Can someone do my Week 6 discussion 2 in Entrepreneur/Intrapreneur?
Prior to beginning work on this discussion forum, read Carlson's textbook, Chapter 10. Pay close attention to Tables 10.1 and 10.2 for this discussion.
In Weeks 4 and 5, you focused on your own entrepreneurial aspirations. This week, you are asked to look at that company and its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Review Table 10.2 when addressing each of the sections listed on the table as it relates to your company.
In this discussion, please address the following questions.
- Which SDGs did you select?
- What entrepreneurial opportunities did you consider?
- What was the geographic focus and scope of these opportunities?
- What do you see as the pros and cons of your venture ideas?
CHAPTER TEN SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN A GLOBAL CONTEXT
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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Identify the potential economic impact of entrepreneurship.
Assess the promise of global social entrepreneurship and its relevance for achieving social goals.
Describe characteristics of global social entrepreneurs.
Distinguish between different types of entrepreneurial ventures based on their scale and market focus.
It is no surprise that social entrepreneurs and the institutions that support them have focused their attention on making an impact around the world. Entrepreneurship is a powerful engine for economic growth, and social entrepreneurs are using their mission-focused skills to tackle chronic social problems ranging from addressing food insecurity in sub-Saharan Africa to expanding education access in India to addressing racial disparities in the United States. Forbes magazine described both the promise and complexity of this kind of problem-solving, observing that “social entrepreneurs are working in close collaboration with local communities, incubating groundbreaking (and often lifesaving) innovations; modeling synergistic partnerships with governments, companies, and traditional charities; and building business models that deploy technology and enable networking to create wins for investors and clients alike.”1
In this chapter, we take a broad look at both entrepreneurship and social entrepreneurship around the world and examine different models that are enabling mission-driven entrepreneurs to address society’s most pressing problems.
THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Global Entrepreneurial Impact
Nearly a century ago, influential Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter theorized that entrepreneurship was a key factor in innovation and technological change. He later asserted that “the doing of new things or the doing of things that are already being done in a new way” stemmed directly from the efforts of entrepreneurs.2 Schumpeter first coined the term “creative destruction,” which describes “the essential fact” of capitalist economies which is the incessant destruction of old ways of doing business as new ones replace them.3 His theory illustrates an essential characteristic of entrepreneurs: their willingness to question the status quo and search for more efficient paths.
Prominent American economic theorist William Baumol is credited with giving the entrepreneur a key role in mainstream economic theory. Among his many contributions (several of which build on work by Schumpeter) is his argument that institutional context influences the nature of entrepreneurship and its impact, contending that the nature and quality of institutions (for example, tax policy and protection) affects whether or not entrepreneurial activity has beneficial outcomes.4
Starting in the 1970s and 1980s, entrepreneurship emerged as an engine for economic growth in developed economies after a centuries-long decline. Scholars cite multiple reasons for this, including that the “growth of the service sector with its smaller scale and lower entry barriers, and increasing differentiation of consumer preferences, declining transactions costs and a trend in occupational preferences towards more autonomy and self-realization.”5 They also note that increased information and communication technologies create new business opportunities and lower costs, enabling small firms to benefit more easily from scale economies.6
In the United States, research using Census Bureau 2013 longitudinal data demonstrated that while start-ups account for only 3% of employment nationwide, they are responsible for almost 20% of national gross job creation. The authors observe a robust up-or-out dynamic of young firms succeeding or failing and observe that the young firms that survive grow more rapidly than their more mature counterparts.7
Entrepreneurship in Emerging and Developing Economies
Perhaps the most comprehensive source of information on global entrepreneurship is the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM), which has been published annually for over two decades. In their 2019/2020 global report, the authors summarize the results of over 150,000 individual interviews conducted over 50 economies. They examine factors that include attitudes towards entrepreneurship, the motivations of those starting businesses, and the level of entrepreneurial activity in each economy.
