Our inaugural Young Guy Doing Cool Shit comes from Connecticut raised, Boston and globally educated, San Francisco based, inspired, ambitious and learned social entrepreneur, Dave Adams. Below is a short dialogue on why we’ve chosen him as our first #YGDCS on Blank Label's Co-creation Blog, and you’ll notice that he definitely is a believer of CONNECTED INDIVIDUALISM.
What are you doing these days, and how is it different to what you were doing a year ago.
Well a year ago I was doing some consulting with a marketing firm. The financial crisis had just hit and it seemed like everyone was running around with their heads cut off. I guess for me it was just kind of fun. Everyone knew that a whole new set of rules would emerge out of the chaos, which meant that there would be a whole new set of rules to break.
My partner and I quit consulting one day and started CauseShare the next. It basically grew from this very prevalent idea that everyone has something to give to their communities, and good ideas usually come from the people who know their communities best, everyday people. I don’t mean communities in just a geographical sense though. Basically for people who are representing a good cause, we are what it would be like if Facebook let you sell girl-scout cookies and raise a militia. Except our girl scout cookies are cool. We're bringing in great companies from around the web to offer their products for this new kind of social fundraising. Its online activism, for causes of any shape and size. You don’t need to be a non-profit, all though it helps, and you sure as hell don’t need to be Bono.
I assume you’re actively working on CauseShare. Can you give us a couple of highlights of your past seven days?
Last seven days… Last weekend I was in Zuni New Mexico hanging out at the Zuni Indian reservation. Holler at Kiva, they just started micro-finance lending in the US this year with a lot of controversy. That kind of dignified charity is needed way bad in some spots. While I was there I got to climb a mesa. Then I was back in the East Bay area talking to the brands who are offering products for sale in our social fundraisers. During the week, like most weeks, I get to work at the Hub in Berkeley which is a shared workspace for social entrepreneurs. Bunch of cool people working there, all sorts of projects. I’m lucky to spend my days in that environment, real good coffee.

You’re pretty passionate about doing good as well as doing well. Who is your world changer?
That’s funny, I don't know anymore. I think we’re living in an age of enlightenment. I mean, the same cool people are doing the same cool stuff that they did yesterday, but it’s just more visible today. We see all our friends and our friends’ friends doing cool shit, and it’s like there is absolutely no reason I can't do something like that. We all have something to give. It’s inspiring. You don’t need to be Annie Lebovitz to take a killer photo nowadays, you don’t need to be Malcolm Gladwell to write an intriguing article. My brother makes beer better than most breweries right in his house. The information and tools are available for anyone to be a change maker, and I like anyone who realizes that they can do something well, then do it hard, until they do it great. I like them.
What do you think life will be like for you in a year?
Busy and hopefully still fun. I was admitted into a program at the London School of Economics for development anthropology, and it would be interesting, but there’s a lot going on here and that kind of education would be kind of a luxury. Would be fun though to seed the CauseShare idea with some people over there though, spread that kind of online activism. No matter where I am, I’m going to do a little homegrown service work, maybe do something in South America, always wanted to go to Argentina. Also got some side projects coming up that will be taking some more time of mine that doesn't really exist. I need to get a watch with a few more hours on it.
What does the future look like to Dave Adams?
I don’t know, when you’re a kid, reading George Orwell in school, you say man, this is scary, everyone waking around in gray jumpsuits, people telling you when you can eat dinner and have kids, speaker boxes and stuff. I think we’re learning now that the future is much more diverse. We take our cues from central sources less and less, and this allows us to go in so many directions, but we see all the offline fragmentation online so it’s easier to appreciate and understand each other. It’s also much easier to self organize around these cool movements. I think the future is a place that has a lot more choice, a lot more freedom and is a much more colorful place, but with many of the same simple troubles and joys that we have today.