13
Sarah Stevenson Social Enterprise Session 1

Introduction to social enterprise

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: Introduction to social enterprise

Sarah Stevenson

Social EnterpriseSession 1

Page 2: Introduction to social enterprise

Module AimsModule Aims• to support the learner in identifying what makes

constitutes a Social Enterprise and how they differ from other organisations

• to facilitate exploration of the learners’ immediate and wider work context in order to promote professional development

ObjectivesObjectivesBy the end of this session you will be able to: • Identify the key attributes of a Social Enterprise• Understand the diverse nature of businesses that

operate as Social Enterprise• Contemplate the first steps needed to set up a

Social Enterprise

Page 3: Introduction to social enterprise

What is a Social What is a Social Enterprise?Enterprise?According to the Social Enterprise Coalition, Social Enterprises are…

“…businesses trading for social and environmental purposes. Social enterprises are distinctive because their social and/or environmental purpose is absolutely central to what they do - their profits are reinvested to sustain and further their mission for positive change.”

Page 4: Introduction to social enterprise

What is a Social What is a Social Enterprise?Enterprise? “We have described and keep on describing organisations motivated by social objectives as non-profit organisations. We need to have another description: ‘non-loss ’organisations, because we don’t want to lose money and our objective is to address a particular problem. So we are non-loss businesses with social objectives.”

Muhammad Yunus. Founder of the Grameen Bank, Bangladesh

Page 5: Introduction to social enterprise

History of Social History of Social Enterprise Enterprise The Social Enterprise movement first emerged 1840s. In Rochdale, a workers' co-operative was set up to provide high quality affordable food in response to factory conditions that were considered to be exploitative.

The Rochdale Society of Equitable Pioneers est 1844

In the UK, in the late 1990s, Social Enterprise started to reappear.

Page 6: Introduction to social enterprise

Social Enterprises:-

• Operate as commercially run businesses• Aim to make profits• Generate the bulk of their income through sales of goods or services• Use good business practices and principles• Use the majority of their profits to further social or environmental goals• May hold the Social Enterprise Mark

CharacterisCharacteristicstics

Page 7: Introduction to social enterprise

Key Key DifferencesDifferences

Explicit Social Aims (Triple Bottom Line)

Private sector business primarily focus is on trading; social enterprises too have a commercial focus but will also have an explicit social and/or environmental purpose.

Funding Social enterprises often have a complex composition of sales income, commercial contracts, service level agreements and grant support.

Risk Social enterprises are usually governed by a Board of volunteers, which may mean that they are more risk averse in terms of pursuing business ventures.

Scale Start up costs may be much higher because social enterprise usually has to operate on a scale that is large enough to sustain its social commitment from the beginning

Page 8: Introduction to social enterprise

Key Key DifferencesDifferences

Investment Social enterprises may have difficulty gaining access to traditional forms of investment such as loan finance.

Leadership / Entrepreneurship

Leaders of social enterprises are usually driven by the social potential of the venture and will need to find support for the other areas of the enterprise

Stakeholders Social Enterprises usually have a wide range of stakeholders involved in their development, which can mean that there is a wide influence on the development process.

Sweat Equity “sweat equity” is invested to grow and build the enterprise ,but the purpose is not financial gain but social

Page 9: Introduction to social enterprise

Who is a Social Who is a Social Enterprise? Enterprise?

The Big Issue The Eden project

Café Direct Fifteen

Divine Chocolate Cooperatives UK

Ethical Property Plc

Green-works

Activity

Identify 2 local, 2 national and 2 international Social Enterprises and identify their social purpose

Page 10: Introduction to social enterprise

The Importance of Social The Importance of Social Enterprise Enterprise

Current government policy is to encourage the development of Social Enterprise with regards to the delivery of public services in areas such as health, transport and leisure.

Voluntary & Community Organisations are being encouraged towards Social Enterprise where appropriate to help reduce their dependency on grant funding

Social enterprise achieve social benefits through standard business practice & can help create strong and sustainable communities.

Social enterprise is becoming the employer of choice

Page 11: Introduction to social enterprise

Developing a Social Developing a Social Enterprise Enterprise •Do you know why you are doing this?•Are you looking to sell a product or service to a customer? •Have you identified who that customer is? •Do you know what the market rate is for the product or service? •Have you considered how you will convince the customer to buy from you rather than from your competitors? •Do you know what success will look like?

Page 12: Introduction to social enterprise

ReferencesReferences

Social Enterprise Coalition - www.socialenterprise.org.uk Social Enterprise Mark - www.socialenterprisemark.org.uk The Big Issue - www.bigissue.com Café Direct - www.cafedirect.co.uk Divine Chocolate - www.divinechocolate.com Ethical Property Plc - www.ethicalproperty.co.uk The Eden Project - www.edenproject.com/ Fifteen - www.fifteen.net Cooperatives UK - www.uk.coop Green-works - www.green-works.co.uk

Page 13: Introduction to social enterprise

This resource was created by the University of Plymouth, Learning from WOeRk project. This project is funded by HEFCE as part of the HEA/JISC OER release programme.

This resource is licensed under the terms of the Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/).

The resource, where specified below, contains other 3rd party materials under their own licenses. The licenses and attributions are outlined below:

1. The name of the University of Plymouth and its logos are unregistered trade marks of the University. The University reserves all rights to these items beyond their inclusion in these CC resources.

2. The JISC logo, the and the logo of the Higher Education Academy are licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution -non-commercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 UK England & Wales license. All

reproductions must comply with the terms of that license.Author Sarah Stevenson

Institute University of PlymouthTitle Introduction to Social Enterprise

Description PowerPoint Presentation

Date Created May 2011

Educational Level Level 4

Keywords UKOER, LFWOER, UOPCPDLM, Work Based Learning, CPD, Continuous Professional Development, Social Enterprise

Creative Commons License CC-BY-NC-SA

Back page originally developed by the OER phase 1 C-Change project

©University of Plymouth, 2010, some rights reserved