about jobs advertise subscribe: Email / RSS

GreenBuzz from GreenBiz

Categorized

» About
» Agriculture & Food
» CSR
» Clean Tech
» Climate Change
» Conflicts & Communication
» Conscious Entrepreneurship
» Eco Products
» Energy
» Green Building
» Greenwashing
» Investment & Markets
» MBA
» Management
» Marketing & Branding
» Policy & Government
» Poverty Solutions
» Renewable Energy
» Social Enterprise
» Supply Chain
» Transportation

Worth Your Time

Green Business Links

Sustainabilty

« back to the latest from 3p

June 25, 2008

Better World Books: A Virtuous Online Bookseller

Better%20World%20Books%20logo.gif

My love of books coupled with my passion for social justice led me to start purchasing books from Better World Books, a triple-bottom-line company that sells new and used books, and donates a percentage from every sale to literacy projects around the world. “We believe that education and access to books are basic human rights. That's why books sold on BetterWorld.com help fund high-impact literacy projects in the United States and around the world,” the company’s website states.

Started by University of Notre Dame college students in 2002 who sold textbooks online, Better World Books now has over two million new and used book titles. For the frugal social conscious book lover, Better World Books provides something Amazon does not: free shipping in the U.S., and $2.97 internationally.

post-continues.gif
our-sponsor-message.gif

The online book company collects used books and supports book drives by partnering with almost 1,000 libraries in the U.S. Better World Books boasts that so far it has raised $4.5 million for literacy and education projects, and saved over 6,000 tons of books from ending up in landfills. Not bad at all for a couple of college kids who wanted to make a few extra dollars.

Better Book World’s four main literacy partners are Books for Africa, Room to Read, Worldfund, and the National Center for Family Literacy. The company holds book drives and gives the funds to its literacy partners.

“Literacy is the big equalizer. It's proven in Africa that a woman who is literate is many times more likely to not contract AIDS. It's pretty much a proven fact that if you get people literate, get people educated, you can make a difference in their lives,” said David Murphy, CEO of Better World Books.

“We appeal to people who want to vote with their dollars. We're very much positioned for buyers with a conscience who are, basically, purchasing with their values. I'd like to go to a place and buy a book and know a certain percentage is going back to something I support.”

Investment from Good Capital, LLC

In April Better World Books announced that Good Capital, LLC the San Francisco-based investment manager of the Social Enterprise Expansion Fund, will invest up to $2.5 million in growth capital. Good Capitol, according to a press release, “accelerates the flow of capital to innovative social ventures to create sustainable solutions to global challenges. Its Social Enterprise Expansion Fund is a private equity fund that provides growth capital to businesses that deploy market-based solutions focused on poverty alleviation, healthcare, and education.”

"Better World Books is a great fit for Good Capital's Social Enterprise Expansion Fund," said Kevin Jones, Principal and Co-founder of Good Capital. "It's a rapidly growing, expansion-stage social enterprise that is leveraging a market-based approach, by buying and selling new and used books to improve global literacy. They are passionate and smart, and we look forward to helping them achieve their financial goals and execute on their social mission."

"This investment from Good Capital and other private investors will have a huge impact on our ability to promote and support literacy on a much bigger scale around the world," said Murphy. "Better World Books was founded on a simple belief that businesses can do good and do well at the same time. We are thrilled that Good Capital and our other partners have embraced Better World Books’ unique model with growth capital that protects our core values while providing the acceleration to help us expand our business."

email-updates.gif
» Gina-Marie Cheeseman | More »

Comments

I ordered a book for a class from this service this past fall, before my semester started. It didn't arrive until after I had taken the final in February (in fact, it arrived next to my spring semester books from Amazon). I'm never going near 'BetterWorld' again (you shouldn't either).

It doesn't matter how good the concept is if the implementation sucks.

» Anonymous at June 25, 2008 10:15 AM

I ordered books from Better World and they arrived within a week. I will continue to order books from them.

» Gina-Marie Cheeseman at June 25, 2008 3:11 PM

sent me a book with the FIRST CHAPTER missing!

» katie at September 7, 2008 3:29 PM

Join the Discussion

Be patient. You only need to click once to post your comment, which will appear soon afterwards.

(you may use HTML tags for style)

 

Remember Me?

Comments from other sites:

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.triplepundit.com/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2728

Related stories by keyword:

No related stories right now
From Technorati »

Search 3p

Latest Posts

  • Can Developing Economies Reduce Power Emissions and Still Grow?
    The Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism has come under its fair share of criticism yet its one of few real games in town when it comes to internationally standardized and coordinated efforts to spur emissions reductions projects and technology transfer between developed and developing countries. Researchers at UNEP's Risoe Center are proposing a new methodology that they say addresses CDM weaknesses when it comes to reducing emissions in the electricity sectors of the largest developing country CO2 emitters.

    January 5

  • Ideablob: Making Dreams Come True
    Guest post from our friends at Good Capital: Jack Alter, a Philadelphia schoolteacher, started giving loans to some of his...

    January 5

  • EPA's Love Affair with Carbon About to End
    The Environmental Protection Agency is, yet again, not doing the very thing its name implies. For the umpteenth time in...

    January 5

  • Beyond the Tangible is Where Learning Begins
    by Erin Jacobs Beyond the tangible work we construct as individuals and in groups, is an emotional being connected...

    January 2

  • Profitable Philanthropy? The Values Behind the Figures.
    Around this time of year, big Fortune 500 companies resuscitate their annual giving campaigns, tossing boatloads of cash at...

    January 2

  • Lost and Found
    by Jennifer Pechacek For the past 7 years---through a very challenging journey---I have been groomed within a professional context...

    January 1

  • Leadership by Design
    by Erica Frye The business world has started to recognize something I’ve thought for a long time -- designers...

    January 1

  • An Urgent Resolution for the New Year
    Tomorrow morning, the gym will be quite crowded with new members hoping to start the year off right. It...

    January 1

Dated Archives




mojo-cover-nov08.jpg

live-neutral-logo.gif

PWC_logo.gif

ecosa.gif