PodcastsBusinessImpact & Innovation

Impact & Innovation

Teresa Chahine
Impact & Innovation
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  • Small Businesses as the Fabric of this Country
    In our bonus final episode this season we meet Elizabeth Gore, co-founder and President of Hello Alice, a fintech company that helps small businesses access capital and growth. Elizabeth shares her journey as an entrepreneur launching this company against all odds, and how she navigated barriers in building it. After 200+ rejections, she and her co-founder found the investors who believed in them, and since then have served 1.5M+ entrepreneurs! She focuses on serving women and people of color along with veterans, who receive the least amount of funding and support. The data shows that when they do receive funding, women outperform men. So Elizabeth is out to change the access gap. She shares that, while the entrepreneurship ecosystem buzz is largely around venture capital and unicorns, small businesses make up 90% of businesses in the U.S. and are the largest providers of jobs. Hello Alice is out to support these businesses through director service and advocacy. If you like this episode, check out Elizabeth's show "The Big Idea" on Yahoo! Finance.
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  • Bending the Arc of Justice
    After many years of zooming in to my class, Rod Bremby is finally here in person! Former health secretary for the state of Kansas, commissioner of the department of social services for Connecticut, and vice president of digital transformation for the global public sector at Salesforce; Rod shares his reflections on the revolving door of public and private sector work. He was fired for turning down a coal fired power plant in Kanses, received an award for taking CT SNAP "from worst to first" through his unique change management approach, and led the Salesforce public private partnerships for multiple states and nations during COVID-19. Most recently his work centers on how AI can help drive impact at scale by freeing up health and social workers to spend more time coaching their patients and customers to succes. Rod shares his advice on standing up for what you believe in, and finding ways to help bend the arc of justice. 
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  • CT Wealth Accelerator
    Yaw Owusu-Boahen returns to SOM to share his experience after graduating, and his most recent role as Director of the CT Wealth Accelerator, an extrapreneurship endeavor bringing together multiple partners who are deeply invested in bridging the racial wealth gap in CT. Building on a government innovation providing "baby bonds" to children born under the poverty line, the Wealth Accelerator is testing new programs to support customers in leveraging existing resources to build generational wealth. He shares his ambitions for accelerating existing results, and the need to take risks to do so. 
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  • KB 2.0 : From Data to Insights, Policy, and Impact
    They're back again! After visiting my podcast in its first year in 2018, Khushi Baby is back to share how they've not only survived the past seven years but completely leaned into their mission and expanded the depth and magnitude of their impact. Founded just over ten years ago, KB started out as a wearable designed to digitize data on childhood immunization in rural India. After conducting field research with Community Health Workers, they created an app integrating the maternal child health challenge into the larger problem set of primary care. Scaling rapidly in response to government crisis during the Covid-19 pandemic, they became part of a growing ecosystem of apps serving the public health system. KB2.0 emerged from this digital boom and the wealth of data generated, to play a new and critical role in helping the government generate insights from this data, and translate those insights into policy. 
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    39:53
  • Sink or Swim
    Now is the time when we find out to what degree and how we will swim rather than sink, as public health innovators and practitioners. In this episode, I talk to my former student Olivia Francis, who obtained her MPH in 2025. Like many of her peers, Olivia is navigating the turbulent waters of the political storm surrounding public health. She reflects on past public health challenges and how we overcame them. "How can we make this an opportunity," she asks, "rather than just a sad time that happened?" Last spring Olivia was recruited by Health in Her Hue, following founder Ashlee Wisdom's visit to my class. Health in Her Hue is a venture backed start-up working to build trust between Black women and their health care providers. We discuss the range of possibilities available to us in keeping public health and health equity alive under attack, using unconventional methods and imperfect allies. 
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About Impact & Innovation

Join the conversation as social entrepreneurs from around the world come to Yale SOM to share the challenges they are grappling with and the insights they are gaining in the field. From rural India and Kenya to the inner cities of the U.S., from the environment to nutrition to maternal child health, this series cuts across sectors to examine the convergence of business and society. Take a peek inside the classroom of Dr. Teresa Chahine as she examines the latest trends and pitfalls in social innovation, funding, and impact.
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