We created a new group “Funding Cooperatives”

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funding cooperatives

Are you an organizer and a self-starter? Please join our new group Funding Cooperatives. We’re putting our heads together to collaborate on the formation of community based ISPs.

If a cooperative sounds too complex, you can start with a simple LLC, that is a nonprofit or a for-profit. This site is the place to meet with others and collaborate virtually or in person. Be sure to complete your profile and let others know about skills and tools that you are able to share, either for free, or at a reasonable cost.

The seven cooperative principles

Also, see our post about “Why electrical and community ISPs should cooperate.”

Help us to adhere to these principles:

  1. Voluntary and Open Membership: Cooperatives are voluntary organizations, open to all persons able to use their services and willing to accept the responsibilities of membership, without gender, social, racial, political or religious discrimination.
  2. Democratic Member Control: Cooperatives are democratic organizations controlled by their members, who actively participate in setting policies and making decisions. The elected representatives are accountable to the membership. In primary cooperatives, members have equal voting rights (one member, one vote) and cooperatives at other levels are organized in a democratic manner. See an alternative voting method
  3. Members’ Economic Participation: Members contribute equitably to, and democratically control, the capital of their cooperative. At least part of that capital is usually the common property of the cooperative. Members allocate surpluses for any or all of the following purposes: developing the cooperative, possibly by setting up reserves, part of which at least would be indivisible; benefiting members in proportion to their transactions with the cooperative; and supporting other activities approved by the membership.
  4. Autonomy and Independence: Cooperatives are autonomous, self-help organizations controlled by their members. If they enter into agreements with other organizations, including governments, or raise capital from external sources, they do so on terms that ensure democratic control by their members and maintain their cooperative autonomy.
  5. Education, Training, and Information: Cooperatives provide education and training for their members, elected representatives, managers and employees so they can contribute effectively to the development of their cooperatives. They inform the general public, particularly young people and opinion leaders, about the nature and benefits of cooperation.
  6. Cooperation Among Cooperatives: Cooperatives serve their members most effectively and strengthen the cooperative movement by working together through local, national, regional and international structures.
  7. Concern for Community: While focusing on member needs, cooperatives work for the sustainable development of their communities through policies accepted by their members

Competition + Cooperation = #DigitalEquity

We create and curate Creative Commons, educational materials to address the Digital Divide by teaching community members to cooperatively own and run “free market” Broadband Internet infrastructure with Open Access Fiber.

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AMA: Brian Vo, Connect Humanity

The transcript has been added for searchability

Transcript

0:05
and we’re live good afternoon and welcome to another ask me anything i’m drew clark editor
0:12
and publisher of broadband breakfast very excited to welcome brian voe to the broadband.money
0:19
community where we talk about anything anything that you want to ask brian vo
0:25
brian is the chief investment officer at connect humanity which in itself is a very
0:32
interesting organization we’re going to drill into what connect humanity does what brian does with connect humanity
0:40
and all and all manner of aspects of financing when we’re talking about
0:46
broadband projects brian welcome and thank you so much for being with us
0:51
thank you so brian um you know we’ve had we’ve had folks on
0:57
this program from vint cerf to jim baller
1:03
from business folks like the ceos of starry
1:09
and ltd broadband uh so we’re really covering the the the range of folks with
1:16
some particular angle as a provider or policy maker or attorney or in your case
1:23
a finance expert talk a little bit for us about connect humanity what is
1:29
connect humanity what led it to get formed and what what’s your role there at connect humanity
1:35
yeah absolutely so uh connect humanity is a a impact fund advancing digital
1:41
equity and i think what makes what makes up our north star is we really try to frame
1:47
that concept of digital equity uh really holistically right that is our north star um so when we think about
1:55
what would it take to get uh folks underserved folks connected but also
2:00
connected meaningfully what does that mean and that’s where we’ve outlined five
2:05
major parts of our approach um so that’s that’s the infrastructure part of it
2:10
right you do need that connection um we put devices in there as well um
2:16
but it doesn’t stop there right you need affordability you need locally relevant content um you need
2:22
digital skills digital literacy to be able to meaningfully use that infrastructure
2:27
and you need a supportive enabling regulatory right the policies that help set that up and so because
2:34
we’re able to frame our north star uh along those different five dimensions um
2:40
it really helps us think about okay if if that’s what it takes to achieve digital equity each of these components
2:46
um what is needed in the environment to help marshall move things towards that
2:53
and that’s where we’ve really focused on building out a spectrum of capital to
2:59
enable service providers operators communities um all the folks who are doing the work
3:05
on on the ground to provide them the the capital tools that they need to push that forward
3:11
um and so when we think about that spectrum of capital uh it’s it’s on one
3:17
and philanthropic sources all the way through to the other end which is um
3:23
investment funds and so really a lot of our work is thinking
3:28
about what’s the most relevant type of capital to bring into different
3:34
uh uh two different situations to make the thing work
3:39
so internally chief investment officer i lead more of that investment side of it
3:45
a lot of my peers work on the philanthropic side of it
3:50
and we work hand in hand to figure out for this community given their context and what they’re trying to do and what
3:56
their needs are what is that best set of capital uh that that we can provide for them
4:03
let’s let’s take that in two in two topics let’s drill in and two things so one is the the the holistic stack of
4:10
five that i’m going to repeat those in just a second let’s do that first and then the second is like
4:15
who you are you’re a non-profit obviously but like how that applies to the financing so let’s go back to the
4:21
the stack for a moment my my notation was infrastructure
4:27
affordability okay so infrastructure meaning okay the towers the fiber the things in the ground that get what they
4:33
