Legitimation of Social Enterprises as Hybrid Organizations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. Liability of Newness and Legitimation of New Ventures
2.2. Organizational Hybridity
2.3. Emergence of Social Enterprise as a Hybrid Organization
2.4. Potential Determinants of Social Enterprises’ Legitimation
2.4.1. Identity Configuration
2.4.2. Integration of Social and Commercial Activities
3. Methods and Data
3.1. Empirical Approach: Inductive Multiple Case Study
3.2. Sampling Approach
3.3. Data Sources
3.3.1. Interviews with Social Entrepreneurs and Employees
3.3.2. Additional Materials
3.4. Data Coding and Analysis
4. Findings
4.1. Legitimation Patterns by Hybrid Identity Type
4.1.1. Socially Dominant Identity
After I graduated from university, I joined a general trading company in Korea and worked at a plant division in the company. At that company, I was in charge of several official development assistance projects for constructing infrastructure in developing countries. However, I hoped that I would do something helpful and beneficial for others since I was a high school student. Hence, I quit the job and set out on a trip to India. In that country, I definitely met my dream… In the beginning, I do not have any strong desire to succeed in my business but just wanted to achieve my old dream.
While searching for business partners, it was effective to suggest the social value of our company. Think about it. They are just businessmen who always calculate the costs and benefits of transactions. They really needed benefits. However, the main reason why they met me, whose company was a tiny venture firm and faced uncertain circumstances, was their sympathy with the social value we suggested [Moral Legitimacy].
In fact, we overcame other obstacles to our business due to our social mission.
To hire employees, we selected candidates whose personal values were aligned with our social mission [Select]. And after our company hired them, we held an intense meeting with new employees to create a consensus about the social value the company should create during their first week in the company [Manipulate]…My decision on forming partnerships with international organizations was quite strategic. Since we needed their reputation and business know-how, we communicated with them by responding to their substantive needs and aligning our values with their missions [Conform].
4.1.2. Commercially Dominant Identity
The reason why I started the social enterprise was the perverse travel industry structure for foreign travelers in Korea… However, the main motivation for creating the company was the business opportunity I found. The core of our business is creating profits through the consistent development of travel products.
The value of our product is comprehensive in that all the value customers want resides in our value proposition… During the advertising tour in the United States, one man who experienced our product told me, “In fact, I went on a diet due to a doctor’s advice. After I ate your food, I felt so good. It was not only healthy but also delicious. I would like to eat your food day after day.” His statement includes the value our company pursues, which is providing the opportunity to taste delicious food [Pragmatic Legitimacy] as well as making their lives more healthy [Moral Legitimacy] by offering an affordable price to them.
Used bags collected from customers were sent to the non-profit organization as our business partner, which helps children in developing countries by upcycling used clothes. In fact, its business operations and social mission are very similar to those of our company. So, to form a partnership with that organization, we communicated with them by aligning our social mission with theirs [Conform].
4.1.3. Balanced Identity
The keyword of our business is symbiosis. One is our lives as artists without worrying about the problem of living. The other is the sustainable community we reside in. Especially, we wanted to invigorate the community by making it solve its own social problems by itself. For this, we searched for ways of employing our artistic talent, by which we could be financially sustainable. At last, we found the way. And we began to run our own business as a social enterprise.
We found out that it is not useful to persuade artisans to work for us by emphasizing the social value we had. If we persuaded them only through social value, we would lose bargaining power in the transactions. Furthermore, a goodwill or an authentic heart was not enough to persuade them since it could not guarantee the sustainable success of the business. Thus, we said to them, “Anyhow, we are going to sell the products we order from you. Please check the amount of our first order.” In other words, we tried to convince them of our business by showing our ability to connect them with the markets we are involved in [Pragmatic Legitimacy].
