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    The 10 Most Successful Social Entrepreneurs

    Arabian Media staffBy Arabian Media staffJuly 7, 2025No Comments9 Mins Read
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    Many entrepreneurs have chosen to accumulate wealth in the private sector and become philanthropists later in life. Now, however, a growing number of entrepreneurs are working to solve social issues using their businesses.

    Globally, a new business model has emerged that meshes businesses with government and social organizations. Nonprofits and for-profit businesses can team up to form a hybrid business model, led by a new generation of social entrepreneurs. These leaders successfully tackle social issues while generating profit for shareholders.

    Widespread use of ethical practices such as impact investing, conscious consumerism, and corporate social responsibility programs facilitated the success of the following 10 social entrepreneurs.

    Key Takeaways

    • Social entrepreneurs look to establish new businesses that contribute positively to the greater social good.
    • While many socially conscious companies are for-profit, they also focus on solving social problems.
    • Such companies often contribute to their communities or help those in need.
    • Social entrepreneurship is growing, with capital provided by investors looking at socially responsible investing and environmental, social, and governance criteria.

    1. Bill Drayton

    Bill Drayton is recognized as one of the pioneering social entrepreneurs of our time.

    Drayton founded Ashoka in 1980. The company “envisions a world in which everyone is a changemaker.” It takes a multifaceted approach to finding and supporting social entrepreneurs globally. Its three priorities are:

    • Social entrepreneurship: Selecting promising “Ashoka Fellows” around the world and providing them with the knowledge, finances, and logistical means to effect change.
    • Empathy and young changemaking: Helping and inspiring the young along their journey to become changemakers.
    • Organizing for changemaking: Partnering with businesses, schools, and business advisors to recast the standard business model so that it better engages people, nurtures potential, and creates opportunities to tackle problems.

    Drayton also serves as chair of the board for Get America Working!, Youth Venture, and Community Greens.

    2. Rachel Brathen

    “Yoga Girl” is the name of Rachel Brathen’s New York Times best-selling book and her handle on Instagram, where she has almost two million followers.

    In addition to introducing viewers to life-changing practices for personal growth and community connections, Rachel hopes to connect teachers with people in the online community who need healing. She seeks to improve the lives of many by helping her followers find beauty in their own.

    “What if social media could become a social mission?” asks Brathen in a 2015 interview in Elephant Journal. She runs two non-profits, Sgt. Pepper’s Friends, which is an animal rescue organization in Aruba, and Yoga Girl® Foundation, which provides for women and children in need.

    Her online channel oneoeight.tv, which offered health, yoga, and meditation services, was transformed into her website and the company of which she was the CEO. From there, she inspiredyoga practitioners and many others across the globe to find balance, promote their inner healing, live life mindfully, and give back to their communities. As of 2025, both Yoga Girl and oneoeight are both retired. Rachel still runs the non-profits and is the host of two podcasts, “From The Heart with Rachel Brathen: and “Self Care Daily.”

    3. Shiza Shahid

    As the co-founder and global ambassador of the Malala Fund, Shiza Shahid managed business operations for Malala Yousafzai, the teenager who became the youngest winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014.

    Like Malala, Shahid was born in Pakistan. She initially reached out to Malala in 2009 and worked to organize a camp for her and other Pakistani girls. In 2012, Shiza flew to Malala’s bedside after she was targeted and shot by the Taliban for promoting education for girls.

    Inspired by Malala’s desire to continue campaigning for gender equality and education, Shahid decided to help Malala strategize her campaign. Shahid created the Malala Fund, which helps empower women and girls by advocating and spreading access to education.

    As of 2021, Shiza made a career pivot and is now runs Our Place, the cookware company behind the Instagram-famous Always Pan.

    4. Blake Mycoskie

    After a trip to Argentina in 2006, Blake Mycoskie became the founder and chief shoe giver of TOMS Shoes.

    Originally, TOMS pledged to donate one pair of shoes for every pair sold. It expanded this One-For-One campaign to support children’s education, health and well-being initiatives. Using the TOMS brand, Mycoskie has raised awareness about issues such as global poverty and health.

    In 2018, TOMS became a Certified B Corporation. Another major milestone occured in 2020, when TOMS had given away 100 million pairs of shoes. As of 2024, the Impact Grants range between $10,000 to $100,000, going to nonprofit organizations in 7 different countries, including the U.S. The funds were used to support mental health initiatives and services to those in need.

    TOMS’ expanded “Impact Model” calls for it to give away a third of the company’s profits for “grassroots good.” That means its money goes to cash grants and partnerships with nonprofits working to create impact in three areas: mental health, access to opportunity and ending gun violence.

    In 2024, TOMS funded 33 organizations in 12 communities located in 11 countries around the world.

    Important

    Social entrepreneurs often work with a focus on the 6 Ps. These are people, problem, plan, prioritize, prototype, and pursue.

    5. Scott Harrison

    Scott Harrison left a life of luxury in New York City and headed for the shores of West Africa to volunteer with a hospital ship charity named Mercy Ships.

