From Balancing Missions to Mission Drift: The Role of the Institutional Context, Spaces, and Compartmentalization in the Scaling of Social Enterprises

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Abstract

In this article, we explain the mechanisms that allow social enterprises to balance their missions, and the risk of mission drift as organizations grow. We empirically explore Incubator-BUS (I-BUS), a student organization within a private Brazilian university, which sought to incubate cooperatives for vulnerable groups. Although initially successful in balancing its missions, I-BUS then failed. We show how scaling-up can complicate the balancing of different missions within the same organization. We propose that, to balance their missions, social enterprises—especially recently formed and democratically managed enterprises—need not only “spaces of negotiation,” as suggested in the literature, but also “herding spaces” that connect an organization to its institutional context. We indicate why herding spaces are critical, but then show how scaling-up can result in organizational “compartmentalization” that undermines them.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1003-1046
Number of pages44
JournalBusiness and Society
Volume58
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

Fields of science

  • 502 Economics
  • 502014 Innovation research
  • 502026 Human resource management
  • 502030 Project management
  • 502015 Innovation management
  • 502029 Product management
  • 502036 Risk management
  • 502043 Business consultancy
  • 502044 Business management
  • 506009 Organisation theory

JKU Focus areas

  • Management and Innovation
  • Gender Studies
  • Social and Economic Sciences (in general)

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