Can Outcomes-Based Financing Scale Peace?

By Eric Letsinger, CEO of Quantified Ventures

Johannes Schreuder (United Nations Peacebuilding Support Office), Eric Letsinger (Quantified Ventures), Michelle McMahon (Innovest Advisory), and Rabbi Joshua Ratner (Jlens Impact Investor Network).

Johannes Schreuder (United Nations Peacebuilding Support Office), Eric Letsinger (Quantified Ventures), Michelle McMahon (Innovest Advisory), and Rabbi Joshua Ratner (Jlens Impact Investor Network).

Johannes Schreuder (United Nations Peacebuilding Support Office), Eric Letsinger (Quantified Ventures), Michelle McMahon (Innovest Advisory), and Rabbi Joshua Ratner (Jlens Impact Investor Network)

Last year, I was introduced to Sheldon Himelfarb, President & CEO of PeaceTech Lab, which had recently launched the first ever cohort of tech startups in their PeaceTech Accelerator. These social entrepreneurs are building technologies that can predictably reduce conflict. With major partners like Amazon Web Services, Sheldon took a simple notion (i.e., tech can drive peace) and made it into a thriving reality.

I thought — cool! I had no idea that was a thing. As the CEO of Quantified Ventures, I’m always looking for innovative, evidence-based projects that drive positive social, health, and environmental outcomes. And here sits the PeaceTech Lab, turning ideas into realities. He had my attention.

But Sheldon wasn’t satisfied with just building these foundational building blocks; he was already aiming higher. He asked Quantified Ventures to explore the creation of a revolving, outcomes-based impact fund to help scale the tech solutions that are birthed in the Peace Accelerator. So, we got to work…

Last week, I spoke on a panel about “Investing in Peace” at the Venture Peacebuilding Symposium in Washington, D.C., where we unveiled the basic structure of this fund, which would be a first-of-a-kind in this sector. There I found:

  • an incredibly sophisticated Peace investor community,

  • an optimistic set of futurists unpacking the promise of blockchain technology to advance peace,

  • an enlightened and innovative NGO community committed to moving the “conflict reduction” field from highly bespoke structures to scalable ones, and

  • a shared desire for investable opportunities.

This community is open for business, making measurable progress against targeted outcomes — quite far down the path from grant dependency towards offering investable platforms and transactions to those seeking to align their capital with mission.

I was joined on the panel by Johannes Schreuder (United Nations Peacebuilding Support Office), Michelle McMahon (Innovest Advisory), and Rabbi Joshua Ratner (Jlens Impact Investor Network). Aside from being inspiring co-panelists, they collectively represent the constellation of partners essential to advance an outcomes-based fund for PeaceTech Lab. Whether by design or happy coincidence, I don’t know, but this serendipity has increased my enthusiasm for making something happen — soon.

At Quantified Ventures, our mission is to drive impact capital to people and organizations who can do good. This outcome fund model represents a new way of doing this and comes with several additional benefits, including:

  • Valuation of outcomes at an amount that’s higher than what they actually cost to produce; this means that when an investor pays for an outcome, it generates enough money to not only pay back the investor, but also to drive dollars back into the fund; this makes it sustainable…holy grail-ish.

  • It’s open to a number of investors, meaning that you can draw capital from multiple sources depending on the outcomes they care about; and

  • The fund “owner” has a lot of flexibility to optimize performance relative to desired outcomes.

I have been bullish about the possibilities of outcomes-based funding for awhile now, and always excited to find new applications like this one for this model — particularly one that pursues the most elusive and necessary outcome of our time: peace.

Quantified Ventures