During the hiring process, I told job candidates about the social mission we had. But it is auxiliary to me. I just hired appropriate candidates whose capabilities seemed valuable to our business [Non-selection]… When I sounded out the potential of our business to the government official of the developing country, I responded to the needs of the target country [Conform] and tried to persuade him by the value of our business, especially the effect of creating substantial jobs in the country [Manipulate]… When I visited the country and met country representatives, I also made an effort to convince them of the potential of our business through the IT infrastructure they had already built [Conform]. Of course, I appealed to them by advertising the economic effect of our own business [Manipulate].
4.2. Legitimation Patterns by Hybrid Organizational Type
4.2.1. Highly Integrated Hybrids
Basically, my intention in running the social enterprise is to correct the perverse structure of the travel industry for foreigners in Korea. However, I emphasized more the economic potential of our business opportunity. For example, to raise the financial resources from the Korea Tourism Organization (a state-owned company in Korea), we appealed to them by suggesting the substantive value of our business in response to the problem in the travel industry in Korea, which was one of the main concerns they faced [Pragmatic Legitimacy, Conform]…When we planned to collaborate with either the organization that ran the tourist attraction in Korea or new airlines that wanted to develop attractive travel courses, we first learned about their business needs or issues and then suggested the benefits they would earn from collaborating with our company [Pragmatic Legitimacy, Conform].
4.2.2. Moderately Integrated Hybrids
4.2.3. Differentiated Hybrids
To search for bag manufacturers for our business, we visited Sinseol-dong, where bag manufacturers are gathered in Seoul. Most of them had already received orders from large apparel companies and made bags for them. However, once we started to discuss the social value we pursued, some of them expressed sympathy with our social mission. Furthermore, they also offered us favorable contract terms [Moral Legitimacy].
An international organization, which is one of the United Nations organizations, contacted us in advance to offer an opportunity for our company to collaborate with it. In fact, their objective did not match our company’s objective. Their main reason for contacting us was to ask us to help them hold a contest for social enterprises, whereas the main objective of our company at that time was to hold debate competitions in Korea as a means of invigorating debating education programs. However, I accepted their offer and collaborated with them for the potential synergy between us since both that organization and our company prepared for the ‘competition’ at that time [Conform]…An international financial institution also invited us as a collaboration partner during their international forum in Korea. In particular, they planned to hold debate sessions in the forum. So, we accepted their offer because we shared common ground: the debate [Conform].
5. Discussion
5.1. Insights Into the Legitimation of Social Enterprises as Hybrid Organizations
In the early stage, we can run a social enterprise by aligning all the business operations with a social mission. But, one day, we should decide on the priority between a social mission and commercial success, scalability… In the future, I expect that I shall earn more money, even if the marginal social impact becomes almost zero. We might choose profitability over social impact. However, I shall pursue our social mission firmly…
5.2. Limitations and Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A: Sample Interview Protocol
Appendix A.1. Entrepreneur (General Information and Identity Configuration)
- Can you tell me about your background and how you came to start this company?
- Are you a ‘Social Problem Solver’ or an ‘Entrepreneur’? Please describe your identity as a social entrepreneur (Identity Configuration).
- ■
- Using the questionnaire about the interviewee’s (social entrepreneur’s) identity configuration.
Appendix A.2. Company (General Information and Business Model)
- Can you give me general information about your company?
- ■
- Name of company, foundation year, office location, legal form, formal certification from the Korea Social Enterprise Promotion Agency (KoSEA) or B Corporations in the United States.
- Could you describe the company’s mission and objectives? What social problems do you aim to address?
- Can you tell me a story about the company from the founding to today?
- Please describe your business model (the degree of integration between social and commercial activities). Can you tell me about the main products or services of your company?
- ■
- Using Business Model Canvas by Osterwalder and Pigneur (2010).
Appendix A.3. Legitimation
- Whom do you meet to gain legitimacy for your company?
- How did you communicate your business with him, her, or them? If you used materials during the meeting, can you show me the materials you used? What were their responses?
- Will you meet some other audiences to gain legitimacy for your business? Why?
