Sustainability of social enterprises – a framework to enable long term impact of their missions

This research is about sustainability of social enterprises. It is about enabling long-term existence of these ventures to continue creating and delivering environmental, and social impact, solving societal issues with innovative solutions where governments and private sectors have been ineffective...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chong, Sook-Leng
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63170/
_version_ 1848799999432851456
author Chong, Sook-Leng
author_facet Chong, Sook-Leng
author_sort Chong, Sook-Leng
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This research is about sustainability of social enterprises. It is about enabling long-term existence of these ventures to continue creating and delivering environmental, and social impact, solving societal issues with innovative solutions where governments and private sectors have been ineffective or eluded entirely. Studies on sustainability of social enterprise has so far been fragmented. This report aims to consolidate through qualitative research, the collective wisdom from academics, field practitioners and interviews with social entrepreneurs about the essentials needed to preserve the longevity of a social venture. The insights gained from this research contributed to a framework for sustainability of social enterprise. Findings suggest that social entrepreneur must deliberate on critical variables at key milestones of its development, deploying an assortment of strategies and an art of managing them. Initial setup phase requires effective fundraising strategy, clarity on mission-profit motives for trade-off conflicts, and implementing viable commercial venture to self-sustain its mission. In monitoring performance, inconsistent practices found in tracking impact performance, and managing commercial and impact risk, citing lack of resources but were deemed imperative by investors. Results indicated most social enterprises remain small to medium sized and scaling decisions rests on founders’ direction. Social ventures with success in expanding reach had instituted key scaling-enablers identified in the research. A variety of management structures, financing strategies, adaptation to new markets, stakeholders and government engagements were deployed to advance mission. The significance of this research is that it will precursor to future research in this area and enhance social entrepreneurial efforts for long-term benefit of society.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:44:35Z
format Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-63170
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:44:35Z
publishDate 2021
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-631702021-03-31T05:47:37Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63170/ Sustainability of social enterprises – a framework to enable long term impact of their missions Chong, Sook-Leng This research is about sustainability of social enterprises. It is about enabling long-term existence of these ventures to continue creating and delivering environmental, and social impact, solving societal issues with innovative solutions where governments and private sectors have been ineffective or eluded entirely. Studies on sustainability of social enterprise has so far been fragmented. This report aims to consolidate through qualitative research, the collective wisdom from academics, field practitioners and interviews with social entrepreneurs about the essentials needed to preserve the longevity of a social venture. The insights gained from this research contributed to a framework for sustainability of social enterprise. Findings suggest that social entrepreneur must deliberate on critical variables at key milestones of its development, deploying an assortment of strategies and an art of managing them. Initial setup phase requires effective fundraising strategy, clarity on mission-profit motives for trade-off conflicts, and implementing viable commercial venture to self-sustain its mission. In monitoring performance, inconsistent practices found in tracking impact performance, and managing commercial and impact risk, citing lack of resources but were deemed imperative by investors. Results indicated most social enterprises remain small to medium sized and scaling decisions rests on founders’ direction. Social ventures with success in expanding reach had instituted key scaling-enablers identified in the research. A variety of management structures, financing strategies, adaptation to new markets, stakeholders and government engagements were deployed to advance mission. The significance of this research is that it will precursor to future research in this area and enhance social entrepreneurial efforts for long-term benefit of society. 2021-02-24 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63170/2/Sustainability%20of%20Social%20Enterprises-A%20Framework%20to%20Enable%20Long%20Term%20Impact%20of%20Their%20Mission.pdf Chong, Sook-Leng (2021) Sustainability of social enterprises – a framework to enable long term impact of their missions. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] entrepreneurship social enterprise social innovation sustainability social impact shared values social value scaling social impact dual value hybrid enterprise social business business sustainability social sustainability
spellingShingle entrepreneurship
social enterprise
social innovation
sustainability
social impact
shared values
social value
scaling social impact
dual value
hybrid enterprise
social business
business sustainability
social sustainability
Chong, Sook-Leng
Sustainability of social enterprises – a framework to enable long term impact of their missions
title Sustainability of social enterprises – a framework to enable long term impact of their missions
title_full Sustainability of social enterprises – a framework to enable long term impact of their missions
title_fullStr Sustainability of social enterprises – a framework to enable long term impact of their missions
title_full_unstemmed Sustainability of social enterprises – a framework to enable long term impact of their missions
title_short Sustainability of social enterprises – a framework to enable long term impact of their missions
title_sort sustainability of social enterprises – a framework to enable long term impact of their missions
topic entrepreneurship
social enterprise
social innovation
sustainability
social impact
shared values
social value
scaling social impact
dual value
hybrid enterprise
social business
business sustainability
social sustainability
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63170/