get broadband there that’s infrastructure affordability okay yeah but you don’t want broadband that’s 120
4:40
bucks a month right i mean it needs to be more affordable to really make a difference digital skills okay this is
4:47
like making sure people who aren’t as familiar know what to do when they have
4:52
a broadband connection let’s talk a little bit about that too and content okay and i’d love to get a
4:57
little more on like does digital excuse me does connect humanity do content do you work with other providers and then
5:04
policy and obviously policy is undergirding so much of this right it’s policy that’s driving the infrastructure
5:10
investment and jobs act to do infrastructure investment focused around affordability focused around making sure
5:17
that that digital equity is is is enabled so so just those five things how
5:23
do you view the interrelationship of those infrastructure affordability digital skills content and policy brian
5:31
yeah so because that’s our north star that’s our framework for looking at every problem um it just depends on
5:38
where in the journey uh you know a community is at when we start talking with them um if the community says uh
5:45
you know we don’t have the infrastructure then we need to start there
5:50
as they’re planning for that infrastructure we’re going to ask questions uh around what what are the
5:56
gaps around digital literacy um uh and as part of your build uh
6:02
how what type of digital literacy program do uh might you need to go with
6:08
it right because just because you build it doesn’t mean they will come well uh those two in and of themselves you may
6:14
still not get meaningful connectivity uh if it’s just uh priced too high especially for median
6:21
household income and so that’s where the question then becomes okay well the the next barrier could be affordability how
6:27
are you incorporating that um in into the build are you offering things like acp um do you have a low-cost type of
6:34
package um okay that’s there uh uh but what other barriers could there be
6:41
on the content side of it um uh if there’s if folks and this is tied a
6:46
little bit to the literacy side of it but if folks don’t know what they can access or do online if they don’t have access
6:53
to that content or know that content even is out there that just makes it less likely they’re
6:59
going to materially meaningfully engage um and so what does locally relevant content mean
7:06
in practice i think in a lot of our conversations it’s bringing in uh
7:11
different types of service providers whether that’s healthcare right content could be telehealth
7:17
and being able to uh push that as a service into rural populations especially
7:24
could that be financial literacy and financial uh inclusion being able to get
7:29
banking services uh in for folks it could also be a lot of public services too right instead of
7:35
waiting three five hours at the dmv being able to process a lot of that online right so i think um
7:43
that the content part goes really closely with that literacy part of it of of knowing what can you really do uh by
7:50
by being connected um and then of course policy understanding like you know the
7:55
context in which we’re we’re trying to not only do the build but also you know kind of the wrap around services if you
8:01
will so bright a lot of people who are not experts in finance and i certainly put
8:06
myself in that category may have in their brains a paradigm where okay
8:11
there’s one source of financing public financing government right and we can apply for a government grant or or
8:19
or maybe maybe you know get get a a money from a
8:25
universal service related program right and so so that there’s a paradigm of the government is gonna you know give money
8:31
or grant money and there are obviously conditions on it and match and so forth that’s but that’s one paradigm right and
8:37
the other paradigm of oh then there’s banks there’s the private you know private sector private financing and they’ll land and they’ll either you know
8:43
either do debt lending uh you know for a loan or or equity taking taking a stake
8:49
in the venture why is that framework of public and private financing overly simplistic or like what’s wrong with
8:56
that what is that missing from the financial uh piece that you at connect and connect
9:02
humanity would like to underscore yeah that’s a really good question um i
9:07
think that is uh we know the problem of digital exclusion
9:14
is big right um and to date the the sources of capital that we’ve tried to
9:20
throw against that problem have only moved us so far to where we are today and so when we think about you
9:27
know how can we go about solving the rest of the problem connecting the rest of the world the rest of um
9:34
americans that that aren’t on um oh we know we’re going to need new and or
9:39
different types of tools and so i think just thinking about those two sources of capital public grants especially um uh
9:47
uh in in private capital um or at least commercial commercially oriented capital is too limiting it’s too constraining um
9:55
and and those are well designed uh especially private capital markets are well
10:01
designed for um you know the business models that that we’ve seen deployed to date to get
10:06
people connected when we think about uh underserved folks low-income communities
10:12
rural communities um uh uh redlined communities
10:18
those business models uh you know aren’t serving them and so not
10:23
only do we need to think about different types of business models and and how we think about you know
10:29
really associating what is the real risk return here uh but also for those those
10:34
risk return profiles they’re gonna need different types of uh capital um and
10:40
that’s why we were quite intentional in thinking about uh deploying blended finance against this um
10:46
define that term blended financing what does that mean blended finance uh the general concept would be mixing and
10:53
matching different sources of capital and so a really simple example would be
10:58
um student loans right or paying for for a college or university uh if you enroll
11:04
uh you’re you’re probably putting a little bit of cash in yourself you call that your own equity you might get you
11:10
know a zero interest loan from from mom and dad you might qualify for
11:16
federally subsidized loans um you know that that could be uh a
11:22
concessionary capital um you might need to go to private markets for you know kind of full fully baked
11:29
interest rates types of loans and you need to cover all that together to pay for tuition and room and board that is a
11:36
version of blended finance right you’re mixing and matching all these different costs of capital and sources of capital
11:42
to be able to pay for for college um similar thing on the infrastructure
11:47
side um grants uh especially public grants uh even though you know we’re seeing a huge
11:55
commitment um from from governments to putting money down on this um we know
12:00
it’s still not going to be able to to pay for 100 of everything right um so
12:05
where can we pull in um private markets well we know private markets are going to have certain rates
12:11
of return that uh they may not look at um certain communities um do we need to
12:17