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Firm | Target Social Problem | Principal Activities | FoundingYear | Entrepreneur Identity Type | Hybrid Type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | Low accessibility of education for children. | Firm A has several paid subscription plans in which customers can regularly receive handicrafts produced by skillful women in a developing country who have children; the only condition for joining A’s business is that they let their children go to school at least two times a week. | 2012 | Balanced | Moderately integrated |
B | Diet-related diseases and ‘food desert’ problem. Unemployment of young people. | Firm B’s business is composed of the following programs with a specific food (hereafter ‘b’): (1) cooking/nutrition class, (2) healthy food campaign, (3) tasting event, (4) selling b to consumers in metropolitan areas as well as ‘food desert’ areas through food trucks. To operate its business, it has employed young people who are unemployed but have a strong will to venture into its business. | 2011 | Commercially dominant | Highly integrated |
C | Huge global waste problem of underused accessories such as bags. Poor educational environment in developing countries. | Firm C produces and sells eco-friendly bags made of biodegradable fabrics. Additionally, C receives used bags from donors, including its customers, to upcycle and deliver them to children in developing countries. C will provide handmade bags upcycled by people in developing countries; this will generate additional revenue for them. | 2015 | Commercially dominant | Differentiated |
D | Deprived area in a metropolitan city due to industrial decline. | The mission of D is to regenerate a deprived area in a metropolitan city by re-designing communities using existing resources in the area. For this mission, D provides (sells) an education program for firms interested in regenerating a deprived area as corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities. Additionally, D invented a unique design process that introduces unique clothes as well as reduces cloth waste during manufacturing processes. Manufacturers in the area participate in D’s businesses, and the profit from it has become a new revenue source for them. | 2011 | Balanced | Moderately integrated |
E | People who are unable to be self-reliant due to their social status or economic situation. | The mission of E is to promote the self-reliance of people who are socially or economically alienated. Its primary businesses are (1) urban greening and (2) flower products. Through its urban greening and landscape architecture companies, E provides training programs and jobs for people who want to be self-reliant. | 2013 | Socially dominant | Moderately integrated |
F | Producers in developing countries who have weak bargaining power in the market (unfair trade environment). | Firm F aims to promote the healthy development of communities in developing countries and improve the quality of life of local residents in those areas through businesses that meet the standards of ‘fair trade.’ F sells products made by residents in developing countries. With local fair trade organizations, F monitors all business processes, which include manufacturing, logistics, and pricing, to ensure they meet fair trade standards. | 2014 | Socially dominant | Moderately integrated |
G | Education inequality among adolescents caused by socioeconomic situations. | Firm G seeks to enhance adolescents’ capabilities through debating education programs regardless of their socioeconomic situation. The purpose of G’s business is to provide equal education opportunities for all adolescents in Northeast Asia. G’s profit is generated by offering debating education programs to customers, such as schoolteachers. Through this profit, G offers high-quality debating education programs to adolescents who are socioeconomically disadvantaged for free. | 2013 | Socially dominant | Differentiated |
H | Perverse travel industry structure, such as the deceiving foreign travelers by seemingly good souvenirs, which leads to a shrinking regional economy. | Firm H develops local travel plans. During development, F attempts to ensure that the plans meet two conditions: (1) providing foreign tourists with novel and fascinating tour plans, delivered in a reasonable and honest way, and (2) helping small local enterprises generate profits. Firm F generates profits by selling local tour courses they have developed. Additionally, F receives brokerage commissions from partner firms by leveraging its information platform. | 2015 | Commercially dominant | Highly integrated |
I | Female breadwinners with limited incomes such as single mothers and housewives in single-parent families. | The firm I provides cooking classes designed by a professional chef to female breadwinners with low incomes to make them self-reliant. After they complete the class, the firm I hires them and implements their own business with them. Its business is composed of two main services: catering service and cooking consulting service (e.g., development of recipes). | 2015 | Socially dominant | Moderately integrated |
