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The Definitive Guide to Scaling Social Enterprise Rizwan Tayabali www.socialeffect.org | www.globosocial.org

The Definitive Guide to Scaling Social Enterprise

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The Definitive Guide to Scaling Social Enterprises, outlining 12 new models for scaling social outcomes that are more effective than the traditional commercial mechanisms of organic growth, franchising, acquisition and merger. (Click the notes tab below the slides for more detail)

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Page 1: The Definitive Guide to Scaling Social Enterprise

The Definitive Guide to Scaling Social Enterprise

Rizwan Tayabaliwww.socialeffect.org | www.globosocial.org

Page 2: The Definitive Guide to Scaling Social Enterprise

© 2007 Charteris plc 2

Outline

1.Commercial vs. Social Scaling

2.Three Myths

3.New Models for Scaling Social Enterprise

4.The Future

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Commercial vs. Social Scaling

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Commercial scaling is about more money

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The dream is explosive financial growth

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Typically via any of 4 scaling models

Organic GrowthFranchisingAcquisition

Merger

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These models are often costly in both their inefficiencies and the

challenges of managing quality...

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...but profits and easy access to borrowing typically mask these issues.

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These models are also often assumed to be the ONLY options for

ALL organisations.

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Social scaling however is about better outcomes

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The dream is a world without hardship

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Different goals require different approaches

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Which means that the same models are NOT necessarily the answer.

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Some SE’s are easy to scale using standard commercial models...

...typically where they offer simple products or packaged services

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For those with complex human factor programmes it is not so straightforward

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They face significant organisational challenges in scaling through

traditional models

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Lack of sector infrastructure

Skills or capacity gaps

Local dependence on CEO/Founder

Raising Necessary Investment

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So we need to start thinking differently

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3 Myths

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Myth 1

Commercial models apply for all orgs

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Myth 2

Replicating process is the way to scale

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Myth 3

Scaling is typically linear

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New Models for Social Scaling

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True social enterprises create and prove financially viable models of

change...

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...they are NOT simply about making money in socially beneficial ways.

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So although scaling for social enterprises involves elements of

traditional commercial scaling up to the point of proving sustainable

models...

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...beyond that, the end-goal is about scaling the outcomes.

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The SE’s model of viable change must therefore be seen as

separately scalable from the organisation itself.

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4 Categories

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NOTE:

1. Scaling can be quantitative or qualitative, but ideally both., so aim for approaches that best achieve these together.

2. The examples given, even if not always perfectly in the SE space, are simply to provide reference and proof that these scaling mechanisms can and do exist. They are a viable basis

for customisation, innovation, or mixing and matching depending on your organisation’s model of change.

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1. Piggybacking

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i.e. Leveraging the scale of others

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Scaling through government

e.g. Cimientos who have convinced the Argentinian state to model their 500,000 scholarships on the ones they provide

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Scaling through policy

e.g. Care Peru who prove their models work and then lobby presidential candidates to ensure that policy is amended to

safeguard change when they get in power

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Scaling through transgovernmental organisations

e.g. Convincing, or merging with, entities like the Red Cross or UNICEF to incorporate proven models.

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Scaling through business

e.g. Hybrid value chains like the partnership between Carlos Cruz and Danone to offer formal job opportunities to

marginalized communities outside Mexico City while creating a new distribution channel for nutritious goods.

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Organisation must evolve to support delivery

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2. Dispersal

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i.e. Seeding the model and facilitating the spread

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Scaling through transferability

e.g. 826 National and Transition Towns that have seeded a host of local variants around the original model

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Scaling through microfranchising

e.g. Vision Spring’s “Business in a Bag” empowering local entrepreneurs to launch their own businesses selling eyeglasses

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Organisation must evolve to manage spread or distribution

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3. Movement

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For models where successful social outcomes require changing mass

behaviour

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Scaling through brand

e.g. La Usina who are developing a premium clothing brand that raises awareness of disability rights

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Scaling through mass participation

e.g. Ashoka in Mexico who are aiming to create a culture of civil action via a 10 year managed program of ideas for change

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Scaling through co-operation

e.g. Movimento Nossa São Paulo which is a network of 600 civil organisations working together to lobby government

with an agenda and set of goals to provide a better quality of life for all inhabitants of São Paulo

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Organisation must evolve to manage the logistics supporting movement

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4. Open Standards

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i.e. Leveraging open interaction for funding, design, development, and

delivery.

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Scaling through open source

e.g. Ushahidi which uses open standards and collaborative networks for sourcing development and leverages the power

of crowds for delivering change

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Scaling through open design

e.g. Cipla’s generic retroviral drugs. Open (unpatented) design can and should be extended to product innovations addressing social needs. Innovator may enforce commons

licensing for efficiency and learning sharing with organisations that reproduce design.

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Scaling through collaborative networks

e.g. SpineConnect, which is a collaborative innovation network (CoIN) for spine surgeons to collaborate on difficult

and unusual cases and develop better outcomes.

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Organisation must scale to provideadvisory support and platforms

for continuous improvement

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The Future?

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The world is changing

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Both sectors are realising that building in financial or social aspects

at start, adds little extra cost and significant rewards

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Web 2.0 is forcing companies to converse to build loyalty, which in

turns forces them to humanise and stay true to social values.

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Social entities are using brand, business model innovation, creating revenue streams, and leveraging the

power of crowds.

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The sectors will merge even further

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New models of operating, new ways of working, and new options for scaling will continue to arise...

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Watch this space!!

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Rizwan TayabaliSE Consultant, Social [email protected] www.rizwantayabali.info www.socialeffect.org | www.globosocial.orgFind me on Twitter & LinkedIn