The GEM authors observe that “entrepreneurship is a uniquely powerful mechanism for economic and social development, generating incomes and jobs while enabling and enriching individuals and communities.” Benefits include job and income creation, innovation, and individual autonomy, although the extent to which they are realized varies by economy.8
In the emerging BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) economies, significant growth has been driven by entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurs’ ability to access knowledge, markets, and education have all been factors enabling economic expansion.9
In less developed economies, necessity is often a driving force. Economists distinguish between two types of entrepreneurship: opportunity driven and necessity driven. Opportunity entrepreneurs are those who start a venture because they spot an opportunity in the market which they want to pursue. Necessity entrepreneurs are those who start a venture because they do not have another means of generating income. Opportunity-driven entrepreneurship leads to higher levels of economic growth, while necessity-driven entrepreneurship has been shown to be less promising and can even have a negative effect. Scholars have observed a downside to high levels of necessity-driven entrepreneurship. A study of 48 developing countries found a negative relationship between established business ownership rate (the percent of the population who are owner-managers of an established business) and per capita GDP and GNI, questioning whether, among other reasons, a high prevalence of necessity-driven entrepreneurship could be crowding out more productive opportunity-driven entrepreneurship and the formation of high growth ventures.10
The higher value of opportunity-driven entrepreneurship has also been demonstrated in multiple studies. In a 2020 analysis that followed 22 transitional and developed economies in Europe, the authors found a strong correlation between opportunity-driven entrepreneurship and economic growth.11 An analysis of a large sample of female entrepreneurs in Mexico showed that on average, opportunity entrepreneurs had better performance and higher skills than necessity entrepreneurs and the researchers also observed that opportunity entrepreneurs achieved better venture performance and used better management practices.12
The Importance of Institutional and Cultural Context
For entrepreneurship to thrive, the institutional environment matters. Unsurprisingly, countries with stable governments, transparent legal systems, and strong property rights’ protections are more conducive to entrepreneurship; this is also true of those with low regulatory burdens, availability of entrepreneurial education, and strong professional, commercial, and physical infrastructure. The World Bank annually ranks 170 countries on the ease of doing business. In 2020, New Zealand ranked #1, and the Democratic Republic of Sao Tome and Principe, an island country off the western equatorial coast of Central Africa, was #170. The factors the World Bank considered included start-up time and cost, ability to get credit, tax policy, and how effectively jurisdictions enforce contracts and resolve insolvency.13
Social norms are also important. For example, when Linda Rottenberg and Peter Kellner launched Endeavor in five countries in Latin America, they found that the countries they had entered lacked the tradition of celebrating entrepreneurs as community wealth creators that existed in many other countries and also had limited infrastructure to support entrepreneurs. “For Linda, the light bulb moment for Endeavor came in the back of a taxicab in Buenos Aires. She struck up a conversation with the driver and was shocked to learn he had a PhD in Engineering. She asked if he hadn’t considered becoming an entrepreneur instead of driving a taxi. ‘An empresario?’ he said dismissively, using the Spanish word for a big businessperson. It suddenly occurred to her that there was no Spanish word for entrepreneur.”14 Endeavor’s founders made it their mission to celebrate entrepreneurs, while building an infrastructure to support them, and today Endeavor operates in over 30 countries around the world with an impressive track record of facilitating entrepreneurial ventures and catalyzing job creation.
Across the 61 countries surveyed in 2016 by GEM, over two-thirds of the adult population believed that entrepreneurs are well regarded and enjoy high status. The most positive attitudes were reported in Africa, with 77% of respondents believing entrepreneurs are admired and 75% believing entrepreneurship is a good career choice. In contrast, a smaller proportion of adults believed entrepreneurs to be well regarded in Latin America and the Caribbean (63%) and in Europe (58%).15
Entrepreneurial Motivation
Motivations for entrepreneurship vary from country to country. For example, the GEM adult population survey asked entrepreneurs in 50 countries their motivations for becoming an entrepreneur. In 60% of countries, over half of the entrepreneurs surveyed somewhat or strongly agreed that “building great wealth or very high income” was their motivation. But this motivation differed country by country, with fewer than half the countries in Europe and North America reporting this dominance, while most did in the Asian and the Pacific regions as well as in nearly all of the 11 countries in the Middle East and Africa.16
Necessity-driven entrepreneurial formation, the drive “to earn a living because jobs are scarce,” motivated more than half the adults that started new businesses in a large share (70%) of the countries GEM surveyed. There were significant regional and country-by-country differences. Half or more of the entrepreneurs somewhat or strongly agreed with the statement in every Latin American and Middle Eastern and African country surveyed, while entrepreneurs in Europe, North America, and the Asian and Pacific regions were much less likely to be motivated by earning a living. This underscores the concentration of necessity-driven entrepreneurship in less-developed nations.17
A third motivation, and the one most relevant to social entrepreneurs, is “to make a difference in the world.” On this dimension, we counted countries where half of the entrepreneurs somewhat or strongly agreed with this statement; the percentage of countries by region was as follows:
Latin America and the Caribbean—63%
Middle East and Africa—45%
Asia and the Pacific—38%
Europe and North America—22%
The countries with the highest proportion of entrepreneurs expressing their agreement about the importance of making a difference were India, South Africa, Guatemala, and Panama (all with over 75% of entrepreneurs agreeing) closely followed by Canada, Poland, and the United States.18
THE PROMISE OF GLOBAL SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP
In the section above, we discussed why entrepreneurship has positive economic outcomes. Now, we’ll turn our focus to social entrepreneurship as an engine for positive social change. Around the globe, examples of innovative solutions created by social entrepreneurs creating sustainable social change abound. Prominent examples include the following:
BRAC, headquartered in Bangladesh, improves livelihoods by founding a series of social enterprises. Some of these enterprises, which include self-sustaining ventures in dairy production, fisheries, agriculture and seeds, silk production, and cattle insemination, among others, help give microentrepreneurs, farmers, and producers the tools, resources, and market access they need to raise their incomes. The results have been astonishing. BRAC reaches millions of the world’s poorest people in Africa, India, and Asia, and its commercial ventures are largely self-supporting.
