Transcript Chapter 2

Chapter 3
Discovering / Creating Social
Entrepreneurial Opportunities
Opening Discussion
• Read the case of Muhammad Yunus and
Grameen Bank and answer the following
questions:

What social entrepreneurial opportunity did
Muhammad Yunus identify in mid-1970s?

What converging factors eventually led to the
discovery of the opportunity?
Chapter Outline
• Define opportunity.
• How are social entrepreneurial
opportunities different?
• How are social entrepreneurial
opportunities discovered?
• A two-stage model of the opportunity
discovery process.
Define Opportunity
• There is little consensus on the definition and
nature of entrepreneurial opportunities.
• There are two philosophical views of
entrepreneurial opportunity:


The discovery view: opportunities exist objectively;
they are formed by exogenous shocks caused by
imperfections in a market or industry.
The creation view: opportunities do not exist
objectively, but rather are created through the
enactment process between an entrepreneur and
the environment.
The Nature of Opportunity in Social
Entrepreneurship
• Opportunities in social entrepreneurship are
socially constructed.
• Opportunities tend to be created rather than
discovered.
“Despite popular sayings, attractive entrepreneurial
opportunities do not come knocking at the door
fully formed. Nor are they out there, like lost
treasures, simply waiting to be discovered by the
lucky or observant. Rather, they have to be
conceived, developed, and refined in a dynamic,
creative, and thoughtful process.” —Guclu, Dees,
and Anderson (2002)
Types of Opportunities
• Creating a new or improved product, service, or program
• Introducing a new or improved strategy or operating
method
• Reaching a new market, serving an unmet need
• Tapping into a new source of supply or labor
• Establishing a new industrial or organizational structure
through mergers, spinoffs, alliances, and other
contractual arrangements
• Framing new terms of engagement with clients,
consumers, suppliers, funders, or employees
• Developing new funding structures
How Are Social Entrepreneurial
Opportunities Different?
• Opportunities in social entrepreneurship differ
from their counterparts in commercial
entrepreneurship in the following ways:

Focus. The focus of a social entrepreneurial opportunity
is on creating social value rather than making a profit.
 Context. A social entrepreneurial opportunity is deeply
embedded in the local context.
 Stakeholders. The discovery or creation of a social
entrepreneurial opportunity often happens in collectives
and involves a wider array of stakeholders than for a
commercial entrepreneurial opportunity.
The Two-Phase Model of the
Opportunity Recognition Process
Phase One: Idea Generation
• During this phase, the
generation of a promising idea
results from the interplay of
three important factors:

Social needs

Social assets

Pattern recognition
Social Needs and Social Assets
• Social needs: the gaps between socially desirable
conditions and the existing reality:

Changes in social needs can open up new possibilities
and inspire the development of promising new ideas.
 However, an unmet social demand alone does not form
a viable opportunity unless a social entrepreneur finds
an innovative and feasible way to meet the demand.
 Moreover, in some cases the demand is unformed and
thus nonexistent in an articulated form.
• Social assets: tangible and intangible assets in a
community:

A good understanding of the scope and level of these
resources is key to developing promising ideas that aim
at addressing social needs.
Pattern Recognition
• This is the cognitive process through which
individuals identify meaningful patterns in
complex arrays of events or trends.
•
Opportunities are identified when
entrepreneurs “connect the dots” between
seemingly unrelated events or trends and
then detect patterns in these connections
suggestive of new products or services.
Factors Contributing to Pattern
Recognition
• How do we learn to be better at
recognizing different patterns that could
eventually lead to an opportunity?
• Prior research suggests the following
factors:

Active information search
 Alertness
 Prior experience
 Social networks
Phase Two: Opportunity Assessment
• During this phase, entrepreneurs assess
recognized opportunities to judge their
attractiveness for further development.
• There are two useful models to consider:

Model 1 contains three key criteria:
• Social value potential
• Market potential
• Sustainability potential

Model 2 contains five key criteria:
•
•
•
•
•
Pervasiveness
Relevance
Urgency
Accessibility
Radicalness
We will dig deeper into opportunity assessment in Ch 4!
Another Approach to Solve Problems
Idea Creation
Five-Steps to Generating Creative Ideas
Discussion
• Consider the two models of opportunity
assessment on the “Phase Two” slide, and
answer the following questions:

How do the two models differ?

How do the two models complement each
other?

How can we improve the two models?