entr4800 class 2 - motivations and drivers for social entrepreneurship

24
ENTR 4800: Introduction to Social Entrepreneurship Class 2: Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship Monday, September 17, 2012 1 Instructor: Norm Tasevski ([email protected]) Elisha Muskat ([email protected])

Upload: social-entrepreneurship

Post on 08-May-2015

418 views

Category:

Business


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Theory: What are the motivations, drivers, and strategic intentions of social entrepreneurship? Practice: What are the implications of these drivers on social enterprise (business) models? How are social ventures blending business and social objectives?

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

ENTR 4800: Introduction to Social Entrepreneurship

Class 2: Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

Monday, September 17, 2012

1

Instructor: Norm Tasevski ([email protected]) Elisha Muskat ([email protected])

Page 2: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

2

Guest Lecturer – Marco Di Girolamo

Page 3: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

3

Page 4: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

Agenda

•  What motivates the social entrepreneur? •  What are the motivations for social enterprise? •  What did we learn – Today? •  Next week

4

Page 5: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

Motivators for Social Entrepreneurs…

5

Page 6: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

A Question…

What motivates you??

6

Page 7: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

Some Definitions

•  Internal and external factors that stimulate desire and energy in people to be continually interested in and committed to a job, role or subject, and to exert persistent effort in attaining a goal. Motivation is the energizer of behaviour and mother of all action. It results from the interactions among conscious and unconscious factors such as the (1) intensity of desire or need, (2) incentive or reward value of the goal, and (3) expectations of the individual and of his or her significant others.”

BusinessDictionary.com

•  “Motivation is the activation or energization of goal-orientated behavior. Motivation may be rooted in the basic need to minimize physical pain and maximize pleasure, or it may include specific needs such as eating and resting, or a desired object, hobby, goal, state of being, ideal, or it may be attributed to less-apparent reasons such as altruism, selfishness, morality, or avoiding morality. Conceptually, motivation should not be confused with either volition or optimism. Motivation is related to, but distinct from, emotion.”

Wikipedia

7

Page 8: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

8

In response to why people are not giving to the Pakistani flood in the same way as they did for Haiti, one woman said:!!“It’s a rogue state, if they can afford the nuclear bomb they can look after their own”!!

Page 9: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

9

Costin Militaru, an outreach worker…has met addicts as young as 9 years old. "His family had no money for food. He was hungry and kept crying, so they fed him heroin," Militaru says. "If you're high, you don't need food.”!!

Page 10: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

10

“On March 24, 1989, the Exxon Valdez ran aground in northern Prince William Sound, spilling 42 million liters of crude oil and contaminating 1,990 kilometers of shoreline. Some 2,000 sea otters, 302 harbor seals and about 250,000 seabirds died in the days immediately following the spill.”!

Page 11: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

11

A total of 32,700 different people stayed in Toronto's emergency shelters in 2005. 4,600 were children. !!Over half a million Toronto households live below the poverty line!!1 in 10 homeless report attempted suicide in 2006!

Page 12: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

12

Page 13: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

So What Motivates The Social/Environmental Entrepreneur?

“…it was an epiphanal experience…” Ray Anderson, Interface Carpets

Page 14: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

So What Motivates The Social/Environmental Entrepreneur?

“I heard the same story again and again. Someone had

experienced an intense kind of pain that branded

them in some way. They said, ‘I had’ to do this. There was nothing else I could do.”

Jody Jensen, Ashoka

Page 15: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

So What Motivates The Social/Environmental Entrepreneur?

“…that made a real impression on me…” Jeff Skoll, eBay, Skoll Foundation, etc.

Page 16: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

So What Motivates The Social/Environmental Entrepreneur?

“I was teaching in one of the universities while the country was

suffering from a severe famine. People were dying of hunger, and I felt very helpless. As an economist, I had no tool

in my toolbox to fix that kind of situation.” Mohammed Yunus, Grameen Bank

Page 17: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

So What Motivates The Social/Environmental Entrepreneur?

“…powerful moments of inspiration…” Jacqueline Novogratz, Acumen Fund

Page 18: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

What about…

Page 19: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

Break

19

Page 20: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

Motivators for Social Enterprise…

20

Page 21: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

Motivations: Nonprofits

à Many social enterprises are founded by nonprofits Primary motivators:

–  Financial self-sufficiency –  Income diversification –  Compliments/expands the organization's mission –  Enhancing the quality/outcomes of programs

Income-generating activities: –  Cost recovery –  Earned income

21

Page 22: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

Motives and Orientation

22

Source:  h*p://www.4lenses.org/setypology/mission_orienta:on    

Page 23: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

What did we learn?

23

Page 24: ENTR4800 Class 2 - Motivations and Drivers for Social Entrepreneurship

© Norm Tasevski & Karim Harji

Next Week

•  Deliverable – Your social enterprise idea…

•  Readings

24