Aravind Eye Hospital in Maduria, India, leveraged the profits from performing cataract surgery in a for-profit hospital to provide free services for the poorest of India’s blind population. Today, the Aravind Eye Care System has treated more than 65.5 million patients and performed 7.8 million surgeries. Using a model of high volume and intense specialization, Aravind can perform cataract surgeries 98% cheaper than in the United States, with outcomes that are as good as or better than those realized in the United States and Europe.19 Aravind is also self-supporting.
The One Acre Fund was started in Kenya in 2006 by Andrew Youn with a simple observation: most families in rural Africa farm at a subsistence level, but a few low-cost improvements can dramatically increase yields. Youn was motivated to start One Acre when he visited rural Kenya during “hunger season,” a time when staple food had run out and families were barely surviving. But he also saw that some farmers achieved dramatically higher yields by using hybrid seeds, fertilizer, and crop spacing. “Smallholder farmers comprise 75% of the world’ poorest citizens, including 50 million households in Africa, (most of whom) live in remote areas of the world and do not have access to basic agricultural tools and training.”20 The One Acre Fund provides a bundle of services to small groups of farmers, including seed and fertilizer access, credit, training on farming techniques, and postharvest and market support.21 Today, One Acre works with over 1 million farmers in six countries in Africa—Kenya, Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania, Uganda, and Malawi. One Acre also employs 6,000 field agents in over 4,500 rural locations who are responsible for enrolling farmers, providing input, and collecting payments.
Sanergy was founded by a global team of young social entrepreneurs in 2010 (Sanergy’s evolution is discussed in a case at the end of this book) as a hybrid for-profit and nonprofit enterprise that operates a network of franchised pay toilets in informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya. Sanergy collects and processes the human waste that is produced to create high-quality fertilizers and animal feed byproducts. In doing so, it solves one of the most important problems in the slums by improving sanitation and reducing harmful pollution. Sanergy has “grown in” in Nairobi, increasing the number of pay toilets by expanding the use of its original franchise model as well as partnering with property owners and community institutions to make sanitation even more accessible. It currently serves nearly 140,000 urban residents daily with its network of 3,500 active toilets, removing 2,800 million metric tonnes of waste from Nairobi’s slums in 2020.22
What can we learn from these examples? They use different approaches and operate in a range of developing nations. Some have urban operations; others operate in rural areas. Their focuses span sanitation, agriculture, and health care. But they also have common elements. Each addresses a social goal and, at the same time, creates economic opportunity for individuals and communities. Each has scaled their concept to foster significant social benefit. Each uses innovation as a foundation. This ranges from One Acre’s experimentation with unique crop yield technologies to Sanergy’s use of a systems approach, to bring together different elements to solve a persistent problem in a financially sustainable way, to Aravind’s use of a cross-subsidized pricing model to make eye surgery affordable to very low-income individuals. And each started with the vision of a single person or small team with a commitment to make a difference in the world.
Entrepreneurship and the UN Sustainable Development Goals
The distribution of income and resources across the globe is uneven. One in ten people in developing regions lives on less than the international poverty line of US $1.90 a day. While global poverty rates have been reduced by more than half since 2000, the rate of decline has slowed. And while progress has been made in many countries within Eastern and Southeastern Asia, up to 42% of the population in sub-Saharan Africa continues to live below the poverty line. Poverty means more than just limited income—it also means lack of access to food, education, and basic services. Ten percent of the world’s population is living in extreme poverty and struggling to fulfill their most basic needs. There are also gender and age dimensions to poverty, with women and children much more likely than men to live in extreme poverty.23
Entrepreneurship has the power to help reduce poverty by providing job opportunities and economic growth. Social entrepreneurship, in addition to creating jobs, can improve living conditions by increasing access to food, water, energy, education, and other resources.
