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The tech industry today stands on the shoulders of Bill Gates.What the documentary succeeds in is making clear that Bill, while a "normal person" like the rest of us, is nothing short of a true genius. He's surrounded by the best and brightest minds in the world, while constantly devouring complex information in the form of daily reading, which sticks in his mind and merges with his existing knowledge due to both his incredible memory and cerebral flexibility.It's the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has assets of $40.3 billion and has given away $41 billion since 2000. Bill Gates' personal net worth is currently around . This is far beyond the .
And yet, Gates' journey is marked with failures. From Muslim imams preaching anti-vaccination to Boko Haram terrorists killing vaccinators, eliminating Polio was of far greater complexity than even Gates had imagined. The documentary described their efforts to eliminate Polio like playing a game of "whack-a-mole," where they'd rid one area of the disease, only for it to pop-up in a neighboring area.
Gates continued to throw on the problem, hoping that providing hundreds of millions of dollars more than asked for could solve the few remaining cases of Polio that kept popping up.As mentioned, Gates is also working on solving the energy problem. This too has proven to be more difficult than imagined. Building his new energy reactors would require efficient resource allocation at scale, and the best partner to do that with would be China, given their history in nuclear. Everything was ready to go, until Trump's trade war .Gates was on the verge of shifting the world away from fossil fuels for good, until an unforeseeable event derailed his mission."Inside Bill's Brain" remarks how the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is well aware that the clock is ticking. Bill Gates won't live forever, not that he would have all the answers even if he did.
While Gates' projects to save the world have been blighted by unforeseen events, knowledge of this history won't eliminate such events in the future. Such is the nature of randomness.Of course, this is precisely the point of a foundation like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. It enables better management and distribution of resources, while eliminating a single point of failure. But I'm not talking about foundations, I'm talking about global entrepreneurial networks.
Unsurprisingly, a lot of the difficulty of solving a challenge in a certain region, say Polio in Nigeria, is the distribution of resources in that region. If you have impact entrepreneurs in Nigeria, the distribution equation is solved a lot more easily. The problem then becomes a tremendous resource constraint, as African startups have virtually no funding compared to startups in developed markets.
The new challenge to solve, then, is efficiently allocating resources to those impact entrepreneurs closest to the problem. In other words: Impact crowdinvesting. This combines equity crowdfunding, which benefits from accessing the resources of a network of investors rather than fewer individuals, and impact investing, which suffers from a lack of accessibility. Impact crowdinvesting gives resources to those with the greatest chance to solve global challenges: Entrepreneurs close to those challenges.But that's just the how, the answer to this article, or "who has all the answers?," is you. It's networks of entrepreneurs, especially those in fast-growing emerging markets, which are also suffering the most from the global challenges we see today.