    The trip was a watershed moment, and in 2006 Harrison founded charity: water, a nonprofit with the goal of providing clean water to every human being on the planet who needed it.

    As of 2025, it had provided safe and potable drinking water in 29 countries around the world. It had raised more than $925 million and fulfilled over 186,000 water projects.

    6. Muhammad Yunus

    Professor Muhammad Yunus is renowned for the popularization of microfinance and microcredit, which serve as the cornerstones of the Grameen Bank, founded in 1983.

    In 2006, Yunus was awarded the Nobel Prize for creating the Grameen Bank, which is based on the principles of trust and solidarity to empower villagers with the funding to pull themselves out of poverty.

    According to the Grameen Bank, as of May 2025, 97% of its about 10.71 million borrowers are women, who pay their loans back at a rate of 95.80%—a recovery rate higher than any traditional banking system.

    This renowned professor has received international awards such as the U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2009, the Congressional Gold Medal in 2010, and the Olympic Laurel in 2021.

    7. Jeffrey Hollender

    Jeffrey Hollender is well known as the former chief executive officer (CEO) and co-founder of Seventh Generation, a popular business offering natural products.

    He is now a leading consultant, speaker, and activist for corporate social responsibility. He has written seven books including “How to Make the World a Better Place.”

    Hollender is also co-founder and CEO of Sustain Natural, which sells sustainable products for sexual and personal health, such as condoms, tampons, lubricants, and pads, among other things.

    Hollender is an adjunct professor at New York University and co-founder and board chair of the American Sustainable Business Network. After having served as a board member of Greenpeace US, he serves on Morgan Stanley’s Sustainability Advisory Board.

    8. Xavier Helgesen, Christopher “Kreece” Fuchs, and Jeff Kurtzman

    These three co-founders of Better World Books—a B-Corp online bookstore that funds global literacy—all deserve recognition as successful social entrepreneurs. The founders met at Notre Dame University, where they tutored the football team and started collecting unwanted books to sell on the internet.

    Helgesen is the co-founder of ZOLA Electric (formerly known as Off Grid Electric), which provides renewable energy to homes in the off-grid world. Originally beginning in Tanzania, they now deliver power to over 3 million across 10 countries on four continents.

    Fuchs went on to become the Chief Operating Officer at Trek10, a company that helps clients use Amazon Web Services.

    Kurtzman previously held the CEO position at Aid Through Trade, a company that distributes handmade accessories from Nepal to the U.S. He also co-founded the nonprofit Operation Incubation, which delivers low-cost, low-maintenance incubators to the developing world. He is also a co-founder of Bark Social, a pet-friendly social club that closed in 2024.

    Fast Fact

    Since 1998, the Schwab Foundation has awarded social entrepreneurs for their efforts to address major issues facing global societies. They offer four award categories: Social Entrepreneurs, Corporate Social Innovators, Public Social Innovators, and Collective Social Innovators. The Collective Social Innovators category was inspired by the collective model that social entrepreneurs developed to tackle the wide-spread, systemic issues that can be solved only when organizations work together to achieve lasting change.

    9. Marc Koska

    Marc Koska re-designed medical tools and introduced a non-reusable, inexpensive syringe that can be used in underfunded clinics. This innovation safeguards against the transmission of blood-borne diseases.

    Koska founded the SafePoint Trust in 2006, and by 2015, delivered four billion safe injections in 40 countries via his auto-disable syringes.

    The Schwab Foundation Social Entrepreneurs of the Year in 2015 cited Koska for his pioneering solution to a world health issue. The World Health Organization (WHO) announced a global policy on safe injections in February 2015.

    10. Sanjit “Bunker” Roy

    Sanjit “Bunker” Roy had a privileged upbringing in India. When Roy visited some of his country’s rural villages, he had a life-altering experience and decided to find a way to improve the socioeconomic inequities in his country.

    He founded Barefoot College in 1972, a grassroots-organized, solar-powered college for the poor with the mission of helping rural communities obtain basic services and solutions and become self-sufficient and sustainable.

    In 2017, Princeton University awarded Roy with a doctor of law degree, citing his activism and ingenuity as the force for so many vital benefits to India’s poorest communities. These included innovation, prosperity, security, empowerment, self-sufficiency and hope.

    What Is Social Entrepreneurship?

    Social entrepreneurship is a concept that relates to a company founded with a mission to promote social good. These are often for-profit ventures that leverage technology and ingenuity to solve serious problems of societal importance such as hunger, disease, lack of water and other basic necessities, inequality, as well as environmental issues.

    What Is Socially-Responsible Investing?

    Who Was the First Social Entrepreneur?

    While there have been many businessmen focused on social issues throughout history, the first person to coin the term “social entrepreneur” was Bill Drayton, founder and CEO of Ashoka, in 1980. Today he is known by some as the “father of social entrepreneurship.”

    The Bottom Line

    These 10 inspiring social entrepreneurs use business to both generate profit and solve some of the world’s most daunting social problems. Innovation takes many forms, and it’s wonderful when insightful ideas can be put to work to address global social issues. Social entrepreneurs take the road less traveled to build flourishing hybrid businesses with triple-bottom lines.



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