, Omidyar Network)
  • None: Investors do not expect to create social impact with the investment. Even these investments may inadvertently produce positive social impact, but this does not count as an impact investment

Who is Engaged in Impact Investing?

Many different stakeholder types are involved in impact investing. These include the following:



Asset owners and managers: Asset owners include foundations, individuals, pension funds, development finance institutions, and banks. They may do their own investing or hire asset managers to invest on their behalf. Asset managers (also known as fund managers) include private market funds, public market funds, debt lenders, funds of funds, and banks. These organizations often do the investing on behalf of the asset owners. Banks can be both owners and managers and can decide to invest their money in impact investments.

Impact investing is relevant for many asset classes, from seed funding to growth and expansion. This includes (but is not limited to): Bank debt, venture capital, private equity, private debt, real assets, fixed income, public equity, public debt, and green bonds.

Enterprises that Receive Impact Investing Funds:

Many impact-focused enterprises structure themselves as for-profits. Other business structures can receive impact investments, however, including hybrids (e.g., nonprofit organizations with a for-profit subsidiary or vice versa), b-corps, and 501(c)(3)s (nonprofits). For example, nonprofits are often the recipients of social impact bonds.

Bridgespan believes enterprises with these types of characteristics tend to be well-positioned for an impact investment:

Definable impact thesis connected to a big problem:

  • Is mission-driven or clear intention that impact can be logically tied to their company's product/service (e.g., lock-step impact and profitability)
  • Impact is connected to a benefit, a change for individuals, and/or populations to address a social challenge (e.g., United Nations Sustainable Development Goals)
  • The proposed impact or solution must be feasible and actionable

Benefits society and/or high-need populations:

  • Impact is either societal (e.g., environmental impact) or is aimed at a population in need (e.g., those at the bottom of the pyramid)
  • Scale is large enough to make a meaningful impact on society and/or the populations in need

Aligns financial interests with impact interests:

  • Investment-worthy companies must yield some financial returns. These can range from partial capital recovery to market-rate returns

Intermediaries: These organizations also play a critical role in the impact-investing field by creating networks, convening impact investors, providing consulting support and conducting research. (e.g. The GIIN), the Impact Management Project, The Bridgespan Group, and Acumen's Lean Data)

How Do Investors Measure Impact?  

Impact assessment is difficult in the social sector in general, but it is especially hard in impact investing for a variety of reasons. For example, rigorous measurement is expensive and therefore competes with financial returns. Many investments also target impact indirectly. And few "gold standard" measurement practices exist. (Though some—such as IMP's five dimensions framework and Rise's Impact Multiple of Money are in active development.)

To circumvent these hurdles, many impact investors use a variety of common practices, including the following:

  • Focus on outputs—the activities or products produced by the investment—instead of outcomes—the actual social or environmental impact created by the investment
  • Reliance on intuition and judgment rather than hard metrics
  • Point in time metrics—considering the impact at one time period versus over a full investment lifecycle

Bridgespan focuses on helping investors and the field shift to more rigorous impact assessment methods—evidence-based impact investing. We help our clients adopt a variety of best practices, including the following:

  • Moving from ex-post to ex-ante by incorporating impact assessment as a formal part of due diligence and estimating impact before an investor makes an investment.
  • Embedding impact assessment across the deal lifecycle: considering impact from the beginning of due diligence and actively tracking and managing during holding and through exit.
  • Measuring and estimating, where possible, outcomes such as the meaningful change in people's lives versus outputs such as activities, or the number of people served.

Examples of Intentional and Evidence-based Impact Investments:

Investment-level examples:

Rise Fund investment in Dodla Dairy: Dodla Dairy, the 4th largest private fresh dairy product company in India, is a premier "success" story investment by Rise in 2017. Dodla sources milk from 250,000+ smallholder farmers. Rise estimated that investments in Dodla would increase farm families' annual incomes by 73 percent, from $425 to $735.

Investment in D. Light (investors have included Acumen, Omidyar Network, and others):D.Light is an energy product company in East Africa, in which Acumen made an investment in 2008. D.Light provides a suite of low-cost solar energy solutions for millions without access to reliable energy in East Africa. More than 60M people benefit from D.Light's solutions with an average monthly cost saving of 10 to 25 percent for consumers, in addition to carbon emission offsets. The impact of the D. Light investments extends far beyond the individual company. The investments also validated the idea that there is an impact-rich market for home solar products.

Bridges Social Impact Bond Fund investment in West London ZoneBridges invested in West London Zone (WLZ), a registered charity that runs a program in certain parts of London. WLZ works with schools to identify youth who are struggling in school and then buys / manages services for local organizations to provide personalized supports for these children. Bridges funded the organization through a social impact bond. In the pilot, there was a 28-percent average increase in reading scores.

Fund-level example:

Root Capital: Root Capital provides agricultural businesses in the world's most vulnerable communities with financial capital and training to help them grow. 65 percent of their clients support farmer households living on less than $4 a day and 96 percent of clients operate in an environmental vulnerability hotspot (biodiversity, soil, water, or climate change). To date, they have lent over $1.2 billion to over 680 enterprises reaching 1.3 million farm families. On average, their companies grow at an average rate of 20 to 25 percent per year.

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