pull in philanthropy uh right and and think about grants from uh private foundations um but we know that capital
12:25
is also very limited uh highly risk seeking but very scarce right and so when we
12:31
think about a build what is the most optimal version of taking x percent of public grant why percent of private uh z
12:39
percent of of philanthropy um to make the network economics work uh
12:44
so that that uh kind of in a nutshell is blended finance no that’s great and that’s a great uh pathway in just a
12:53
moment into the the the non-profit mission and nature and the different types of financing that that connect
12:59
humanity is involved humanity is involved in but first obviously
13:04
we as a community uh are very concerned about the infrastructure investment and jobs act
13:09
we’re very focused on that as well as other broadband funds but but iija is kind of the big kahuna right and so i
13:16
just want to ask brian that the notice of funding opportunity came out seven days ago you know they they
13:23
were required by by law to come out with them you know this this monday and they they beat the clock a few days uh have you
13:30
had a chance to to look at it what’s your initial read on those rules that
13:36
they’ve put in place particularly the the match requirement and what that will
13:42
mean for the mission that you have of making sure there’s digital equity in terms of
13:48
broadband deployment deployment that’s affordable that’s used et cetera et cetera
13:53
yeah yeah really good question it’s still digging through the technicals um as as i’m sure a lot of other folks are
13:59
i think my my big takeaway from a financing perspective uh was
14:05
um i would say uh uh both of validation um knowing that uh you know it isn’t
14:13
going to be enough it is a huge commitment but it’s it’s still not going to be enough and i think everybody knew that going in um into an extent nor nor
14:21
should it be everything right i think that that allows for a lot of other opportunities creative opportunities at
14:26
at the local community level um so i think that that was a big chunk i think the other one was uh very much um
14:33
opportunity right and so i think uh uh seeing um you know
14:40
seeing the opportunity for community voices especially to be centered at uh
14:46
not only the network design but what else might that community need um to to make that
14:52
make those connections and make that network really meaningful for them whether it’s designing around certain community institutions anchor
14:59
institutions or other services and and capacity building that might need to go around it so i
15:05
think that it was very um both validating and i think creates a
15:10
good amount of opportunity and really still points us back to our north star of that holistic approach uh because it
15:17
really showed a lot of those um it recognized i think that
15:23
it’s more than just infrastructure that that’s going to be needed absolutely absolutely is is clear in
15:29
fact i had a chance to interview alan davidson the head of national telecommunications and
15:36
information administration last month at our broadband breakfast for lunch
15:41
club i will have the opportunity to interview alan again next tuesday at mountain
15:47
connect and if you if you haven’t registered do so it’s in keystone colorado
15:54
and uh all of those who are watching this will be able to to watch that as well here on the broadband dot money
16:00
platform but but one of the things that alan totally emphasized when when he was was with us last month was that that
16:08
we’re not going to be happy until we have affordable high-speed internet he really emphasized that affordability
16:15
component and i think that’s that’s a key for the administration so so
16:20
i’d love to talk more about affordability and if you’ve got any things to say on that that’d be great but but i want to make sure i’m
16:26
understanding the match component right so how do you all at a non-profit organization that is
16:33
involved in funding broadband digital equity how do you look at those match
16:39
numbers what do you see when you read the nofo and what it says about a 25
16:44
match minimum yeah well let me step back for a second and say uh what are the the major kind
16:50
of verticals of funding we provide please please do that’s that’s great thanks for bringing us back to that uh
16:56
the the the match part i think uh impacts different parts of those those verticals differently and so when when
17:03
we say we’re we’re deploying a spectrum of capital uh to try to advance digital equity holistically um what that means
17:10
in practice is on the philanthropic side um where we’re often engaging
17:15
communities uh and trying to meet them where they’re at in their journey to digital equity uh
17:21
most often that means communities at the beginning of that journey saying we have a problem
17:28
but we have the political will the stakeholders aligned to solve this we just don’t know what the network’s
17:35
going to look like or even how to go about it and so for for those communities we’ll provide a planning
17:40
grant of sorts which gives them the time space resources to work with experts um
17:45
consultants who can really answer three questions for them the first is around the network
17:53
technical design what is what are different options for an optimal network design is it uh you
18:00
know fiber wireless hybrid um
18:05
what could different owner operator models look like um
18:11
what are the different cost cost benefits to each of these different modalities if you will
18:17
the second one is around community engagement and so to what extent has can we include
18:23
community voice in that planning process and it’s not just where uh passings are
18:29
gonna go uh but it’s also that you know the skills assessment where what are literacy gaps uh and
18:35
what are the best community anchors uh whether organizations or places um to be
18:42
able to to provide that content um
18:47
so that’s right and hopefully what what you heard earlier in the way i was talking about community engagement um
18:53
you know from from i think that equity perspective a lot of that is uh
19:00
making sure we’re we’re solving the human side of connectivity right uh because it’s not just um lines and wires
19:09
um at the same time from the investment perspective to me those are the underlying the real underlying drivers
19:16
of take rate right so when i’m thinking about uh you know the the risk return profile of an investment um that
19:24
questions like that and conversations at that level allow me to go a lot deeper than in a kind of a classic uh demand
19:31
survey of like if you if we were to offer you you know xspeed for why dollars would you buy it right being
19:37
able to unpack that down to that level of digital equity i like the underlying drivers and barriers to access
19:44
that allows us to really understand the nature of i would say the business risk as well
19:50
the third component is the business model then uh which is what are these network economics and i think the way we
19:56
think about it is um a a network economic profile isn’t a
20:03
go no go in terms of investment right uh i think um uh especially if one appears
20:10
you know uh uh on the margins of sustainability for us that’s a signal of
20:15