The UN Sustainable Development Goals (also known as the SDGs or Global Goals) are 17 interlinked goals intended to be a “blueprint to achieve a better and more sustainable future for all.”24 The SDGs were established in 2015 by the United Nations General Assembly and intended to be achieved between 2020 and 2030.25
Description
Figure 10.1 UN Sustainable Development Goals
The social ventures described above have all worked towards reaching these goals; some have addressed multiple goals. For example, Aravind Eye Hospital focuses on a single objective, Goal #3 (good health and well-being). The One Acre Fund is making progress on Goals #1 and #2 (zero poverty and no hunger). Sanergy is meaningfully addressing Goal #6 (clean water and sanitation). But along the way, it is also addressing Goal #3 (good health and well-being) and Goal #11 (sustainable cities and communities). Its impact does not stop there. By using waste products to generate its own electricity, it is contributing towards Goal #7 (affordable and clean energy) and its operations and franchise model both contribute to achieving Goals #5 and #8 (decent work and economic growth, and gender equality). Similarly, BRAC, with its multifaceted operations, helps contribute to progress on over half the goals.
Achieving the SDGs requires collaboration across sectors and social enterprises have a special role to play because they can scale rapidly and, in many cases, use financially self-sustaining models. That said, social entrepreneurship is not the only solution. Given the magnitude of the goals, social ventures are only part of an effort that requires focused and concerted efforts by individuals, companies, NGOs, governments, philanthropies, and individuals. As part of their 2020 Impact Report, the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship (a foundation that for two decades has supported social entrepreneurs globally) surveyed 133 late-stage social entrepreneurs to, among other things, understand how their ventures addressed the SDGs. They found that 90% of the social entrepreneurs surveyed reported that their strategies are somewhat or significantly influenced by the SDGs. The focus of respondents (many of whom reported targeting multiple goals) was on the following:
Goal 1—No poverty (51%)
Goal 2—Good health and well-being (51%)
Goal 4—Quality education (50%)
Goal 5—Gender equality (50%)
Goal 8—Decent work and economic growth (50%)
Goal 10—Reduced inequalities (36%)26
The SDGs have been highly effective at catalyzing innovation and political commitment. However, progress towards the goals is not currently on track, according to the UN’s September 2019 High Level Political Forum. Moreover, significant and widespread economic and social hardship caused by the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic will likely further erode progress.
Factors Supporting the Growth of Global Social Entrepreneurship
Similar to commercial entrepreneurship, there are numerous trends that have supported the growth of social entrepreneurship. A major tailwind has been technology. The availability of simple and widespread infrastructure for communicating and processing information has reduced the cost of starting ventures and the cost to reach and serve recipients and customers. Regulatory reforms that simplify trading across borders and the increased ability to enforce contracts are just a few elements that have made it easier to create new ventures.
Figure 10.2 shows how these important trends have resulted in lower business formation costs. Each year, the World Bank tracks the cost of starting new business in 190 economies. In high-income economies, the cost of starting a business (as a percentage of income per capita) declined threefold, from an average of 12% in 2004 to only 4% in 2020. The decline in low- and middle-income economies has been even more dramatic—from an average of 142% in 2004 to 25% in 2020. This means that the 2020 cost was only 17% of the cost in 2004
Description
Figure 10.2 Cost of Starting a Business as a Percentage of Income per Capita
Constraints to Global Social Entrepreneurship
Despite this progress, social entrepreneurs continue to face impediments. One that we see in Figure 10.2 is that the cost of starting ventures remains significantly higher as a percentage of per capita income in low- and middle-income countries than in high-income countries. Another impediment is that in some countries, regulatory barriers to starting a business are persistent and, in some cases, increasing. In many countries, gender inequities make it harder for women to start new ventures. A lack of capital or credit can also be a significant barrier. And finally, in some countries, social norms, class structure, attitude towards risk taking, and a lack of positive role models constrain the formation of new mission-driven ventures. For example, the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Index surveyed individuals in 139 countries in 2019 asking on a 1–7 scale, “In your country, to what extent do people have an appetite for entrepreneurial risk?” Results varied from lows scores of 2.40 in Mauritania and 2.77 in Haiti to high scores of 5.55 in the United States and 5.96 in Israel. Higher risk appetite had a moderately strong correlation to income per capita.28
Resources Supporting Mission-Driven Ventures
Mission-driven founders use a patchwork of funding sources including personal funds, friends, colleagues, and private investors (including philanthropic investors and government funds). The GEM’s 2015 Report on Social Entrepreneurship found that most start-up social entrepreneurs invest personal funds, and this ranges from a high 80% of founders in Southeast Asia to a low of 64% in Western Europe. More than a third of the world’s social entrepreneurial ventures rely on government funding. This source is particularly important for entrepreneurs in the United States and Australia, where, as Table 10.1 shows, 55% of entrepreneurs utilize these funds. Private investments or venture capital is used by over a quarter of entrepreneurs in the United States and Australia, Western Europe, and Sub-Saharan Africa. Founders in Southeast Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa are more likely than those in other regions to rely on family, friends, and neighbors. Relying on volunteers is another important resource, and GEM found that in all regions except for Western Europe, over half of those working for social ventures were volunteers.29
CHARACTERISTICS OF GLOBAL SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURS
When we consider social entrepreneurship around the world, it quickly becomes clear that there are significant differences between countries, regions, and types of economies. These differences affect who becomes a social entrepreneur, what their motivations are, and how they access the resources that they need to support their ventures.
