Community Impact Commerce in the UK

We have successfully implemented innovative impact commerce pilot initiatives across the UK, uniting businesses and communities. By driving measurable benefits, we’re creating a new standard for success—one that fosters both economic growth and lasting positive social change.

Join us in transforming commerce into a force for good.

Givewith Partners with BCG

Givewith works with Boston Consulting Group to further develop its innovative model.

Through the development of technology and a focus on AI,
Givewith becomes

A UK and Global Partnership:

Yeme Tech redefines how communities are understood and shaped by harnessing vast, complex datasets to deliver actionable insights that are both measurable and evidence-based. Our advanced mapping and scoring methodologies provide a precise, granular understanding of neighborhoods, highlighting strengths, uncovering gaps and enabling data-driven decisions that drive meaningful, lasting impact.

Now with our joint venture and partnership with Community AI, we are aligning social, economic, and environmental factors with corporate reporting needs, we empower city authorities and businesses to implement initiatives that are more productive and better aligned with community needs. Yeme Tech and Community AI are directing critical new funding to communities all while improving business results for our corporate partners. Through rigorous analysis and predictive capabilities, we simplify complexity, transforming overlooked data into opportunities for growth and resilience.

Yeme Tech ensures every intervention is informed, targeted, and measurable—helping to build stronger, more inclusive communities for the future.

Strategic Procurement for Community Impact

Community AI transforms procurement into a strategic driver for measurable community impact. By aligning procurement decisions with corporate goals, we empower organisations to create value that extends beyond the balance sheet—building stronger communities while meeting ESG and CSR objectives.

92%

Percent of C-Suite that believes Givewith could enable Procurement’s strategic importance.

86%

Percent of C-Suite that believes Givewith could enable Procurement to help achieve company CRS goals.

US Private Sector Procurement

Advancing HP's diversity and inclusion strategy

With the support of HP, Black Girls Code will update technology used to run year-round workshops and summer coding camps serving over
500 girls in 13 cities around the country. These programs can now cover an array of topics, from robotics to coding to virtual reality.

Workshops and summer coding camps provide hands-on, project-based instruction, where girls can develop technical skills and build a network of like-minded peers.

US Private Sector Procurement

Transforming lives through technology

When Dell renewed its equipment program with a media company, it decided to offer Givewith® Enterprise as a unique sales incentive, putting social impact at the heart of this procurement deal.

Video: Clean Cooking Alliance | Guatemala City

Video: Eden Reforestation Projects | Haiti

UK Community Impact Ad Campaigns

Built new infrastructure for toilets, hand-washing facilities and a year's supply of soap for healthcare centres in Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa
Supported communities across London with equipment, tools, and plants, together with training and local education programmes to ensure ongoing support for greener, healthier and wilder urban green spaces.
Supported the inspirational Comic Relief campaign, redirecting funds to education and well-being projects in Sub-Saharan Africa to combat poverty.
Helped vulnerable and elderly families across the UK to reduce their energy bills through energy health saving assessments.
Helped to provide families in adversity with access to food banks and emergency food parcels during the Covid pandemic.
Educated schools and local communities with both in-person and online training on the importance of protecting our oceans and seas.
Removed carbon through restoration and nature projects locally and globally.
Supported solar power projects in West Africa, which gave 160,000 people access to renewable energy as well as providing jobs, education and healthcare benefits.
Planted over 18,000 seedling trees (7.2 acres)in South America and Asia.

Street Games

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Team Rubicon UK

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SOFEA

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Country Trust

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Groundwork

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US Community Impact Ad Campaigns

From Scarcity to Abundance:

Rewiring the economic and corporate systems to transform social impact from a cost center to a revenue generator

Historically, positive social impact has been limited because of the conventional wisdom that views the economy through a lens of scarcity.

On a macro level, sales taxes, corporate taxes, property taxes, and payroll taxes, etc. are not enough to adequately fund governmental efforts to combat our profound challenges, including climate change and its repercussions, poverty, and lacks and inequities in education, healthcare, and mental health services. And at the bottom of the economic “funnel,” there’s not enough money left over after this subtractive process to meet the ever-growing need.

The lens of scarcity also prevails in the business sector, where accepted doctrine dictates that social impact is, by definition, a cost center. As a result, Sustainability, Foundation, and CSR budgets are created at the bottom of the corporate “funnel,” from the limited profits left over after business expenses and taxes are deducted. The result is that commitments to Net Zero, for example, are delayed for decades—decades too long.

Givewith has developed a suite of software solutions to fulfill the fundamentals and promise of this new economic construct, so corporations can operationalize, productize and automate its principles at scale.

Social Value Economics leverages the most fundamental activity of commerce—the transfer of goods and services for value—into an engine for positive social change.

Critically, this goal is accomplished without corporations needing to spend any new money. In fact, Social Value Economics actually transforms social impact into a revenue generator for both sellers and buyers in every business-to-business and business-to-government transaction.

