Business Model Design for Social Goods and Services in Developing Economies

Abstract: Over the past decade there have been increasing calls for alternative ways of tackling poverty problems in developing economies. Rather than aid or charity approaches that have traditionally dominated this area, an alternative line of discussion around base-of-the-pyramid approaches has emerged which emphasizes the role of innovation and pro-poor entrepreneurship. These developments are consequently reshaping our current views on organizational sectors, vulnerable communities, and sources of value creation.Social businesses trailblazing these approaches however may find it difficult to provide customers at the very base of the economic pyramid with products and services in financially sustainable ways. Markets in remote rural areas are characterized by severe resource scarcity and pervasive institutional voids which make the pursuit of designing adequate value creation and appropriation mechanisms a challenging undertaking. Additionally, the commercialization of social goods further compounds these challenges, because hybrid missions demand the simultaneous generation of social and commercial value.In this dissertation, I aim to shed light on these issues and examine how successful social businesses have emerged in the context of the unfolding pro-poor informal water market. This setting lent itself especially well to such study because the lack of safe and affordable water access prominently affects severely poor and secluded geographies to which sustainable solutions in profit, non-profit or governmental form have not yet emerged; yet successful solutions by social businesses have.Building on the emergent research on social businesses, I suggest that these organizations established viable business ventures by designing a type of business model that caters to the needs of socially constrained base-of-the-pyramid communities despite the afore-mentioned managerial challenges. With a focus on theory development, I employ a multi-qualitative approach consisting of multiple case studies to develop a conceptual framework of these social business models and various propositions as to what may underpin their successful development.The empirical foundation for these elaborations consists of five studies. These highlight distinct value creation and appropriation mechanisms as well as capabilities that social businesses employ to circumnavigate resource scarcity and institutional voids. Consequently, focusing on the design of value creation and appropriation mechanisms, we gain deeper insights as to why some social businesses may outperform other organizations. The thesis concludes with implications for base-of-the-pyramid, social entrepreneurship and business model literature, as well as avenues for future research. 

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