In the 50 countries assessed by GEM and using a broad definition of social entrepreneurship (including both social and value creation goals), 3% of the adult population in these countries work in a nascent (start-up phase) social venture. The proportion varies from 0.3% in South Korea to 10.1% in Peru. The highest proportions can be found in factor-driven (developing) economies. An additional 3.7% is involved in operational (post start-up) social entrepreneurship. As a point of comparison, the rate of start-up for commercial entrepreneurship averages 7.6% in the world, ranging from a low of nearly 1.4% in Vietnam to a high of over 22% in Peru.30
Table 10.1 Sources of External Funding for Social Entrepreneurs by Region
Southeast Asia (%) MENA (%) Sub-Saharan Africa (%) Eastern Europe (%) Western Europe (%) Latin America/Caribbean (%) United States/Australia (%)
Family 68 51 67 49 38 36 37
Friends and Neighbors 47 9 39 18 14 23 18
Employer or Work Colleagues 28 12 27 23 18 18 30
Bank/Financial Institution 37 19 42 19 25 24 27
Private Investor/Venture Capital 11 9 27 19 25 15 27
Government 25 28 38 42 43 41 55
Crowdfunding 11 11 0 14 9 7 18
Numbers add to more than 100% in each region because multiple sources of financing are used. Based on use of funding reported by social entrepreneurs (broad definition).
Source: Global Entrepreneurship Monitor. Report on Social Entrepreneurship 2015/16. Used with permission.
If a narrower definition is used, where ventures have a market orientation and social value creation is the primary driver, the average prevalence of social entrepreneurs overall is 2.3% of adults with 1.1% in the start-up phase and 1.2% in the operating phase.31
Of the world’s social entrepreneurs, an estimated 55% are male and 45% are female, a much smaller gap than for commercial entrepreneurship where male founders outnumber female founders by approximately 2:1.32 Education levels differ across regions: 62% of US and Australian entrepreneurs have a postsecondary education, compared to half of those in the Middle East and North Africa, Eastern Europe, and Western Europe. In every region, social entrepreneurs are more likely to have postsecondary education than their commercial entrepreneur counterparts.33
Both commercial and social entrepreneurs are often young. In the Middle East, North Africa, and sub-Saharan Africa, over 50% of social entrepreneurs are in the 18–34 age range and in most other regions, over a third are in this range. The exception is the United States and Australia where 28% of start-up entrepreneurs and 18% of operating social entrepreneurs are young. In every region, the percentage of young operating phase social entrepreneurs exceeded that of commercial entrepreneurs, perhaps reflecting the idealism of young adults everywhere.34
In nearly all locations, both start-up and operating social entrepreneurs tend to be likely to have higher incomes than the adult population average. The exception is sub-Saharan Africa, where operating social entrepreneurs are more likely to have higher incomes than the overall population, but start-up entrepreneurs are not.35
The Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship’s 2019/20 survey of their 133 late-stage social entrepreneurs demonstrates the diversity of issues addressed by social entrepreneurs. The top issues that they reported addressing were education (35%), economic opportunity and development (26%), entrepreneurship and enterprise development (26%), and health and health care (23%).36 This is unsurprising based on both the high impact potential of ventures in these areas, and the existence of self-sustaining business models launched by social entrepreneurs in these spaces discussed earlier in this book (for example, India’s Ekal Vidyalaya in education, Bangladesh’s BRAC in economic opportunity, global player Endeavor in entrepreneurship development, and Israel-based Genesis in health care).
The same survey also identified the ten countries in which late-stage Schwab entrepreneurs are most active. The locations spanned the globe. Outside of the United States (30%), all of the ten top countries where efforts were focused were low- to middle-income economies, and the entrepreneurs were most active in India (36%), Kenya (26%), and Brazil (22%).37
Profile: Michael Sly at Wilding and Co.—Leveraging a Global Market to Meet Local Goals
Michael Sly credits his mother—a single parent and entrepreneur—with helping to spark his own entrepreneurial initiative. During his formative years, he watched his mother convert a small grape-growing business in Arrowtown, New Zealand, into a local wine producer, which inspired his interest in creating and growing new ventures.
