| Social Entrepreneurship - The Alicia Polak Way |  | 
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 Case Details:
 
 Case Code : LDEN045
 Case Length : 10 Pages
 Period : 2004-06
 Pub Date : 2007
 Teaching Note :Not Available
 Organization : Khayelitsha Cookie Company
 Industry : Food Products
 Countries : South Africa
 
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 << Previous "Alicia Polak's idea was created in Africa and at the 
moment is quite small, but we could grow the idea and if it works it can be 
replicated in many other places."1 - Ian MacMillan, Director, Sol C. Snider Entrepreneurial 
Research Center, Wharton School of Business, in 2006. "It (Khayelitsha Cookie Company) is not making me any 
money yet, but I still feel incredibly lucky at the end of my working day. And 
not many people get to say that!"2 - Alicia Polak, Founder, The Khayelitsha Cookie Company, in 
2006. Introduction
	
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In August 2006, Business 2.03 published a 
list of '12 most intriguing business opportunities in the world.' In this list 
was one of the opportunities of 'Becoming a social entrepreneur in South 
Africa,' which referred to former Wall Street investment banker Alicia Polak (Polak) 
and her venture Khayelitsha Cookie Company (KCC). The company was based in 
Khayelitsha, a poor township in South Africa near Cape Town (Refer to Exhibit I 
for the 12 most intriguing business opportunities in the world). 
 In the year 2004, Alicia Polak founded KCC, a company which sold its branded 
cookies to several hotels and restaurants across South Africa.
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 KCC employed women from Khayelitsha to bake, pack, and sell the cookies. Polak 
	started KCC as a social entrepreneur, who wanted to make money out of this 
	venture and at the same time improve the lives of the poor women of the 
	township, who worked for the company. According to James Thompson 
	(Thompson), Associate Director of Wharton Entrepreneurial Programs, "You 
	might say, 'They're just cookies,' but she's teaching people skills in a 
	very poor area.  
	
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	And there's no reason this brand can't be big in America and Europe."4 
	(Refer to Exhibit II for more information about Khayelitsha). KCC was a part 
	of Wharton's Societal Wealth generation program (SWGP), which was 
	established in early 2006 (Refer to Exhibit III for details of the Societal 
	Wealth Generation Program). The program aimed at addressing social problems 
	through entrepreneurial business models. The projects established under SWGP 
	included an animal feed project and healthcare projects in different 
	countries in Africa. According to Thompson, "That project is a microcosm of 
	what the Societal Wealth Generation Program - and the spirit of 
	entrepreneurialism - can accomplish."5 |  
Social Entrepreneurship - The Alicia Polak Way
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