Emerson Collective is focused on several .
IMMIGRATION
Complex issues require complex solutions, so we use a broad range of including philanthropy, venture investing, convening, and art to spur measurable, lasting change.
Collaborating across disciplines and geographies, we work to find genuine, sustained and sustainable solutions.
Power Of the
Collective
In partnership with community, business, and government leaders we pursue our mission: to advance some of society's most calcified systems, creating pathways to genuine opportunity so people from all communities can achieve their full potential.
Learn more about us from our founder, .
Both words are very meaningful to me. I’m deeply inspired by Ralph Waldo Emerson’s writings on our ability to transcend limitations that are placed on us by society. I love the word collective because it acknowledges that we are all at our best when we learn from–and work with–team members who share a sense of purpose and possibility. Like steel sharpens steel, we make each other better. With the name Emerson Collective, we recognize that humanity is bound together, and that we can create new possibilities by drawing on one another’s gifts and talents.
Working with the students, families and staff of College Track enriched my understanding of our country and the many systems within it. At its best, the public education system is an engine for social and economic mobility. But we all know it doesn’t always work that way. Education is not an isolated or siloed domain. It connects to a broader set of systems that touch people’s lives, including immigration, health, environment, and economic opportunities. The understanding of just how interconnected these issues are was fundamental to the creation of Emerson Collective.
It’s very difficult to make sustainable and sustained change. None of the issues we are trying to address have easy solutions and making progress requires a variety of approaches. We work with domain experts with a breadth of experiences, insights, and relationships, and we use a range of tools, like philanthropy, investing, convening, and storytelling to build broad coalitions. As challenges evolve, we are nimble in our response and find that a cross-functional approach often yields unexpected results.
Dr. Martin Luther King said that philanthropy is a very useful and good tool, but it can’t ignore the conditions that created it. I believe that philanthropy is a very powerful tool for good, but it’s not the only powerful tool. Mission-driven investing is a tool for good. Art and activism and storytelling are tools for good. The LLC structure allows us the flexibility to creatively use the best attributes of all these models to address emerging needs and opportunities.
I would like Emerson Collective to be a place where great leaders come to do difficult things. Through our efforts, we hope to shape a world where people are not bound by the circumstances of their birth. Instead, they have the ability and agency to design their own paths—aligned with their highest and best purposes. We work to create equitable opportunities, and my hope is that we leave the world a little improved because we have existed.
Read more in the Letter From Our Founder.
QUESTIONS
WITH
Laurene Powell Jobs
Founder and President