Sly studied industrial design at Victoria University of Wellington and used the skills he acquired there to found several entrepreneurial ventures. First, he started a website design company called Chrometoaster. Later, inspired by his interest in textiles, he created a process to convert New Zealand flax (harakeke), a locally grown spear grass, into a new textile product. He became intrigued by this idea while he was building a client website, which focused on using new technology to extract products from plants. This led him to start working with an indigenous Maori group (Ngai Tahu) to help them restart the lost art of creating fragrances from native plant extracts. These diverse experiences, combined with his deep interest in environmental sustainability, created the foundation for Wilding and Co., a for-profit venture that removes invasive trees in New Zealand, and uses them to produce pine-scented essential oils. Essential oils are plant extracts obtained through distillation or pressing.
On New Zealand’s South Island, the problems created by wilding pines are well documented. Over ten species of nonnative conifers were originally introduced to the area in the late 1800s to shelter homes, protect livestock, and provide timber. But the fast-growing pines proved to be prolific producers of seeds and spread rapidly, crowding out native trees and other plants, as well as the birds and insects that rely on them. The New Zealand Department of Conservation estimates that without rapid action, 20% of New Zealand will be invaded by wilding conifer forests within 20 years. Wilding conifers currently cover more than 1.8 million hectares of land and are spreading at an estimated rate of 5% a year. Approaches to reducing the spread have included the use of herbicides, removing seedlings by hand, and cutting down existing trees.
Sly’s entrepreneurial inspiration was that rather than wasting the by-products of discarded pine trees, he could turn them into a commercially viable product and, as a result, accelerate their removal. Leveraging his industrial engineering background and his prior experiences, he developed a process for extracting a high-quality essential oil from cut pines.
finding the right business model for the company was not simple. After achieving initial success selling the essential oil product on a small scale through a dedicated website, Sly discovered that the New Zealand market size was simply too small to support the levels of production that would make a meaningful environmental impact.
A chance encounter at a US perfume conference in Connecticut (USA) propelled the company forward. Sitting in a bar at the site of the convention, Sly struck up a conversation with a person who turned out to be one of the fragrance and essential oil industry’s most influential advisors. When his new acquaintance showed an interest in the product, Sly followed up with samples. He recounts: “He came back and said—can you make 6 tonnes?” Through a series of operational adjustment and by engaging committed partners, Sly was able to scale up to meet this demand. Today, Wilding’s Douglas Fir Oil is marketed through doTERRA, which has sold millions of units (units are equivalent to 5 ml bottles), and in the process, Wilding and Co. has removed 50,000 invasive pines a year from the Queenstown Basin. On the doTERRA website, the marketing pitch describes the fragrance and quality of the oil, as well as the social mission.
Sly recounts: “I was always interested in the connection between large scale businesses and the environment. The major reason is that it can create an engine for scale. By partnering with a multinational company and tapping into a global market, I was able to multiply our impact on a local problem. What we used to produce in a year with our locally oriented product, we now produce in a half day.”
Offering advice to aspiring social entrepreneurs, Sly draws on his marketing background. “It is important to understand the power of telling a great story. Our impact on removing an invasive species makes immediate sense to consumers.”
He also reflects on the challenge facing social entrepreneurs. “Starting a new social venture is a really challenging process, one that requires a lot of social and environmental fitness, as well as business acumen and an ability to work well with external partners.” He adds, “Don’t be afraid to think big and to partner with the commercial sector—they can help you magnify your scale.”
DIFFERENT TYPES OF MISSION-DRIVEN VENTURES
There are four different types of social ventures, based on their geographic scope and the markets they serve. The most successful approach depends on the venture’s mission and the nature of its products and services. The choice of venture type can also affect growth potential, although as we describe below, expanding to a new market can be an option for mission-driven ventures with proven models.
Local Ventures Serving Local Needs
The majority of entrepreneurial ventures serve a local or in-country market. There are many reasons for this including lower start-up expenses and start-up entrepreneurs’ tendency to focus on solving immediate and visible problems. The majority of both commercial and social entrepreneurs serve customers primarily within their borders.38
Social ventures are no exception. Consider the case of OliLand, which was founded in 2018 by Amjad Dwikat with a simple observation: every year, more than 60,000 metric tonnes of waste are produced in Israel and Palestine as a byproduct of pressing olive oil. The waste can be converted into a valuable biofuel product; unfortunately, because this requires specialized equipment, the waste is usually discarded and ends up filling landfill sites and creating pollution. OliLand dries and processes the waste into briquettes that it sells to local bakeries because the high temperature and consistent size is ideal for fueling ovens. The venture is self-supporting and diverts approximately 500 metric tonnes of waste a year. OliLand operates on a small scale with a limited market, collecting waste from olive oil producers operating in a small geography, the north part of Palestine’s West Bank. The briquettes that are produced are heavy and difficult to transport, so virtually all of the products are sold to users within a 60-kilometer radius of the production facility. While there may be ways to scale the concept (for example, expanding to other markets), the reliance on local inputs and a local market makes it most efficient to operate as a niche, local social enterprise.
