The first 6 chapters were very compelling. I loved the stories about how people made an impact through education and investments. But the chapters afterwards, though informative, became quite tedious with large info-dumps of stats, numbers and organization names. I really could not keep track of ten different acronyms appearing in the same chapter. This book could be slightly difficult to consume for readers with little to no background on investing or marketing (such as I). Nevertheless, it did introduce me to the concept of Impact Investing and the encouraging idea that doing good and earning a profit for oneself does not always have to be mutually exclusive.