Social Value Economics moves up in the economic and corporate structures the place from which social impact is funded. Instead of looking to the limited resources at the bottom of the economic and corporate funnels, places of scarcity, Social ValueEconomics targets the approximately $100 trillion at the “top”—in the business-to-consumer, business-to-business, and business-to-government transactions that are conducted globally every year. Social Value Economics creates access to this abundant and self-sustaining pool of resources by creating more business value for both sellers and buyers. In common business parlance, Social Value Economics is an efficiency play:

The Fortune 500 spends approximately 70-90 cents of every dollar brought in, on cost of goods sold. An estimated 10-30 cents of every dollar is spent on Selling, General, and Administrative expenses (SG&A) alone. In other words, corporations spend roughly 10-30% of every revenue dollar trying to make a dollar. It’s impossible to pin down these figures precisely, because inefficiency and waste are endemic in traditional approaches to sales and sourcing and procurement. Therefore, it’s also impossible to know the exact ROI and the most effective and profitable allocation of those 10-30 cents.

By contrast, organisations that pivot from tired, old-school sales tools (marketing events, volume discounts, rebates, extended warranties, and free shipping) to apply social impact as a sales incentive and differentiator have quantifiably higher win rates, shorter sales cycles, and better client relationships and retention. By using social impact as a sales incentive, their existing client acquisition dollars work harder and better in the 21st century economy, producing an improved ROI from every already-budgeted dollar.  

Importantly, Social Value Economics is not charity or philanthropy. It’s a proven business model that creates an entirely new funding stream for social impact, completely and entirely separate from corporations’ CSR, Sustainability, Philanthropic, and Foundation activities.

The day is coming when Social Value Economics—applying social impact to transactions as a way to improve business outcomes—will simply be the way business is done.  Ubiquitous. Expected. Not because of regulatory or consumer pressure, but because through Social Value Economics, sellers and buyers derive more business value.

That day cannot come soon enough.

Social Value Economics is backed by
global experts

Associate Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship for London Business School

"The Social Value Economics construct is one of the most innovative ideas I have come across in the social impact space, and indeed, one with the potential to achieve meaningful social impact at scale."

-Loannis Loannou

Professor (Education) in Strategy and Sustainability & Deputy Director (MBA and International) at University College London (UCL) School of Management

"In a time when we need to take urgent action to achieve a better and more sustainable future, it is of paramount importance to rethink the role of business and explore new models of corporate sustainability. The Givewith platform, based on the Social ValueEconomic construct, is a great example of an innovative and sustainable business model that can offer businesses the opportunity of making a real impact with every single business transaction, with a material alignment of CSR initiatives to business strategies."

-Paolo Taticchi

Yale Initiative on Sustainable Finance

"Givewith, and by extension the Social Value Economic construct, represents a potential breakthrough in creating business models that create social and environmental benefit by integrating social and environmental impact as a component of transactions."

-Todd Cort & Cary Krosinsky

Professor of Entrepreneurship and Director of the Fred Kiesner Center for Entrepreneurship at Loyola Marymount University

"There’s a multi-trillion-dollar funding gap to achieve all 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals by 2030. From poverty and inequality to climate change and world hunger, our social and environmental challenges pose an existential risk to everyone, and businesses are certainly not immune. That’s the beauty of Social ValueEconomics — it’s designed with the needs of our communities, the planet, and businesses all in mind. Paul Polizzotto has unlocked a remarkable opportunity at a time when the world desperately needs it."

-David Choi

David C. Bohnett Professor of Social Entrepreneurship & Founding Director of the USCMarshall Brittingham Social Enterprise Lab

"The Cort/Krosinky paper described a new model of gaining a sustainable and scalable financing source for addressing the wicked problems of our times.  Social ValueEconomics argues against the existing model of scarcity, where society and business are in a zero-sum game.  Scarcity leads to a belief that society and the environment only benefit at a direct cost to business and wealth.  Using Givewith as the originator of this new theory, Social Value Economics inserts society into every business transaction with a win-win for everyone involved."

-Adlai Wertman

Awards &
Recognition

Paul Polizzotto has been honored with numerous recognitions for his work. He has been named an “Environmental Hero” by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (1999); received the US Conference of Mayors Award for Excellence in Public Private Partnerships (2009); was named a “Public-Private Visionary” by Vanity Fair magazine (2006) and “Social Good Leader of the Year” by Cynopsis Media (2018); and was featured as one of INC Magazine’s “Founders Who Matter” (2020).

Paul’s other awards include: Santa Monica Baykeeper’s and the Waterkeeper Alliance’s “Keeper Award” (2001), Coastal Living Magazine’s “Leadership Award” (2003), Edison Awards for Social Innovation and Social Impact (2012, 2013), the Starlight Children’s Foundation’s “General H. Norman Schwarzkopf Leadership Award” (2014), and Volunteers of America’s “Good Samaritan Award” (2018).

Yeme Tech: Experts in mapping and evaluating neighborhoods, Yeme Tech uses advanced data analytics to uncover gaps, identify strengths, and ensure targeted, effective interventions.

Amir Hussain

Founder & CEO

Alejandro Quinto

Head of Innovation

Nihar Mehta

Head of Analytics

Rovianne Santiago

Lead Product Designer

Kushal Saraiya

Head of Data Science