Rich Donovan

Rich Donovan is a global expert in business development issues surrounding disability and accessibility. He is best known for creating financial instruments that track the intersection of corporate profitability with corporate commitment to disability hiring and best practices. His Return On Disability Index is reported on Bloomberg and has been used as the basis of an Exchange Traded Note (ETN) by Barclay's Bank on the NYSE Arca Stock Exchange.

Accessibility and finance work[edit]

Development of the Return on Disability Index[edit]

Donovan is a founder of several research and advisory companies that have foregrounded the business case for companies and governments to act on the disability market. In 2008, he founded what is now called The Return on Disability Group to build metric and models that allow for analysis of corporate activity which help assess how well businesses engage customers and employees with disabilities. The organization's "Return on Disability Reports" and other models helps companies understand their performance across disability factors that are linked directly to profitability. As well they produce the Return on Disability Indices for the U.S. and Canada markets. These financial tools "recognize public companies that are outperforming in the disability market."[1] The RoD US 100 and the RoD Canada 50, are published daily by Bloomberg LP. The indices track the shares of the 100 firms that deal best with disabled people. The Economist notes that in the five years to 2012 the US index had outperformed the broader stock market.[2]

LIME[edit]

In 2006, Donovan founded Lime Connect, an organization whose goal is to find employment for people with disabilities. The idea with Lime Connect is: "to connect with the brightest people with disabilities from all disciplines. Results have been stellar, with the Lime Connect Fellowship Program placing 20 young stars in 2011 alone, six of whom were hired by Google."[3] Other companies Lime has partnered with include PepsiCo, Bank of America/Merrill Lynch, IBM, and TD Bank.[4]

Fundamental concepts[edit]

As one of the early progenitors of the business case for accessibility, Donovan has focused on the following:

    • Strategic road maps for companies to do accessibility well. What works within their strategic frameworks.
    • What accessibility practices drive value at specific companies that, in turn, drive investor returns
    • the notion of Shared value so that the next ten years of growth will come from non-traditional markets such as people with disabilities

Education[edit]

Donovan received his BBA in Finance from the Schulich School of Business at York University (1993 - 1997) and his MBA from Columbia Business School (2000 – 2002). He worked successfully as a trader for Merrill Lynch. Donovan is an avid sailor and father of a son, Maverick, along with his wife, Jenn. He has cerebral palsy.[4]

Honors and awards[edit]

Volunteer experience and causes[edit]

Publications[edit]

The primary annual report published by The Return on Disability Group is the "Global Economics of Disability".[5] The report "is featured on the European Union web site and is frequently quoted by businesses, governments and NGOs when defining the size, scope and value of the disability market."[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The RoD Report". The Return on Disability Group. Retrieved March 9, 2017.
  2. ^ "Disability and business: The new green". The Economist. September 8, 2012. Retrieved April 26, 2015.
  3. ^ Donovan, Rich. "Disability: From Redheaded Stepchild to Golden Girl". Essential Accessibility. Retrieved April 26, 2015.
  4. ^ a b c "Rich Donovan". Accessibility Summit: Speaker List. Carleton University. 2014. Retrieved April 26, 2015.
  5. ^ "2014 Annual Report: The Global Economics of Disability" (PDF). The Return on Disability Group. August 1, 2014. Retrieved April 26, 2015.