Abstract

As poverty and inequality continue to plague American cities, universities and hospitals are looking for ways to leverage their role as community anchors to address these issues. Local procurement programs have emerged as one way for institutions to build local wealth and create jobs. In order to increase the impact of individual institutions, many cities are creating place-based collaboratives to amplify the impact of individual anchors. However, because collaboratives focus on systems-level change, which can take many years to achieve, they frequently struggle to raise and sustain necessary levels of funding. This article outlines how the principles of a Lean Startup methodology, an approach that focuses on gradual growth using validated learning, can be utilized to build financially sustainable anchor collaboratives and identify the most effective strategies for local purchasing. The article provides an overview the Philadelphia local purchasing landscape, defines the Lean Startup methodology and looks at the application of the methodology through the lens of Philadelphia’s local purchasing collaborative, Philadelphia Anchors for Growth and Equity at the Economy League of Greater Philadelphia. The goal of this article is to share a strategic planning framework that could be useful in creating effective local purchasing collaboratives.

Highlights

  • Philadelphia has been experiencing population and economic growth for the last 10 years, more than a quarter of its population still lives in poverty (Pew Charitable Trust, 2017)

  • In March of 2018, the Economy League launched Philadelphia Anchors of Philadelphia of Growth and Equity, based on the research and groundwork completed by the Philadelphia City Controller (Khandros, 2018)

  • The Philadelphia Anchors for Growth and Equity (PAGE) team should measure the effectiveness of these programs by seeing whether companies reach the requisite capacity upon completing the training

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Summary

Introduction

Philadelphia has been experiencing population and economic growth for the last 10 years, more than a quarter of its population still lives in poverty (Pew Charitable Trust, 2017). Just a few of them are The Enterprise Center, Philadelphia Industrial Development Corporation (PIDC), The Reinvestment Fund (TRF), Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC), and Finanta to business groups such as the Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce (GPCC), the Delaware Valley Industrial Resource Center (DVIRC), and the Sustainable Business Network (Office of the Controller, 2015) These organizations offer a variety of programs to help small businesses working with large, institutional clients: advising businesses on questions of legal structure, bonding and insurance, writing an RFP, and managing cash flow. This places an intermediary between the institutions and their suppliers

Benefits to Anchors
Best Practices Implementation
Lean Startup Methodology
Setting Goals
Building a Backbone Organization to Connect Supply and Demand
Capturing Existing Capacity
Growing Promising Businesses
Building New Capacity
Setting Goals and Communicating the Commitment to Local Purchasing
Making Improvements to the RFP Process
Engaging Supply Chain Integrators
Findings
Completing the Best Practices Checklist
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