A different example is STREETS International, located in Hoi An, Vietnam. STREETS provides culinary and hospitality training for disadvantaged youth in Vietnam, providing high-quality career paths in the hospitality industry. STREETS also runs a café and a learn-to-cook program aimed at tourists to help its students gain English language skills. While the venture provides services locally (and covers most of its expenses through earned income), it also receives charitable funding from US donors. Its 18-month training program follows a curriculum developed in conjunction with the Institute of Culinary Education in New York. By ultimately serving a tourist market via hotel employment for its graduates, as well as its café and cooking school, STREETS leverages out-of-country resources to fund a local need. Catering to the lucrative tourism hospitality market enables higher wages for trainees after graduation, and the café and cooking school create both training and language learning opportunities in addition to generating operating funds.
What can aspiring social entrepreneurs learn from these ventures? First, that meeting social needs usually requires a local focus, at least initially. Second, founders should be realistic about limitations. For example, in OliLand’s case, a niche market (bakeries) and limited portability (heavy, hard-to-transport briquettes) naturally limited growth.
That said, some ventures that initially have a local focus evolve to serve larger markets both by diversifying their products and services and expanding geographically. For example, SunBox, profiled in a short case in Chapter 3, initially provided solar electricity to residences in Palestine. But over time, entrepreneur Majd Mashharawi evolved the venture, providing electrical services for hospitals and other commercial ventures. Serving a broader range of customers expanded SunBox’s capabilities and this growth enabled Mashharawi to plan the creation of a for-profit solar company in Saudi Arabia.
Local Ventures With a Global Market
Many international ventures seek to create local wealth by tapping into a global marketplace. Most fair-trade organizations fall into this category. For example, Prosperity Candle (profiled in a short case in Chapter 6) was established to enable women in conflict regions to earn a “prosperity wage” by producing high quality candles primarily for export. The founders of Prosperity Candle also established a candle factory in Western Massachusetts where they employ refugees.
Equal Exchange is one of the pioneers of fair trade that uses this model. The venture was founded as a worker-owned cooperative in 1986 by Rink Dickinson, Jonathan Rosenthal, and Michael Rozyne. Their insight (which has been widely adopted) was that small scale coffee farmers in Latin America live in unstable economic situations while their products passed through multiple intermediaries to then be sold at a premium in developed countries. They went on to develop what became the largest and oldest fair trade coffee company in the United States by establishing long-term contracts for farmers and offering higher-than-market prices. Today, Equal Exchange distributes organic gourmet coffee, tea, sugar, bananas, avocados, cocoa, and chocolate bars produced by farmer cooperatives in Latin America, Africa, and Asia. Fair trade as an approach to expanding markets and increasing incomes has grown significantly. Today, the World Fair Trade Organization has 3,000 members, who are improving the livelihoods of nearly 1 million people worldwide.39
A more recent example is Mercado Global, founded in 2004 by Ruth Alvarez-Degolia and CoFounder Benita Singh. Alvarez-Degolia conceived of the idea for the organization during college when she completed two summer internships in Guatemala’s Highlands and saw first-hand the extreme poverty and lack of opportunity that existed after the country’s crushing civil war. While still in college, she tested the market by bringing handcrafts back to campus and found that she was able to sell $5,000 worth of crafts in a single weekend, enough to send 26 local children to school for a year. Based on her experience, she wrote a business plan and won the Yale School of Management business plan contest in the nonprofit category. After graduating, she became an Echoing Green Fellow and started Mercado Global in earnest (R. Alvarez-Degolia, personal interview, October 20, 2020).
Today, Mercado Global is a nonprofit organization that works with women’s cooperatives in Guatemala to create high-quality handmade products, which they sell through retail channels. All sales provide fair wages for the artisans and invest in their children’s education. To support the women, they provide education on how to develop their businesses, support with asset development (for example, help purchasing sewing machines or looms), and market access.
One important lesson Alvarez-Degolia learned while expanding Mercado Global was that to work at a meaningful scale, she needed to tap into existing distribution networks, so she partnered with multiple retailers including Levi’s, Free People, Stitch Fix, Target, and Nordstrom. She also learned that mission alone would not sell the product, observing: “While the story is the icing on the cake, the cake needs to be a really great product” (R. Alvarez-Degolia, personal interview, October 20, 2020). Mercado Global uses a “virtual factory” model where a network of artisan cooperatives produces products that meet the volume and quality requirements of its retail partners. An in-house design team ensures that the products are on-trend and will maximize income for artisans. And with a strong retail network firmly in place, she aims to expand Mercado Global’s model to different product categories and regions.
