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Clay Water Brick: Finding Inspiration from Entrepreneurs Who Do the Most with the Least

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In the tradition of Kabul Beauty School and Start Something That Matters comes an inspiring story of social entrepreneurship from the co-founder of Kiva, the first online microlending platform for the working poor. Featuring lessons learned from successful businesses in the world’s poorest countries, Jessica Jackley’s Clay Water Brick will motivate readers to more deeply appreciate the incredible entrepreneurial potential that exists in every human being on this planet—especially themselves.

“The heart of entrepreneurship is never about what we have. It’s about what we do.”
 
Meet Patrick, who had next to nothing and started a thriving business using just the ground beneath his feet . . .
 
Blessing, who built her shop right in the middle of the road, refusing to take the chance that her customers might pass her by . . .
 
Constance, who cornered the banana market in her African village with her big personality and sense of mission.
 
Patrick, Blessing, Constance, and many others are among the poorest of the world’s poor. And yet they each had crucial lessons to teach Jessica Jackley—lessons about resilience, creativity, perseverance, and, above all, entrepreneurship.
 
For as long as she could remember, Jackley, the co-founder of the revolutionary microlending site Kiva, had a singular and urgent ambition: to help alleviate global poverty. While in her twenties, she set off for Africa to finally meet the people she had long dreamed of helping. The insights of those she met changed her understanding. Today she believes that many of the most inspiring entrepreneurs in the world are not focused on high-tech ventures or making a lot of money; instead, they wake up every day and build better lives for themselves, their families, and their communities, regardless of the things they lack or the obstacles they encounter. As Jackley puts it, “The greatest entrepreneurs succeed not because of what they possess but because of what they are determined to do.”
 
In Clay Water Brick, Jackley challenges readers to embrace entrepreneurship as a powerful force for change in the world. She shares her own story of founding Kiva with little more than a laptop and a dream, and the stories and the lessons she has learned from those across the globe who are doing the most with the least.
 
Praise for Clay Water Brick
 
“Jessica Jackley didn’t wait for permission to change the world—she just did it. It turns out that you can too.”—Seth Godin, author of What to Do When It’s Your Turn
 
“Clay Water Brick is a tremendously inspiring read. Jessica Jackley, the virtuoso co-founder of the revolutionary microlending platform Kiva, shares uplifting stories and compelling lessons on entrepreneurship, resilience, and character.”—Adam Grant, author of Give and Take
 
“With only a dream and a lot of determination, Jessica Jackley founded Kiva, an organization that has empowered millions of people around the world. Clay Water Brick is the inspiring story of her own far-flung journeys as an entrepreneur, but it’s also a blueprint for anyone who wants to make the world a better place and find fulfillment in the process, no matter how scarce their resources or how steep the challenge.”—Arianna Huffington
 
“Inspiring and insightful, Clay Water Brick is a book you simply won’t be able to put down. Jessica Jackley has created a timeless read for every aspiring entrepreneur.”—Adam Braun, author of The Promise of a Pencil

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3 thoughts on “Clay Water Brick: Finding Inspiration from Entrepreneurs Who Do the Most with the Least

  1. Small Changes Create a New World How does inspiration grow? Jackley wanted to figure out poverty and what to do about it from an early age. While many people might have given up, she pushed and questioned and experimented until she discovered microfinancing. And the she went right on pushing and questioning and financing until she created Kiva. Many of my friends have given small loans through Kiva and I hope everyone who reads this book will be inspired to do so. I’m as impressed with Jessica’s story as I am with the many…

  2. Kiva and beyond ‘Clay Water Brick: Finding inspiration from Entrepreneurs who do the most with the least’ alternates with stories of microlending changing the lives of people, and the lessons author Jessica Jackley, founder of Kiva learns from those entrepreneurs. Those entrepreneurs who have almost nothing to their name but the drive to make brick out of clay and water, to help disabled by iterative design and so on.. shattering the idea of who is or who can be an entrepreneur. 

  3. Tell a Story to Make a Point – Approaches to Building Effective Organizations to Make a Difference This book is a couple of different things. On the surface, it is a chronological account of Jackley’s path from early encounters with poverty, anecdotes of people and situations throughout her schooling and her work in other countries, on to the founding of Kiva and later ProFounder, interspersed with brief profiles of micro-entrepreneurs she encountered along the way. But what takes this book to another level is that she extracts lessons and advice from these experiences, that would be…

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