uh what other sources of capital do we need to bring in to make it sustainable to make this
20:21
financing work uh and so if it is uh looking to be unprofitable for the first
20:28
couple years do we need to provide you know an extended no interest period or
20:34
do we need to bring in more grants to subsidize some of the the infrastructure costs so for us that business model and
20:40
just that network economics profile is more of an opportunity to problem solve if you will like what’s the right
20:47
investment structure here as opposed to saying no this is out of the money pass let’s move to the next one um
20:54
so i think it’s very much an opportunity to roll if this leaves there um so that’s that’s a lot of what the
20:59
planning grant covers um through that work that then would go to
21:05
the investment team and we think about our investments in i’d say three major categories um we first started this by
21:13
thinking about a project financing really like a network with a certain set of economics with you
21:20
know within a confined um or defined geographic area fairly
21:26
high risk uh project financings typically are um uh and so in increasing what we were
21:32
seeing and that’s the first vertical increasingly what we were seeing was we were talking to the same operator doing
21:38
like multiple projects and it’s like well rather than do a pretty heavy lift on five different
21:44
projects what if we uh did the investment at the enterprise level uh for the operator
21:50
then they can spread that out across their portfolio uh so that became our second vertical enterprise financing um
21:58
and so that’s uh more recognizable instruments i think to institutional
22:03
investors things like senior term loans working capital lines of credit but i think because digital
22:10
equity is our spin to it uh that’s our north star uh we didn’t just want to
22:15
provide a traditional type of a vehicle um without a some level of assurance that
22:23
it was going to advance digital equity and so what we bake into those investments are instead of financial
22:30
covenants like interest coverage ratios etc we think about it from a digital equity covenant perspective right so
22:37
what percent of your subscribers are low income what is your low cost package uh as
22:43
indexed to median the aries median household income right different metrics to to try to make sure the money is
22:50
going towards on an underserved communities and then the third vertical
22:55
is is innovative finance uh and so this is one where we’re really actively trying to problem solve
23:02
creating new different types of structures um uh in in
23:07
and this is where uh being a digital equity investor
23:12
rather than just being you know a fiber to the home investor really gives us
23:18
more scope to be creative and and solve some of the underlying barriers so an example there
23:24
is device access you know there have been a couple instances where um
23:30
the communities have had all the investment they needed whether that was private or or public funding for the
23:36
infrastructure uh but we then ask the question well what else could be a barrier to meaningful connectivity um and device
23:44
access came up so we’re we’re structuring a a couple vehicles right
23:49
now where we say what if we gave money to the operator up front to buy all
23:54
low-income households uh free devices so from the household perspective um that barrier is removed
24:03
the operator then pays us back a portion of the monthly fee uh from the
24:08
subscriber only as long as that household is on the network they go to a
24:14
competitor if they stop paying their monthly uh for any other reason like moving out of the
24:19
area um the operator is not on the hook to us for the remaining balance right so the
24:26
conversation then becomes uh us and the operator to what extent does this lower
24:31
your cost of customer acquisition um to what extent does this increase revenues from you know an addressable market that
24:38
otherwise would not have joined the network and that’s risk we’re willing to take in the name of digital equity
24:45
so that’s where we can get really creative we got a lot of good questions digging into some of the details of this and i
24:50
do want to get to them but just let me just step back and make sure i’m understanding the the the breakdowns
24:56
here that you talked about these three verticals of project financing and then enterprise financing and then innovative
25:02
financing but but i was wondering if if you could speak to philanthropy versus
25:08
um i guess it’s structured credit versus equity fund those those are are
25:14
those products talk about those three three things uh brian yeah those all flow through um so it’s
25:21
it’s all just uh grouped into uh different types of groupings so i would say the philanthropy one is where
25:27
primarily where a lot of the planing grants uh are coming out of um uh and
25:33
then well we recognize that okay well after the plan um worst case scenario is the plane just
25:39
sits on a shelf right like i think that would be damaging for all and so how can we create
25:44
uh different types of capital tools uh to take the plan forward and so that that uh structure credit uh that that
25:52
middle bucket really is to uh covers those three verticals i was just talking about the project lineage the the
25:58
enterprise and the innovative finance um and then uh i think so where where the concept of equity was coming from was um
26:06
oh do we need an equity tool in some of these situations in some of these
26:11
communities um given that risk return profile right so uh we don’t have that capability yet um
26:18
uh but i think in in some early conversations uh there’s been some um i
26:24
would say themes we’ve been hearing uh the way we’ve been uh solving for
26:31
equity-like needs right now has been more on the project finance side and so
26:36
historically project finance is some type of debt um uh
26:41
but you know especially if it’s from a commercial uh uh lender uh but often projects require
26:48
a mix of debt and equity right so uh if if if a community can uh it
26:56
isn’t really in a position to take on debt we weren’t really comfortable providing you know direct equity especially for
27:03
infrastructure because we don’t want to be in a position where we’re owning community assets right we actually want to invert
27:10
that right we want to enable community ownership of of those assets uh and so
27:15
that’s where we’ve been able to use kind of hybrid instruments things like revenue based financing that can
27:22
take equity like risk um but with uh kind of capped returns um so it’s not
27:29
excessive uh yeah no i mean and so this will be a digital
27:34
equity equity fund right yeah
27:39
um no that that’s super good so so let me get to some of these questions so so um a question is is your portfolio
27:46
project-based financing only or will you invest in operators so i think you’ve answered that right yes you will
27:53
mix absolutely yeah and so on the operator side a lot of mission aligned
27:59
operators out there i would say the spectrum that that we’ve spoken to is you know on on the one end
28:05
um fairly large regional operators that that could have the whole suite of like design build operate capabilities
28:12
