Transcript Chapter 2

Chapter 8
Managing Social
Intrapreneurship
Opening Discussion
• Read the case of M-Pesa and answer the
following questions:

Two social intrapreneurs at Vodafone were key
to the successful launch of M-Pesa: Nick
Hughes and Susie Lonie. What distinctive
roles did they play in the recognition and
exploitation of the business opportunity?

In your view, what other factors contributed to
the success of M-Pesa?

How could you consider this a social (and)
intrepreneurship?
Chapter Outline
• Nature of innovation in established
organizations
• A two-phase model of the social
intrapreneurial process
• The role of frontline managers
• The role of middle managers
• The role of top managers
Nature of Innovation in Established
Organizations
• Fundamental challenges in managing
social intrapreneurship:

How do you manage the conflict between the
new and the old?

How do you achieve an appropriate balance
between exploration and exploitation?
• Exploratory opportunity vs. exploitative
opportunity
A Two-Phase Model of the Social
Intrapreneurial Process
Phase One: The Definition Process
• The definition process refers to the process
through which social intrapreneurial opportunities
are discovered by participants of the organization.
• Communication is central to the development of a
pool of ideas and initiatives in the process.
• Project championing activities help break through
the vicious circles in the definition process.
• Managers have limited time and attentional
capacities.
Phase One: The Definition Process
• Selective attention to entrepreneurial opportunities is
shaped by several attention regulators.
• These jointly influence the allocation of managerial
attention among entrepreneurial opportunities,
especially exploratory vs. exploitative ones.
• Strategy types
• Project champions
• Structures
• Slack resources
Phase Two: The Impetus Process
• Having survived the definition phase, an initiative
needs additional impetus before it can receive the
necessary resources for further exploitation.
• “Policy windows” play an important role in top
managers’ decision to screen these innovative
initiatives and select some for further exploitation.
• Policy windows may be predictable or
unpredictable.
Phase Two: The Impetus Process
• Predictable policy windows:



Are events such as weekly staff meetings, quarterly strategy
meetings, board meetings and retreats, and so on.
Are predictable in that they entail recurrent procedural
events.
Create “business as usual” conditions.
• Funding opportunities – a major type of predictable
policy windows in the nonprofit sector context –
influence the impetus process in several ways:



Funding opportunities come with financial resources.
Recurring funding opportunities help generate rules and
routines.
They may lead to a “competency trap” or “success trap.”
Phase Two: The Impetus Process
• Unpredictable policy windows:

Result from unexpected, nonroutine events, such as
technological shocks and environmental jolts.
 Generate a strong sense of urgency and threat.
 Evoke an organizational response.
• Two types of threat situations and their
implications:
Resource-related threats – A potential loss of tangible
resources, such as a competitor’s launching of a new
product
 Control-related threats – A potential loss of control,
such as a regulatory body issuing a new regulation
harmful to the organization

Initiators of Innovations in
Organizations
• Middle managers and frontline staff are the driving
force.
.
The Role of Frontline Managers in the
Social Intrapreneurial Process
• Frontline managers are deeply involved in
the process of defining new business
opportunities.
• The recognition of exploratory
opportunities requires the presence of
project champions.
• Frontline managers often function as
project champions for exploratory
opportunities.
• Examples.
The Role of Middle Managers in the
Social Intrapreneurial Process
• Middle managers are particularly important
in the impetus process.
• Middle managers play dual roles:

They evaluate and sponsor strategic initiatives
championed by frontline managers.

They “sell” these initiatives to top management
through strategic building and organizational
championing activities.
The Role of Top Managers in the
Social Intrapreneurial Process
• The crucial role of top managers is
reflected in four aspects:

Transformational leadership

Management control systems

Recruiting strategies

Organizational culture
Discussion
• What different roles do top, middle, and
frontline managers play in the social
entrepreneurial process?
• How do their roles vary across sectors
and/or types of organizations?