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The Ecosystem of Scaling Social Impact: A New Theoretical Framework and Two Case Studies

The Ecosystem of Scaling Social Impact: A New Theoretical Framework and Two Case Studies AbstractThis article reviews existing literature on scaling social impact and proposes a new theoretical framework to understand the ecosystem of scaling social impact beyond organizational growth. By searching scale-related keywords extensively, we have identified 107 pieces of literature from 1992 to 2018. We analyze the literature and categorize multiple theoretical frameworks of scaling into five groups (supply-demand model, three-strategy model, spiral model, multi-factor model, and pathway model). We find that each model has overlooked one or several enabling factors of scaling. By synthesizing these factors, we propose a new theoretical framework, namely ‘the ecosystem model of scaling social impact’, which combines six key elements – financing, organizations, technology and data, strategies, institutional infrastructure, and government policy. We apply this framework to analyze two cases, the Rockefeller Foundation and B Lab, which initiated and scaled two global movements of Impact Investing and B Corps and map out key elements and players in the formation of the ecosystems of scaling impact. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Social Entrepreneurship Taylor & Francis

The Ecosystem of Scaling Social Impact: A New Theoretical Framework and Two Case Studies

Journal of Social Entrepreneurship , Volume 11 (2): 25 – May 3, 2020

The Ecosystem of Scaling Social Impact: A New Theoretical Framework and Two Case Studies

Journal of Social Entrepreneurship , Volume 11 (2): 25 – May 3, 2020

Abstract

AbstractThis article reviews existing literature on scaling social impact and proposes a new theoretical framework to understand the ecosystem of scaling social impact beyond organizational growth. By searching scale-related keywords extensively, we have identified 107 pieces of literature from 1992 to 2018. We analyze the literature and categorize multiple theoretical frameworks of scaling into five groups (supply-demand model, three-strategy model, spiral model, multi-factor model, and pathway model). We find that each model has overlooked one or several enabling factors of scaling. By synthesizing these factors, we propose a new theoretical framework, namely ‘the ecosystem model of scaling social impact’, which combines six key elements – financing, organizations, technology and data, strategies, institutional infrastructure, and government policy. We apply this framework to analyze two cases, the Rockefeller Foundation and B Lab, which initiated and scaled two global movements of Impact Investing and B Corps and map out key elements and players in the formation of the ecosystems of scaling impact.

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References (60)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group
ISSN
1942-0684
eISSN
1942-0676
DOI
10.1080/19420676.2019.1624273
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractThis article reviews existing literature on scaling social impact and proposes a new theoretical framework to understand the ecosystem of scaling social impact beyond organizational growth. By searching scale-related keywords extensively, we have identified 107 pieces of literature from 1992 to 2018. We analyze the literature and categorize multiple theoretical frameworks of scaling into five groups (supply-demand model, three-strategy model, spiral model, multi-factor model, and pathway model). We find that each model has overlooked one or several enabling factors of scaling. By synthesizing these factors, we propose a new theoretical framework, namely ‘the ecosystem model of scaling social impact’, which combines six key elements – financing, organizations, technology and data, strategies, institutional infrastructure, and government policy. We apply this framework to analyze two cases, the Rockefeller Foundation and B Lab, which initiated and scaled two global movements of Impact Investing and B Corps and map out key elements and players in the formation of the ecosystems of scaling impact.

Journal

Journal of Social EntrepreneurshipTaylor & Francis

Published: May 3, 2020

Keywords: Scaling social impact; ecosystem model; Rockefeller Foundation; B Lab

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