um on the other end of the spectrum uh talking to community networks community-based networks uh that that
28:18
might be solving like a hyper-local need um and everybody in between so it’s been really inspiring i
28:26
would say just uh talking to all the different operators out there um and communities looking at at it from a
28:33
project perspective right and and again another question are you debt only or will you do equity investments you
28:38
you’ve addressed that you you will do equity right and hybrids right and so i think um
28:43
they’re kind of tying this back to your your question around the matching we really see ourselves as the one minus
28:49
x for funding like what is it that you need one minus x just to find that for us yeah what’s the remaining amount of
28:56
capital and type of capital that you need so if you have something that is 75 public funded uh and you need that 25
29:03
match uh we can uh provide that 25 match if that’s too big uh
29:10
or you know you have say a commercial uh investor or a cdfi community development
29:16
finance institution looking to plug that 25 but they might be a little skittish with the economics um we can provide a
29:23
credit enhancement uh to uh or some type of concessionary capital to incentivize them to to come
29:30
along right so we don’t necessarily need to be the uh investor uh we could also uh be a
29:36
credit enhancement like a guarantee or something um or concessionary capital which would be more junior
29:43
in the investment stack uh so i think for for us we see capital as a problem-solving tool
29:49
um so depending on the existing resources that you already have there and investors lined up um the question
29:56
then becomes like what else do you need yeah well this this refers to um
30:02
i i saw you you speak at a one of our reporters saw and wrote a
30:07
story about you speaking at a a recent event in washington in which you talked about working with community
30:15
development financial institutions cdfis to you know bring about this holistic
30:20
approach just again it’s always useful to start at the base level what is a
30:25
cdfi like is that like a private bank that has some charter or mandate or are
30:31
they specialized financial institution tell us what a cdfi is an example even
30:36
and how connect humanity has or will work with these types of institutions yeah cdfi but community-based investors
30:44
would be the short of it there’s a lot of technical like tax and legal implications um were related to it uh
30:51
but uh i would say that at the heart is you know investments into local regional
30:57
uh communities um and so uh i would say and i think that that event uh
31:04
was with rural um great events and i think you know great thought leaders over there really
31:10
pushing to see uh uh how cdfis can play a leadership role
31:15
in you know where their capital can go um so lisp would be an example of a cdfi
31:21
type of investor um and i would say uh with their capital um
31:29
they can be also many also non-profit i think they can be very flexible with
31:35
the roles that they play um and not necessarily you know kind of your your bulge back bracket bank type
31:41
of uh return expectations uh but very much community partners um and thinking
31:47
about it holistically um so i think there’s a huge role for for cdfis to play
31:52
but i wouldn’t say i wouldn’t necessarily i wouldn’t absolve other sources of capital right
31:59
when when we say spectrum it’s not just public private cdfi um i think there’s
32:05
roles for uh foundations with like tons of different types of capital tools um beyond grant right they can
32:13
provide guarantees pris mris um when i think about uh other philanthropic
32:19
things like daft donor advised funds right uh there’s a role for them to play
32:25
commercial institutions as well i’d also put this back on private sector
32:30
um uh because they have a lot of the the mechanisms to channel a good amount of
32:35
money fairly quickly um and so you know is that their high net worth portfolio
32:42
is that their own infrastructure infrastructure fund um and so i think some of the things we’re hoping to test
32:48
in this is um when when we create a blended finance product can we do it in a way where
32:55
we can show how each of these sources of capital and in their different positions
33:01
their own constraints and requirements and return expectations can we point to different projects and say hey here’s to
33:08
where you could play right and you can do more of this right and it fits your your return expectations uh cdfi here’s
33:14
where you can play but also you know um local credit union this is where you
33:20
could play right kind of translating uh what we see in like you know an investment package
33:27
or a network build package into language that they can understand and is recognizable to them
33:34
ryan when we had a chance to visit a little bit earlier before this this call a few days back we talked about kind of
33:40
the role you can play maybe it’s the goldilocks role right i mean foundations may do smaller grants
33:47
and big grants big loans will come from others but but you kind of conserve
33:53
somewhere in the middle could you speak to the minimum and maximum amount of funding you you will do and
34:01
and not just in a in a particular you know grant or loan but also on a project
34:07
by project basis yeah absolutely so uh one element of our investment thesis was
34:14
uh the the uh size of capital um for for a lot of the
34:22
operators um that i think will be driving at like crucial to driving uh digital equity um
34:31
just wasn’t available right and so you know on on the kind of six figure side of it
34:37
um philanthropy foundations uh we’re really good at kind of the the five figures up to maybe 250 to 500k type of
34:45
thing um on the other end of the spectrum we were that’s the philanthropy side right yeah
34:51
right like a grant at a time on the other end of the spectrum you had
34:57
uh commercial investors uh development finance uh uh institutions um that were saying
35:04
really we we need 30 50 mil plus uh to to get out of bed um
35:10
but then when we spoke to operators so much of the need was in between that
35:15
right uh so much in the need was i i need more than a grant uh i need that 500k or that mill two mil five mil 10
35:23
mil uh and i have nobody i can talk to my my local bank um wants to securitize it
35:31
against you know my house that makes me very nervous uh and they don’t really understand how you know uh
35:38
telecom or you know network infrastructure um i can’t go to private debt or private
35:44
equity because i have limited track record uh and so that’s where we really started to see this uh this opportunity
35:52
really uh to say well what if we could provide um capital in in that that range
35:58
um so i think that was from the capital side of it and embedded in there was uh was this idea that you know um
36:06
different types of capital uh may not recognize as much like how do
36:12
you network build how can you say you know those network economics look uh look
36:18
good um and so i think when when we were thinking about how to um structure and staff connect humanity
36:26
we really saw that as multi-dimensional so we have experts in finance
36:31