J | Insufficient jobs for highly educated people in a developing country, which leads to a brain drain from the country. | Firm J developed an IT solution platform in which English learning services are provided by local people in a developing country who have a bachelor’s degree or higher. The English learning services of firm J are delivered in two ways: mobile chatting and by phone. Firm J is now supported by the government of the developing country since it provides jobs with satisfactory salaries for highly educated people in the country by using the IT infrastructure that the government has constructed with great effort. | 2014 | Balanced | Moderately integrated |
Coding Definition | Initial Codes from Interview Scripts | Themes | Theoretical Dimensions |
---|---|---|---|
An individual whose identity is dominated by the role identity associated with social welfare logic. | Giving higher scores on ‘social problem solver’ identity than on ‘entrepreneur’ identity in the questionnaire. Statements reflecting one’s strong beliefs related to social welfare logic. | Socially dominant Identity | Social entrepreneur identity configuration |
An individual whose identity is dominated by the role identity associated with commercial logic. | Giving higher scores on ‘entrepreneur’ identity than on ‘social problem solver’ identity in the questionnaire. Articulation of self as a profit-seeking businessman or entrepreneur. | Commercially dominant Identity | |
An individual whose identity is evenly dominated by both the role identity of commercial logic and that of social welfare logic. | Giving similar scores on both identities. Talk of one’s commitment to putting equal emphasis on business operations and social activities. | Balanced identity | |
A hybrid organization whose beneficiaries are the same as the paying customers. | Description of one’s organizational activities in which beneficiaries are also targeted customers who pay for its products or services. | Highly integrated Hybrid | Hybrid types |
A hybrid organization whose beneficiaries are included in its commercial activities. | Description of one’s organizational activities in which target beneficiaries are embedded in its commercial activities such as employees, producers, or suppliers. | Moderately integrated Hybrid | |
A hybrid organization whose social activities serving beneficiaries are separate from its commercial activities. | Description of one’s organizational social activities that are disconnected from its commercial activities (i.e., its beneficiaries are not included in its commercial activities). | Differentiated hybrid | |
A legitimacy resting on audiences’ self-interest. | Talk of one’s commitment to making its organization become more responsive to audiences’ interests (e.g., giving direct and substantive benefits to audiences). | Pragmatic legitimacy | Legitimacy types |
A legitimacy based on a normative evaluation by audiences. | Statements about one’s efforts to align its organizational outputs or procedures or structures with audiences’ normative criteria (i.e., rightness). | Moral legitimacy | |
A legitimacy embedded in audiences’ cognition (i.e., comprehensibility). | Talk of one’s efforts to organize its self-definition or experiences into coherent and understandable accounts in the social world of audiences. | Cognitive legitimacy | |
The effort to gain legitimacy by positioning one’s organization within an existing institutional regime, which is composed of claims of audiences. | Statements reflecting one’s efforts to satisfy audiences’ substantive needs or invite them into one’s decision-making processes (pragmatic legitimacy). Personal efforts to produce normatively meritorious outcomes or embed one’s organizational structures in legitimate institutions (moral legitimacy). Talk of efforts to imitate the prominent entities in the sector or formalize and professionalize one’s organizational procedures (cognitive legitimacy). | Conform | Legitimation strategies |
The effort to gain legitimacy by selecting a favorable social domain or audience. | Talk of one’s efforts to select an audience whose interest is aligned with the values of those provided (pragmatic legitimacy). Statements reflecting one’s efforts to select an audience whose moral criteria accord with one’s organizational goal (moral legitimacy). Personal efforts to select a social environment in which audiences share common cognitive ground with one’s organization (cognitive legitimacy). | Select | |
The effort to gain legitimacy by shaping social environments into environments favorable to one’s organization. | Talk of one’s attempts to persuade audiences or advertise an image to accelerate exchanges with audiences (pragmatic legitimacy). Statements of one’s efforts to persuade audiences in terms of moral standards embedded in the organization’s outcome, structure, or procedures (moral legitimacy). Talk of one’s attempts to promote a new social environment in which the cognitive definition of the organization resides (cognitive legitimacy). | Manipulate |
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | ||
