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Andrew Youn '06 and Prof. Harry Kraemer '79 at a gala Youn's One Acre Fund held in Kraemer's honor on Dec. 11.

Andrew Youn '06 and Prof. Harry Kraemer '79

Chance encounter

A run-in at reunion leads to a collaboration fighting hunger

By Sonali Basak

12/13/2013 - "There's a certain amount of serendipity to all of this," said on connecting to the One Acre Fund. works with getting small-scale farmers resources to pull themselves out of poverty.

Andrew Youn 鈥06 founded One Acre in 2006 while at Kellogg. Youn never had Kraemer as a professor, but the former CEO of Baxter International and current executive partner at Madison Dearborn would coach Youn on running One Acre outside the classroom.

After graduation, Youn moved to Kenya to run One Acre. He visited Kellogg for his five-year reunion in 2011, the same week Kraemer 鈥79 launched his book, They ran into each other at reunion and started talking.

On Dec. 11, One Acre honored the collaboration that conversation started with a gala in Kraemer鈥檚 honor.

Country by country

Kraemer decided to put the principles 鈥淔rom Values to Action鈥 into practice, donating all his proceeds to a worthy cause. He saw no better fit than One Acre and Andrew Youn.

鈥淭his is a guy who decided he wasn't going to wait for anything, he was going to make it happen,鈥 Kraemer said. 鈥淭o have an impact on the entire continent 鈥 to go country by country to eliminate poverty in all of Africa 鈥 that's the goal.鈥

Kraemer also promised to speak monthly on One Acre鈥檚 journey. Since then, he spoke nearly 240 times to companies, colleges and organizations on Youn鈥檚 leadership.

One Acre chooses one person yearly whose influence significantly impacts farmers. The book proceeds aid One Acre in doubling or tripling farmers鈥 crop yields, hiring good advisors and buying better seeds and equipment.

But Youn said the honor was largely due to Kraemer鈥檚 humility. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really needed in our world,鈥 Youn said. 鈥淗e talks in his book about values that drive a leader 鈥 He鈥檚 the one that embodies all those things.鈥

Kraemer said Youn鈥檚 humility facilitated a connection to people he serves. It helped Youn grow the network to four countries, build staff of close to 1,700 and serve close to 127,000 farms.

This reaches 137,000 farm families, with the goal to reach 1.4 million families by 2020.

Youn鈥檚 story resonates with companies and students tremendously, Kraemer said.

鈥淗e's a real example that gets beyond talking about it to actually doing it,鈥 Kraemer said. 鈥淎 lot of folks can actually talk about it, but not realize that it's never too early to start.鈥

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