but not so deep on the technical we have experts in technical we have experts from philanthropy
36:38
and for us the secret sauce really is that collaboration right being able to
36:44
um speak across um uh you know lines of careers and
36:50
experiences we’ve got a great question from mike fallon here he asks often there is an
36:56
inverse relationship between investment returns and community impact how do you
37:01
balance the two brian yeah that’s a really good question um i think the
37:10
uh part of our structure is helpful by being non-profit um uh where where
37:18
we have stated that our objective isn’t to maximize returns um and i think when uh
37:26
part of our work in our community engagement with different communities is to let them know that there are
37:32
investors out there that aren’t necessarily trying to optimize on the financial return of it
37:39
um and and we’re really looking to balance uh the two uh i think the second thing i would say
37:45
to that is um oh
37:51
a little bit of that it goes back to the business model part
37:57
where i i think if you copy and paste what has worked to date to connect you
38:04
know high income middle income uh communities uh if you copy and paste
38:10
that paradigm of risk return uh uh onto low-income communities
38:16
um uh it’s the math won’t work and uh we’ve seen that because they still
38:21
remain largely uh unserved so i think it’s an opportunity to rethink what uh
38:26
you rethink that business model um and i think there’s a whole broader conversation happening right now of uh
38:33
you know what is that role of of capital markets markets generally businesses um
38:38
in an esg type of context um did you just define the esg
38:44
the term there environmental social uh and uh governmental uh returns um so really thinking more
38:52
holistically about returns rather than just the financial dimension of it um and i think that’s that’s kind of the
38:59
paradigm that we’re challenging as well and so i don’t think
39:04
uh for for for low-income communities and in rural communities that’s been
39:10
historically you know unserved um i don’t think there necessarily needs to be a trade-off between financial return
39:18
and social return but if you put it in the context of you know i’m i’m private equity trying to
39:24
like you know uh 10x my money type of thing um then yet i
39:31
think there there needs to be some guard rails and there there would likely be tradeoffs for that
39:36
but a fair return with a positive social impact in connecting uh unserved communities uh i
39:45
i we haven’t yet really seen that trade-off do you have a targeted investment return
39:51
rate brian no i think each community is going to be a little bit different and that’s where the blend uh really comes into play
39:59
um and so and you know kind of back to mike’s question if uh if a certain
40:05
network economics like if their cash flow profile really looks uh like it’ll
40:10
struggle um that’s one where we may bring in more philanthropy or grants of some sort
40:18
whether that’s from the state or you know the local muni that’s that’s part of the build um to to
40:24
uh just uh uh try to right size the risk return there who who are the investors of connect
40:31
humanity and and what is their mission and purpose yeah uh uh also been a range of i would
40:39
say uh classic philanthropy uh family private foundations um all the way
40:44
through to banks so uh uh tons of sponsors um uh uh in and i point folks to our
40:52
website because i would say incredible thought leaders in themselves um our biggest supporter has been true is
40:58
bank um and uh uh i i think really hats off to them in
41:04
seeing and trying to think about really advanced ways um philanthropy and also banks can be
41:12
supportive um digital equity uh effort and that’s where you know to to this question of
41:19
financial versus social and and is there a trade-off i i think um the truth is
41:25
demonstrating um you know putting putting their money where their mouth is that it doesn’t necessarily need to be
41:32
right from a macro level you know we’re in this situation where interest rates are really uh rising uh because of
41:39
inflation and and other other factors uh you know we now have this again that’s a
41:44
great problem to have is 65 billion in federal funds for broadband investment
41:51
but some extent it’s also kind of you know forcing a little bit of inflation in there too i’m wondering what what
41:57
your kind of thought is on what’s it like to be a banker right now a financial institution right now in this
42:04
broadband space right is is the financial institution basically going to say i’m going to sit this one out because the government’s already
42:10
involved or because entities like connect humanity or do you by contrast see there being great opportunities for
42:17
more traditional financial issues just talk a little bit more about the collaboration and and what role you see
42:22
that the private financial players playing yeah i mean from an investor perspective
42:28
um we would always need to manage our our average weighted average you
42:35
know rate of return with our weighted average cost of capital rate and um that that you know that gap or that spread
42:43
that’s what implies financial sustainability and viability as an investor um i think that that
42:50
means there’s you know on on the return side of it now let me start on the cost side so on the cost side we actively
42:57
think about how do we manage that right and so uh uh are we bringing in you know are we
43:03
capitalizing ourselves with you know kind of private debt um uh on one end uh
43:10
uh but then you know uh grants on the other and how can that blend that cost down so we can manage um you know the
43:16
cost side of it and so i think there’s a huge role philanthropy um can can play there
43:22
that really will also leverage a lot of their capital um uh and kind of multiply
43:27
you know the money multiplier effect on the return side um i i think you know in in
43:34
uh in any type of you know high inflation period or environments where
43:40
you know uh institutional investors are are seeking yield uh if if you will
43:46
um uh i i kind of go back to the fundamentals of what is it that we’re
43:51
actually building here right right and at the end of the day this is still infrastructure right uh and historically
43:58
infrastructure has demonstrated a a certain consistency um in in in
44:07
economics or at least the consistency of the level right you know different different networks might be higher
44:13
economics lower economics but the consistency of it um is is still there and so i think anybody thinking about a
44:20
broader portfolio management where they have uh certain types of utilities in there
44:26
for that yield um i think there’s a role to play for digital infrastructure as well
44:32
um you know when we think about uh infrastructural
44:37
infrastructure in low-income or underserved communities um i think there’s that the the
44:42
stereotype that um it’s it’s uh uh the consistency may not be there uh or you
44:48
know the return may not be there i think a lot of what we’re trying to challenge is uh
44:53
you know fundamentally i’m not sure if that’s the right assumption about risk return profiles for for on an underserved
45:00