Degree of Coupling with Each Role Identity a | Social | ●●●●●●○ | ●●●●●○○ | ●●●●●○○ | ●●●●●○○ | ●●●●●●● | ●●●●●●○ | ●●●●●●● | ●●●○○○○ | ●●●●●○○ | ●●●●●○○ |
Commercial | ●●●●●○○ | ●●●●●●● | ●●●●●●● | ●●●●●●○ | ●●●●○○○ | ●●●○○○○ | ●●●●○○○ | ●●●●●●○ | ●●●○○○○ | ●●●●○○○ | |
Hybrid Identity Type | Balanced | Commercially dominant | Commercially dominant | Balanced | Socially dominant | Socially dominant | Socially dominant | Commercially dominant | Socially dominant | Balanced | |
Beneficiary | Members of handicraft cooperative (producers). Children of producers | Residents in food desert areas (customer) | Children in developing countries | Owners of sewing factories (producers). Residents in the area (partners) | North Korean refugees (employees). Residents in a shabby one-room town (employees) | Local weavers and farmers in developing countries (producers) | Socioeconomically disadvantaged adolescents | Foreign travelers (customers). Local owners of small businesses (partners) | Female breadwinners (employees) | Local English tutors in a developing country (employees) | |
Hybrid Organizational Type | Moderately integrated | Highly- integrated | Differentiated | Moderately integrated | Moderately integrated | Moderately integrated | Differentiated | Highly- integrated | Moderately integrated | Moderately integrated |
Hybrid Identity Type | Case | Target Audience | Main Target Type of Legitimacy | Strategies for Gaining Legitimacy |
---|---|---|---|---|
Socially dominant | E | Staff: Co-founders | Moral | Select |
Staff: Employees (North Korean refugees) | Pragmatic, Moral | Select | ||
Staff: Employees (residents in the shabby one-room town) | Pragmatic | Select | ||
Sponsor: Government branch | Pragmatic, Moral | Select, Conform | ||
Sponsor: Large commercial company | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
Partner: District office | Moral | Conform | ||
Partner: Urban greening and landscape architecture companies | Moral | Select, Conform (invited) | ||
Partner: NGOs | Moral | Manipulate | ||
Customer: Individuals and companies | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
F | Staff: Employees | Moral | Manipulate | |
Sponsor: Investors | Moral | Select | ||
Sponsor: City hall | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Producer: Local weavers and farmers in the developing countries | Cognitive | Manipulate | ||
Partner: Local fair trade organizations in developing countries | Moral | Select Manipulate | ||
Partner: Social enterprises in the affiliated cooperative | Moral | Conform | ||
Distributor/Store: Social enterprise | Moral | Select | ||
Customer: Individuals and customers | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
G | Staff: Co-founders | Moral | Select | |
Staff: Employees | Moral | Select, Manipulate | ||
Partner: International organizations | Pragmatic | Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: International NGO that provides the academic program for promoting participants’ skills and capabilities | Pragmatic | Conform (Invited) | ||
Customer: Public and private schools (for students and English teachers) | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
Customer: Individual customers | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
I | Staff: Professional chef | Moral | Manipulate | |
Staff: Employees (nutritionist, clerk) | Moral | Select, Manipulate | ||
Staff: Employees (female breadwinners) | Pragmatic | Conform, Manipulate | ||
Sponsor: Government branch | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Supplier: Food ingredients supplier | Moral | Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: City hall | Moral | Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: Other social enterprises | Moral | Select, Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: Social welfare organizations | Cognitive | Select | ||
Customer: Other organizations (in social sector) | Moral | Manipulate | ||
Customer: Other organizations (in non-social sectors) | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Commercially dominant | B | Staff: Employees | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate |
Sponsor/Partner: Large commercial company | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform (Invited), Manipulate (Invited) | ||
Producer: Advertising professional | Moral | Select, Manipulate | ||
Partner: Local government campaign | Moral | Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: Local institutions (e.g., council, foundation, consulate) | Moral | Conform (Invited) | ||
Customer: General consumers | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
Customer: Residents in the food desert areas | Pragmatic, Cognitive | Conform, Manipulate | ||
C | Staff: Co-founders | Moral | Manipulate | |
Sponsor: Government branch (social venture competition) | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Producer: Bag manufacturer | Moral | Select | ||
Partner: NGO | Moral | Conform | ||
Customer: Individual customers | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
H | Staff: Employees | Moral | Select, Manipulate | |
Sponsor: City hall | Moral | Conform | ||
