Ashoka is probably the state of the art for Social Entrepreneurship.

What I really want to build, I think, is a "Social Entrepreneurship 
Anti-Party." That is, a group of people primarily focused on solving social 
problems themselves, with electing appropriate political leaders only an 
afterthought.


-- Ernie P.


http://www.ashoka.org/hvc

Hybrid Value Chain

Transforming Markets to Generate Sustainable Social Change by Reducing Poverty 
and Unlocking Wealth

Large scale solutions to poverty are needed. Competitive market systems and 
innovative distribution channels are required to effectively deliver necessary 
products and services to low income clients. These products, such as improved 
housing, rural technologies, and health insurance, allow low-income populations 
to improve their livelihoods and quality of life.
Hybrid Value Chains are business models for commercial partnerships between 
businesses and citizen sector organizations that leverage the critical 
strengths of each actor to transform markets and meet these critical needs 
through market access.

Capitalizing on Business Social Convergence 
In the last three decades, a large number of citizen sector organizations 
(CSOs) have emerged to create positive social change. Social entrepreneurs have 
been at the forefront of developing practical innovations to empower low-income 
populations as consumers, producers and wealth creators. While the citizen 
sector is becoming increasingly competitive, pioneering companies have also 
understood that being socially and environmentally conscious can make business 
sense. This changing landscape is an opportunity to instill a critical 
mind-shift within businesses and CSOs to foster business-social convergence and 
create value for all.

 

The Hybrid Value Chain Model
Hybrid Value Chain (HVC) is a business model that leverages the capabilities of 
the business and citizen sectors to enable the delivery of needed goods and 
services to low-income populations in a more cost-effective way. Companies tap 
into new markets and expand their client base. CSOs increase their impact by 
generating new revenue sources for their programs and expanding their service 
range to beneficiaries. Additionally, low-income populations improve their 
livelihoods as their basic human needs are met and new economic opportunities 
arise.



 

The HVC model is most relevant for essential goods and services that represent 
a significant investment for low-income populations and that typically require 
complementary services to develop markets and maximize customer value. Its 
implementation implies new roles and practices for businesses and CSOs.


The Impact 
The HVC model goes beyond philanthropy and corporate social responsibility. By 
leveraging the core assets of CSOs and businesses, HVC partnerships are 
breaking the inefficient paradigms that separate the two sectors.



Hybrid Value Chains enable a world in which CSOs and businesses collaborate, 
compete, and learn to serve low-income markets with new business models so that 
all individuals benefit from products and services delivered by the formal 
economy in a way that improves their lives.




-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to