communities uh i think we need to think about differently about the the business model
45:05
whether it’s the owner operator side of it um but i don’t know if it’s fair to assume that
45:13
low-income communities are by nature you know of lower return um so i think i’m
45:19
excited to fast forward a few years um uh and see some of the evidence and data uh
45:26
from an evaluation perspective of these early investments so it’s easy to think about the costs
45:31
involved in the infrastructure piece right because it is so expensive can be so expensive to build it what what about
45:37
these other aspects of the the holistic equation that we spoke about
45:42
are there are there a lot of costs associated with quote unquote affordability with you
45:48
know uh content with devices uh what what are those the costs associated with
45:53
things besides infrastructure brian yeah uh so uh
46:00
i think it’ll depend on who is it like what’s the stakeholder you’re trying to bring to the table so i
46:06
think the broad framework we like to think about um that that’s driven a lot of you know kind of the creativity and
46:12
different structures um it’s been you know often i think you might hear the term
46:17
investments or capital staff right who’s in this um we actually see three different
46:22
stacks with every investment and whereas the the traditional when you hear capital stack that
46:28
typically means sources of capital who uh what is the stack of investors um
46:33
whether that’s you know connect humanity grants um private investor etc
46:39
the two other stacks uh i think are actually more important um and a place
46:44
to start so the first stack is uses of funds um and it’s what is the capital
46:50
going to be used for how much of it is for infrastructure how much of it uh might need to be for digital literacy
46:55
how much of it might need to be for you know the local hospital system to set up a telehealth uh program
47:02
um and similar thing with with a local bank and so for for us that the start is
47:08
to ask about the uses of funds uh stack the second stack is the repayment stack
47:15
um and uh most traditionally you know who’s paying
47:20
the the investment back and you know the biggest sources there have have usually been user fees right whether it’s
47:27
different subscriber anchors residential anchors or residential subscribers or businesses right business
47:34
subscribers when we say traditional business model well that’s what we really mean right so
47:41
network economics really just thinking about that as a way to pay off um the the uses of funds the the infrastructure
47:48
but when infrastructure goes in that creates a lot of uh who else
47:54
benefits from digital infrastructure and folks being online right and that’s a lot more than just the actual user
48:01
itself there what are the externalities that it creates for that that area um
48:08
you know it’s it’s it’s economic development it’s workforce it’s education it’s healthcare uh et cetera
48:14
et cetera right like the list goes on is so it enables so much more and so for the folks who might be enjoying some of
48:20
those externalities are there ways that we can tap into that um
48:25
where we can formalize them paying a little bit their share of the network if you will so an example would be
48:31
telehealth where uh many studies have shown um that
48:38
telehealth demonstrably lowers uh operating costs delivery costs for for
48:44
hospitals and so through that savings um could you
48:50
do almost like a cost share with that hospital uh but outcomes based right if
48:55
the hospital doesn’t experience that savings they don’t need to pay in the network uh but if they do
49:01
if they save a dollar uh say per per patient could they contribute 20 cents
49:06
right and then the the hospital keeps the rest right and so could that help offset um
49:11
the economics to make the investment work and it’s after we really explore those
49:16
two things uses and potential repayment streams that’s when we ask our question of who
49:22
needs to be in the sources of capital um uh and how much grant might we need to take
49:28
off the top so that the rest can be investible um
49:33
so that’s i think yeah that’s great that was extremely useful to think about like
49:38
this the capital stack being uses a fund stack repayment stack but also sources
49:44
of of capital n and so speaking of the capital stack right do you prefer to be
49:50
more senior as a secured creditor or are you comfortable being unsecured you kind of mentioned a little bit about this
49:55
earlier on but but could you just come back to that now that we know a little bit more about what that means yeah one
50:00
minus x uh so if you have grant that can then make the rest investable um if
50:06
you’re able to fill that with you know a commercial investor or cdfi or you know
50:13
your local credit union or the operator right the operator uh often puts a lot of investment into this um then you
50:19
don’t need us um if the operator is a little skittish for you know a small sliver of it we can provide a credit
50:26
enhancement but the capital is already there um if that’s unfilled and you’ve spoken to uh
50:32
those folks and they’re on what right we absolutely can step in and say yeah we’ll provide the senior oh you have a
50:39
senior uh we can provide the sub or the junior oh you have that too we can provide you know uh the
50:45
um the credit enhancement i think where we where we get more and you know throughout that journey right we can be
50:51
that thought partner to think about who might you put in here um and how might our capital help you get them in or can
50:59
we fill it all ourselves yeah so that’s not something we expect communities to solve all by themselves
51:05
um uh uh yeah so it really is that that thought partnership of of uh
51:13
uh what’s the most optimal way to fill this i remember the uh what i was gonna say i
51:19
think where we get skittish is when we fully grant for infrastructure builds
51:25
and our rationale there is we know there are going to be some communities and some builds that where the network
51:31
economics it just requires it um so to me as as uh an impact uh
51:37
investor um a dollar for infrastructure i grant out i know that’s a dollar of
51:46
infrastructure money i can’t give to the next community and so my knee jerk my
51:51
default will always be is there some way we can create some type of recovery mechanism because if i
51:58
give you a dollar uh but you know things don’t go to plan but i’m able to get you know 50 cents
52:03
back on that dollar that’s still 50 cents i can you know bring to the next community and so for us it’s that
52:10
revolving idea of paying it forward if you will are there any particular areas of the
52:16
country that you that you are focusing on or is it equally everywhere
52:22
everywhere uh where there’s a need i should say do you do you do it outside of the
52:28
united states or just in the united states uh right now we’re primarily focused domestically i i think uh when
52:34
we think about digital equity um it is it’s a global problem uh so i think uh
52:40
we’re we’re actively talking about how we can help global communities as well
52:47
well we we’ve got about uh seven minutes left brian and i i don’t want to
52:53