Sponsor: State-owned firm | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Sponsor: Venture capital (impact investment) | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
Partner: Owners of small local businesses | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
Partner: Other travel companies | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
Partner: Other ventures (including social enterprises) | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
Partner: Local NGO | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
Customer: Foreign travelers | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Balanced | A | Staff: Coworkers | Moral | Conform |
Sponsor: Government branch (social venture competition, promotion for social entrepreneurs) | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Producer: Members of handicraft cooperative | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Partner: Large social enterprise | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Partner: Non-profit community of students and universities | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Partner: Large local NGO | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Customer: Individual customers | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
D | Staff: Co-founders and employees | Moral | Manipulate | |
Sponsor: Government branch | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Sponsor: Large commercial company | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform | ||
Producer: Owners of sewing factories | Pragmatic, Moral | Manipulate | ||
Partner: Residents in the area | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Partner: District office | Moral | Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: Associations, foundations, museums | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Customer: Individual customers | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
J | Staff: Co-founder | Moral | Conform | |
Staff: Managers and IT developers | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
Staff: English tutors in the developing country | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Staff: Advisor (government official in the developing country) | Pragmatic, Moral | Manipulate, Conform | ||
Sponsor: The government of the developing country | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Sponsor: Government branches in Korea | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Partner: Large commercial company | Pragmatic | Conform (Invited) | ||
Customer: Individual customers | Pragmatic | Conform |
Hybrid Organizational Type | Case | Target Audience | Main Target Type of Legitimacy | Strategies for Gaining Legitimacy |
---|---|---|---|---|
Highly integrated | B | Staff: Employees | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate |
Sponsor/Partner: Large commercial company | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform (Invited), Manipulate (Invited) | ||
Producer: Advertising professional | Moral | Select, Manipulate | ||
Partner: Local government’s campaign | Moral | Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: Local institutions (e.g., council, foundation, consulate) | Moral | Conform (Invited) | ||
Customer: General consumers | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
Customer: Residents in the food desert areas | Pragmatic, Cognitive | Conform, Manipulate | ||
H | Staff: Employees | Moral | Select, Manipulate | |
Sponsor: City hall | Moral | Conform | ||
Sponsor: State-owned firm | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Sponsor: Venture capital (impact investment) | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
Partner: Owners of local small businesses | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
Partner: Other travel companies | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
Partner: Other ventures (including social enterprises) | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
Partner: Local NGO | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
Customer: Foreign travelers | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Moderately integrated | A | Staff: Coworkers | Moral | Conform |
Sponsor: Government branch (social venture competition, promotion for social entrepreneurs) | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Producer: Members of handicraft cooperative | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Partner: Large social enterprise | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Partner: Non-profit community of students and universities | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Partner: Large local NGO | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Customer: Individual customers | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
D | Staff: Co-founders and employees | Moral | Manipulate | |
Sponsor: Government branch | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Sponsor: Large commercial company | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform | ||
Producer: Owners of sewing factories | Pragmatic, Moral | Manipulate | ||