Regional Ventures
Regional social ventures are those that serve multiple countries within a geographic area. Leveraging access across immediate borders, common time zones, and serving what are often similar economies and cultures, regional ventures are able to meet the similar social needs for a greater number of people than local or national ventures. However, because there are nearly always differences in local conditions, regional ventures must balance scope- and scale-related efficiencies with adapting to local needs.
The One Acre Fund is a social venture that has expanded regionally based on common needs. The social enterprise was founded in 2006 by MBA student Andrew Youn. After initially launching with 40 farmers in Kenya and recognizing that their solution would have regional appeal, One Acre expanded to Rwanda in Year 2. By the end of its second year in operations, the venture was serving roughly 600 farmers. Then things started to move even more quickly. Today, One Acre works with over 1 million farmers in six countries in Africa and has gross revenue of over $120 million.
Or consider the case of BRAC (founded as the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee), founded in Bangladesh in 1972. Today, BRAC is the world’s largest nonprofit organization, helping an estimated 126 million people in 11 countries in Asia and Africa via health care, education, enterprise development, microfinance, and other programs. BRAC’s expansion has been driven by many factors, but one of the most important has been that its demonstrated impact enabled it to attract partners (such as the Mastercard Foundation) that provided support for rapid scaling into additional countries. BRAC’s efforts are concentrated in countries in Asia and Africa where its leaders believe it is best poised to alleviate poverty.
In some cases, social ventures define themselves by ethnic or cultural borders instead of national borders. For example, Genesis, an Israel-based venture that seeks to reduce the prevalence of genetic disease in Bedouin communities through premarital genetic testing (see the case at the end of this book), has started operations in Israel, where nationalized health care is expected to provide funding to support initial scaling. But the founder, Dr. Yasmeen Abu Fraiha, is well aware that there are 21 million Bedouins in the Middle East and North Africa that would benefit from Genesis’ solution once the venture has proven itself and expansion funding can be secured.
Ambitious social entrepreneurs targeting international markets should also note that in all three of these examples, the venture’s founders first entered one market, and then after they had proven their concept, expanded to others to gain regional scale.
Global Ventures
A handful of social ventures have established themselves as global players. The common thread among these ventures is the ability to translate a core concept or approach into a series of mutually supporting activities that meet human needs across many regions.
Endeavor is an example of this kind of geographic boundary spanner. It was founded in 1997 by Linda Rottenberg and Peter Kellner. Endeavor provides “mentor capitalist” services for high-potential entrepreneurial companies in emerging markets. It gives selected founders and teams with education, access to capital, and networks to increase the success rate of their businesses, thereby fostering economic growth, while at the same time working to promote entrepreneurship more broadly. After initially launching in five Latin American countries and refining its model, Endeavor now operates in 30 countries worldwide including countries in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. It has helped over 2,000 entrepreneurs scale their ventures, creating 4.1 million jobs and earning $24 billion in revenues annually.40
One World Health, another venture with a global focus, was founded by pharmaceutical scientist Victoria Hale in San Francisco in 2000 when she saw an opportunity to develop effective, safe, and affordable treatments for neglected infectious diseases. Her insight was that many promising drugs were abandoned because they weren’t lucrative for Western pharmaceutical companies, despite their lifesaving potential in lower-income countries. With funding from charitable foundations (including the Gates Foundation), One World Heath convinced for-profit pharmaceutical companies to donate abandoned intellectual property. It then created programs to develop cures for four deadly infectious parasitic diseases that affected millions of people worldwide. By conducting clinical trials and contracting with manufacturers in low-cost locations, they hoped to prove the efficacy of and then widely distribute life-saving drugs for free or at a low cost in South Asia, Africa, and South America.41 In 2011, One World Health became a drug development affiliate of PATH, an international nonprofit global health organization based in Seattle.
Since then, other new ventures have built on Hale’s insights about the unequal global availability of lifesaving treatments. For example, in 2006, Priti Krishtel, a 15-year veteran of the global access to medicines movement, and Tahir Amin, an attorney with more than 25 years of experience in intellectual property law, cofounded I-MAK, an organization that uses patent challenges and other approaches to reduce the cost of drugs in middle- and low-income countries. I-MAK has worked in 49 countries, expanding access to 33 therapies for 16 diseases and saved health systems more than $2 billion.42
What do all these global ventures have in common? They have a business model that leverages organization-wide intellectual capital and resources to solve an important global problem. They also have ambitious social entrepreneurs or teams at the helm who have a global vision for impact.
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Figure 10.2 Cost of Starting a Business as a Percentage of Income per Capita
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Figure 10.1 UN Sustainable Development Goals