A Social Entrepreneurship Strategy
Here's a mini-paper I wrote for a class on social entrepreneurship, November 5, 2009. This was a course in the school of social work but was taught by a business school professor.
Assignment: Present a scale strategy or an innovative assessment tool being implemented by a social enterprise you have researched or with which you are familiar.
As a bank, Grameen Bank grows itself through a branching strategy. As an enterprise seeking to maximize its positive social impacts, however, Grameen grows itself through a dissemination strategy. Thus its social impact has spread
worldwide
, even as its branches are largely
limited to Bangladesh
.
Grameen’s branching strategy
combines
centralized monitoring with decentralized managerial authority. This strategy appears to be moving in the direction of
branchless banking
, at least in some contexts, as Grameen
follows
the lead of other branchless providers.
Such innovations notwithstanding, Grameen
qua
bank has
emphatically
not sought growth, typically conceived, as measured by either market share or enhanced (never mind maximized) profits from branch or branchless operations. Hence, the Grameen approach to banking has provoked serious concerns about sustainability, both in its own
original manifestation
of its microfinance model and in subsequent adoptions of that model
elsewhere
.
Grameen’s fame comes, not from its profitability, but from its social impacts. Treating its banking operation within Bangladesh as a proof-of-concept model with worldwide applicability, Grameen’s founder Muhammed Yunus cites its
poverty-reduction
efficacy as the much preferred alternative to the for-profit version of microlending epitomized by Banco Compartamos in Mexico. For purposes of sustainability, though, Compartamos has the upper hand.
Yunus’s
concern
appears to be that the altruistic intent of his concept has been successfully employed for purposes of exploiting the very persons whom he sought to assist. This is precisely what one might predict from
the observation
that a dissemination strategy yields little control over the ways in which a concept might be used.
It is possible, however, that the problem for Yunus lies, not in the distortion of the original “pure” Grameen concept, but rather in the ways in which Compartamos has addressed certain weaknesses in that concept. In addition to the problem of sustainability (above), there is an obvious problem of rapidity, in the sense that an organization like Compartamos can produce nearly immediate results of some arguable merit while Grameen-style microlending seems to yield results very
slowly
. From that perspective, there appears to have been, in effect, a trust-but-verify process, where the original, disseminated idea has
prima facie
plausibility and some demonstrated efficacy, but is subsequently refined (and perhaps simultaneously sullied) by a more control-oriented (and profit-verified) implementation that does depend upon a sustainable affiliation or branching scheme.
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