Partner: Residents in the area | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Partner: District office | Moral | Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: Associations, foundations, museums | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Customer: Individual customers | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
J | Staff: Co-founder | Moral | Conform | |
Staff: Managers and IT developers | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
Staff: English tutors in the developing country | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Staff: Advisor (government official in the developing country) | Pragmatic, Moral | Manipulate, Conform | ||
Sponsor: The government of the developing country | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Sponsor: Government branches in Korea | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Partner: Large commercial company | Pragmatic | Conform (Invited) | ||
Customer: Individual customers | Pragmatic | Conform | ||
E | Staff: Co-founders | Moral | Select | |
Staff: Employees (North Korean refugees) | Pragmatic, Moral | Select | ||
Staff: Employees (residents in the shabby one-room town) | Pragmatic | Select | ||
Sponsor: Government branch | Pragmatic, Moral | Select, Conform | ||
Sponsor: Large commercial company | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
Partner: District office | Moral | Conform | ||
Partner: Urban greening and landscape architecture companies | Moral | Select, Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: NGOs | Moral | Manipulate | ||
Customer: Individuals and companies | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
F | Staff: Employees | Moral | Manipulate | |
Sponsor: Investors | Moral | Select | ||
Sponsor: City hall | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Producer: Local weavers and farmers in the developing countries | Cognitive | Manipulate | ||
Partner: Local fair trade organizations in developing countries | Moral | Select, Manipulate | ||
Partner: Social enterprises in the affiliated cooperative | Moral | Conform | ||
Distributor/Store: Social enterprise | Moral | Select | ||
Customer: Individuals and customers | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
I | Staff: Professional chef | Moral | Manipulate | |
Staff: Employees (nutritionist, clerk) | Moral | Select, Manipulate | ||
Staff: Employees (female breadwinners) | Pragmatic | Conform, Manipulate | ||
Sponsor: Government branch | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Supplier: Food ingredients supplier | Moral | Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: City hall | Moral | Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: Other social enterprises | Moral | Select, Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: Social welfare organizations | Cognitive | Select | ||
Customer: Other organizations (in social sector) | Moral | Manipulate | ||
Customer: Other organizations (in non-social sectors) | Pragmatic | Manipulate | ||
Differentiated | C | Staff: Co-founders | Moral | Manipulate |
Sponsor: Government branch (social venture competition) | Cognitive | Conform | ||
Producer: Bag manufacturer | Moral | Select | ||
Partner: NGO | Moral | Conform | ||
Customer: Individual customers | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
G | Staff: Co-founders | Moral | Select | |
Staff: Employees | Moral | Select, Manipulate | ||
Partner: International organizations | Pragmatic | Conform (Invited) | ||
Partner: International NGO that provides the academic program for promoting participants’ skills and capabilities | Pragmatic | Conform (Invited) | ||
Customer: Public and private schools (for students and English teachers) | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate | ||
Customer: Individual customers | Pragmatic, Moral | Conform, Manipulate |
Category | Main Types of Legitimacy | Main Strategies for Gaining Legitimacy | |
---|---|---|---|
Hybrid Identity Type | Socially dominant | Moral | Conform Select Manipulate, Invited a |
Commercially dominant | Moral Pragmatic | Conform | |
Balanced | Pragmatic | Conform Manipulate | |
Hybrid Organizational Type | Highly integrated | Pragmatic | Conform |
Moderately integrated | Varying by hybrid identity types | Varying by hybrid identity types, Invited a | |
Differentiated | Moral | Conform |
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Park, J.-H.; Bae, Z.-T. Legitimation of Social Enterprises as Hybrid Organizations. Sustainability 2020, 12, 7583. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12187583
Park J-H, Bae Z-T. Legitimation of Social Enterprises as Hybrid Organizations. Sustainability. 2020; 12(18):7583. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12187583
Chicago/Turabian StylePark, Ji-Hoon, and Zong-Tae Bae. 2020. "Legitimation of Social Enterprises as Hybrid Organizations" Sustainability 12, no. 18: 7583. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12187583
APA StylePark, J.-H., & Bae, Z.-T. (2020). Legitimation of Social Enterprises as Hybrid Organizations. Sustainability, 12(18), 7583. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12187583