Kevin Doyle Jones: Difference between revisions

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Kevin Jones began his career as a weekly journalist in the poorest county in Mississippi. Along with his wife and business partner, Rosa Lee Harden, he went on to run a number of successful newspapers and a trade journal and a business journal in the state. In the mid-90s, Kevin launched the first web-based legislative monitoring and legal opinion service in the country, the same year the Netscape browser came out. Having a profitable internet-based business in the year the web launched enabled him to understand the business potential of the web, which he leveraged with Rosa Lee to create the first business-to-business internet conferences. In 2008, Kevin partnered with Tim Freundlich to create one of the first impact investing funds. While the fund was successful, Kevin and his partners quickly realized that the ecosystem needed to change for impact investing to succeed. This led to the creation of SOCAP, which grew over ten years from 600 to 3700 participants and is credited with changing the narrative on impact investing. Now, Kevin and Rosa Lee have launched [[Neighborhood Economics]] to let people of faith get their money and their beliefs in line in order to do the hard, catalytic, patient work the world needs and Neighborhood Economics to pull together investors, practitioners, people of faith and planners to address economic justice in local communities.
Kevin Jones began his career as a weekly journalist in the poorest county in Mississippi. Along with his wife and business partner, Rosa Lee Harden, he went on to run a number of successful newspapers and a trade journal and a business journal in the state. In the mid-90s, Kevin launched the first web-based legislative monitoring and legal opinion service in the country, the same year the Netscape browser came out. Having a profitable internet-based business in the year the web launched enabled him to understand the business potential of the web, which he leveraged with Rosa Lee to create the first business-to-business internet conferences. In 2008, Kevin partnered with Tim Freundlich to create one of the first impact investing funds. While the fund was successful, Kevin and his partners quickly realized that the ecosystem needed to change for impact investing to succeed. This led to the creation of [[SOCAP]] which grew over ten years from 600 to 3700 participants and is credited with changing the narrative on impact investing. Now, Kevin and Rosa Lee have launched [[Neighborhood Economics]] to let people of faith get their money and their beliefs in line in order to do the hard, catalytic, patient work the world needs and Neighborhood Economics to pull together investors, practitioners, people of faith and planners to address economic justice in local communities.




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Latest revision as of 10:59, 29 February 2024

Kevin Jones began his career as a weekly journalist in the poorest county in Mississippi. Along with his wife and business partner, Rosa Lee Harden, he went on to run a number of successful newspapers and a trade journal and a business journal in the state. In the mid-90s, Kevin launched the first web-based legislative monitoring and legal opinion service in the country, the same year the Netscape browser came out. Having a profitable internet-based business in the year the web launched enabled him to understand the business potential of the web, which he leveraged with Rosa Lee to create the first business-to-business internet conferences. In 2008, Kevin partnered with Tim Freundlich to create one of the first impact investing funds. While the fund was successful, Kevin and his partners quickly realized that the ecosystem needed to change for impact investing to succeed. This led to the creation of SOCAP which grew over ten years from 600 to 3700 participants and is credited with changing the narrative on impact investing. Now, Kevin and Rosa Lee have launched Neighborhood Economics to let people of faith get their money and their beliefs in line in order to do the hard, catalytic, patient work the world needs and Neighborhood Economics to pull together investors, practitioners, people of faith and planners to address economic justice in local communities.


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