I really believe in this mission of ‘the internet is for everyone’, Tim Berners-Lee wrote that famously. This is for everyone and I’m excited by the mission of empowering people through technology. Devices are the way to do that at the moment.

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@humansonpurpose
I really believe in this mission of ‘the internet is for everyone’, Tim Berners-Lee wrote that famously. This is for everyone and I’m excited by the mission of empowering people through technology. Devices are the way to do that at the moment.
Life for me has to be very coercive. You are born in circumstances, you build structures in your life in such a way that it has to be coercive otherwise I can't see myself being inherently motivated all the time...
I would like to think that if one day you needed something, that stranger would help you. That is the code I have lived my life by.
I started lobbying and the more people told me it wasn’t possible the more driven I was to find ways around the problem, to take on those challenges and prove those individuals wrong. I guess that’s me, that’s the way that I am.
Photography is very much a two-way thing. At each stage, I involve [the subject] and show them progress…. It’s like putting people, enabling people to be on their own stage, and letting them act out who they really are.
For goodness sake do something you believe in. Because if you don’t believe in it, if you don’t think it’s important, and if you don’t think it will in some way be useful, make a difference to somebody, to something, you won’t stick with it.
Other people I was studying business with were more interested in making money or having a good career in the corporate world, but I was always seeing it as a tool, as something I wanted to do for only a bit, more as a learning experience, and then later to apply these skills for social good. And that’s what I’m hopefully doing now with On Purpose in Berlin!
I think that having that sense of social purpose means that I couldn’t look at myself in the mirror if I didn’t feel I was doing something that sat with my values and ethics.
Social responsibility is in my culture, that is my family's culture. My father worked for the United Nations. We travelled around the world with that. My mother works with handicraft artisans, promoting local culture and local livelihoods.
I first got involved in social action when I was 12 or 13 mainly prompted by being angry, and quickly became an activist, annoyed by hypocrisy and unfairness of all kinds. A lot of social change is driven by that kind of anger - but I’ve also since learnt to channel that energy into creating things. I was lucky in my upbringing to be surrounded by people who just took it for granted that to be fully human meant doing things for others as well as for yourself and not being stuck in the mindset of only one field or sector.
The social enterprise movement is fantastic in the way that it’s slowly replacing the old fashioned ways of thinking, call it market capitalism. Whatever names we call them the old mindsets, they have a lot less space for cooperation, for the complexity of human nature and relations. So I love the social enterprise movement for taking the society one step closer to understanding how people can cooperate and solve complex challenges in a much wiser way. At the same time, my desire to participate in this is diminishing.
So I went to the One Young World summit in South Africa and there were loads of really inspirational speakers - people like Muhammad Yunus and Kofi Annan. But what inspired me most was talking to other people attending the event.
How can we smash down walls between the haves and the have-nots? How can we make sure that the have-nots, and the people who don’t have much of a chance in life have that chance in life, and how can we use finance and business as a way of helping tackle poverty and tackle disadvantage and generate opportunity? And that for me has been a real motivator for why I do what I do.
We cannot become the people that we dream of being, the leaders we wish to be, without encompassing the concept of vulnerability and openness.
There is not a problem that I am as passionate of solving as food waste. Part of the reason why I left McKinsey to start Winnow was that it was a massive problem that no one was really trying to solve. I felt like it was something that I had some special skills to bring to help to address. There are very few times in your life when you find a problem that big that fits.
Bikeworks turns 9 years old this September. The original business plan, (‘Olympic Bikes’ because the Olympics were on the horizon and it was always going to be based in Tower Hamlets), was my partner’s dissertation project for her degree in social enterprise. When I read it, I decided we should give it a go.
Looking at other people’s wealth is like looking at the Mona Lisa on the wall of a museum. You don’t want to own it. You look at it and you like it. Of course I’d be loving to live in a big house, and go on fancy holidays. That’s not been what’s given me a purpose. I suspect it doesn't give them a purpose.