The Importance of Convening Impact Investors
Nearly 30 years ago, Atlanta captured the world’s attention as the city played host to the 1996 Summer Olympics. Last week Mission Investors Exchange (MIE) – one of the country’s leading impact investing networks – announced that Atlanta will host its 2026 biennial conference. While the two events vary greatly in scale and global relevance, as an Atlanta-based impact investing practitioner, this announcement is hugely relevant to me. As I processed my excitement, my thoughts drifted to the ‘96 Summer Games.
Hosting world events is a fiercely debated topic – with proponents and opponents turning over the relative economic, social, and environmental impacts to host cities. I’m not here to add to that debate. Regardless of personal beliefs on the matter, I think proponents and opponents can agree on the significance of the moment of selection. Atlanta’s selection created a very real call-to-action for local organizers and leaders. The “vision state” was defined so to speak, and the run-up to the Olympics would be a coordinated effort to bring about that end experience.
In roughly 18 months, Atlanta will host hundreds of impact investing practitioners (representing foundations, investment managers, innovative investment funds, community development investors from across the country). For two days, these practitioners – hailing from different places, representing different types of organizations, varying in experience levels, focusing on different strategies – will be invited to set those differences aside and create a space where they think of one another as peers. Why is this important? It’s important because mission and impact-first investing is often difficult, lonely work.
At its best, impact investing challenges the status quo and confronts conventional investment norms and practices. Put yourself in the shoes of a foundation executive asking their board to consider unlocking the 95% for mission. Think about the CDFI professional working in rural communities with traditional and exclusionary economic development priorities. Consider how organizations focused on solidarity economics and Black wealth-building must grow tired of philanthropic incrementalism. Practitioner conferences like those hosted by MIE, ImpactPHL, Neighborhood Economics, and others are vital spaces where individuals and organizations who are doing the hard work of shifting capital – away from Wall Street and into communities and socially-responsible investment endeavors – can feel supported and can share openly how this work challenges them.
My Vision for Atlanta’s Role as “Host City”
To bring this full-circle, my excitement about Atlanta’s role in the upcoming MIE conference quickly transitioned into a “readying” state of mind. I questioned, Does Georgia’s impact investing ecosystem have a shared “vision state” for our role as host city for MIE’s 2026 conference? How are we using the 18-month runway we have in front of us to prepare our ecosystem stakeholders to best engage with this experience?
I have some thoughts on how I’d answer these questions.
Invitation to Join Me in the Ramp-Up to 2026
Consider this your invitation to join my visioning exercise. If some of what I’ve offered resonates with you, or if you have something to add, reach out to me. Our deliberate march towards 2026 begins now!
Sydney England
Executive Director, GSIC