subject: Mouli Cohen: The 2009 Philanthropic Statistics Speaks of Experimentation and Creative Thinking [print this page] Mouli Cohen: The 2009 Philanthropic Statistics Speaks of Experimentation and Creative Thinking
Technology is a risky but highly profitable and beneficial investment. There are only a few investors who take the lead in bringing new inventions and unique innovations in the market but the brave ones who try and succeed really makes a good fortune. Mouli Cohen is a technology entrepreneur who supports the development of high technology, biotechnology and digital media. His private firms which include Voltage Capital, Lilly, Ecast, Aristo International and ICOS, are all focused in finding the best solutions made by nontraditional research carried out by exceptional individuals. His talent for making sound investments and his aptitude for management has been remarkable and can be completely described by his enormous three billion dollars of shareholder's value generated from all the startup businesses he funded. Being wealthy and continuously making huge incomes, Mouli Cohen remains humble and engages himself in a more meaningful life through philanthropy.
2009 is a slow year for philanthropists like Mouli Cohen who suffered the bouts of recession. But despite such depressing events, Cohen is still very confident in the art of smart giving, like the donors he admired the most, Bill and Melinda Gates and Eli and Edythe L. Broad. Being both an entrepreneur and a philanthropist, he has learned to make advances in his mission of giving back and helping others by working with the government and supporting advocacies.
Mouli Cohen considers a fulfilling life of having less and making greater impact in other people's lives. Mouli Cohen reviews that the philanthropic statistics of 2009 only characterizes a period of experimentation for nonprofits and donors and is a way of encouraging a more creative and different thinking for people who are committed and passionate about their worthwhile missions.