skimp on you and and and your background and as a recovery investment banker what
53:00
what attracted you to connect humanity what’s your journey uh in in this space
53:06
of finance and broadband yeah it’s um
53:11
i wouldn’t have uh connected these dots uh you know well i’m only able to
53:17
connect these dots looking backward as the saying goes um so uh a child of
53:23
immigrants um my my parents came over during the vietnam war uh and the way
53:28
they came over was more fortunate so i think growing up there’s always this sense of service um uh community service
53:35
uh being service-minded um i started noticing i was getting interested in kind of economics related
53:43
uh questions you know why are why do people buy x versus why
53:48
um what what makes uh you know a better investment versus not
53:53
um and found myself at wharton um uh uh and it was an interesting kind of
54:00
reconciliation because you know uh kind of growing up with that service mind uh uh
54:05
service value values of service uh but then also finding myself in a little bit of the heart of capitalism um
54:13
i started seeing or asking myself like what could happen if you got
54:18
the the public and social sector speaking the language of the private sector especially around capital markets and
54:24
what could happen if you got the private sector speaking the language of public and social sector and this was well
54:30
before i think a lot of the the language we have now around that whole esg language that you you
54:37
ripped on and i wanted to get you defined right uh so back then my first job was to really try
54:43
to understand the capital market side of it and so that was a bit more of a traditional investment banking private equity experience
54:50
i’d say really colored by the financial crisis so i was there before during and after the financial crisis um and saw i
54:58
would say the the potential power of financial engineering um but its inability to create
55:05
sustainable value uh especially by itself right it was it’s just a tool um
55:11
so who is using that tool uh why are they using that tool and what are they using it for
55:16
um so that that i think really really impacted me um early on
55:22
then i spent some time with with mckenzie i joined them in their singapore office
55:30
before transferring to the dc office and i wore two hats with them one was strategy corporate finance practice and
55:36
the other was the public social sector practice and increasingly i was getting excited working at the intersection so
55:42
using corporate finance tools for public and social sector clients um and and
55:48
trying to get public and private capital to incentivize economic development health outcomes and outcomes um so it’s
55:55
been that intersection i’ve tried to to work at since um so i’ve spent some time with outcomes
56:01
based financing social impact bonds um spent some time in global development
56:07
trying to uh kind of marry a different
56:14
capital structures with market-based mechanisms and principles with uh
56:21
philanthropic programs what could happen when when you bring that lens to program design uh in the
56:28
social sector and i think what what really drew me to connect humanity
56:33
was two things i think the the first one was um uh from an issue area perspective and
56:38
then i think the second was the blended finance and so from an issue area perspective i was doing a lot of work in
56:45
health financial inclusion workforce education and uh
56:51
underlying all of those promising solutions and approaches was connectivity right and so it wasn’t too
56:59
hard of a jump to say well if you care about any of these other outcomes you
57:05
have to care about connectivity because without connectivity you have no path forward
57:10
for any of those things um so for me the uh that that jump uh was very natural
57:16
and then on the second one the blended finance uh part of it um i think it was that recognition that
57:22
um there there there are a lot of uh private sector investment financing structures vehicles
57:29
well known um a lot of them have been copy and pasted for social sector purposes um social entrepreneurship
57:37
investing um etc um so a lot of those vehicles are uh exist in a social uh and
57:44
public context what what i think is is uh is the opportunity um and uh you know we’re
57:51
trying to to think about it at connect community is um what are those vehicles
57:58
that you can’t copy and paste from the private sector right what are those needs at the community
58:04
level um that need to be financed and what are the structures and terms that make most sense for them um rather than
58:11
me kind of begging borrowing stealing you know the private sector tools do we actually
58:17
need to create another set of tools that are more oriented around uh you know the
58:23
communities we’re trying to serve so i think it was that opportunity to to um
58:28
really just brainstorm new new ways to finance what what impact
58:34
do you think the great recession had on the evolution of finance again with a particular reference to this blended
58:41
finance world of connectivity that connect humanity is focused on
58:47
yeah oh that’s that’s so existential um
58:52
a few things i i uh a positive thing uh is i think it it
58:59
got a lot of folks who weren’t really thinking about capital markets uh
59:05
to think about capital markets and uh how is it structured what’s it doing for me type of thing and how can it be used
59:11
for things that i care about and so from that perspective i think it was
59:16
really helpful and in you know uh almost mainstreaming in a way um conversations
59:22
around it uh and challenging you know what what should be uh the the financial versus social uh trade-off
59:29
i think the uh the flip side of that coin is um
59:37
it’s a very nuanced conversation but it’s so easy to uh polarize it right you’re you’re either a
59:44
um on the public social sector side where uh it’s for the good greater good
59:49
or your commercial uh investor return maximizing and so i think most of
59:58
the conversation most of the work has been in the nuances in that gray area in between where it’s it really is
1:00:04
a balance um so i think a little bit of of that flip side is you know especially
1:00:10
engaging a lot with community-based organizations and non-profits csos um there is some of that that uh legacy
1:00:17
feeling of um you know uh well are you are you them or are you not uh
1:00:23
and where uh we’re neither if you will right right well that that will have to
1:00:29
be our our last uh word uh before we thank our our guest we want to remind
1:00:35
everyone that uh next tuesday at 10 30 eastern time uh or 8 30 mountain time uh
1:00:45
ntia chief alan davidson will be at mountain connect i’ll have the great
1:00:51
opportunity to be be there with him and have a a a q a much like this one and
1:00:59
the next uh ask me anything in our series will be on june 3rd with elliot
1:01:05
noss the ceo of ting internet very excited for him to be here with us just
1:01:11
as we have been so excited to have you brian vo thank you for being here and on
1:01:16
behalf of the broadband.money community uh have a great weekend and we’ll we’ll
1:01:22
see you next week all right thank you for having

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