ABSTRACT

This book offers a glimpse into the future. The companies it describes are pioneers, the first-movers in market shifts that will eventually become mainstream. These "hybrid organizations" – or what others call "values-driven" or "mission-driven" organizations – operate in the blurry space between the for-profit and non-profit worlds. They are redefining their supply chains, their sources of capital, their very purpose for being; and in the process they are changing the market for others.  Using a combination of high-level survey analysis and, more importantly, in-depth executive interviews, the book helps fill the present gap in literature on environmentally focused and financially driven for-profit businesses. Moreover, it highlights key trends and critical themes that enable this new wave of socially conscious and fiscally minded enterprises to be successful in meeting both sets of goals. The takeaway for readers of this book is not only an appreciation for common business practices that hybrid organizations adopt, but also an understanding of the complexity of the integration of such adoption that allows them to successfully achieve both mission- and market-driven goals.  The book begins with key definitions to establish the scope of this new sector, including explicit definitions for hybrid organizations, environmental sustainability missions, as well as specific criteria to create useful boundaries for the field of hybrid organizations. Building on prior work conducted by researchers on corporate social responsibility, sustainable entrepreneurship, and social enterprise, the book catalogues the best practices within this growing sector, helping others to learn from both the successes and failures of those that are choosing this strategy.  The core of the book is built on an analysis of survey data from 47 hybrid organizations, investigating their business models and strategies, finances, organizational structures, processes, metrics, and innovations. The organizations represent a cross-section of size, age, industry, and geography, although the sample set is biased towards young, small, U.S.-based hybrids. Based on analysis of the survey data, five best-in-class companies were selected for in-depth case studies in order to provide instructive lessons for hybrid practitioners and researchers alike.  In short, this book presents research that shows hybrid organizations to be a practical and feasible organizational model for contributing solutions to global environmental issues. The lessons in this book will help other social entrepreneurs, business managers, non-profit leaders, or students interested in careers that fuse profitability and responsibility do it even better.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|6 pages

Why hybrid organizations?

chapter 2|7 pages

The hybrid landscape

chapter 3|7 pages

Uncovering the layers

chapter 4|12 pages

Hybrid trends and lessons

chapter 5|26 pages

Case Study

Sun Ovens International—patient dealmaker

chapter 6|27 pages

Case Study

Guayakí — creating an entirely new value chain

chapter 7|16 pages

Case Study

Eden Foods — lasting leadership and the risks of succession

chapter 8|22 pages

Case Study

Maggie's Organics — connecting producers and consumers to the cause

chapter 9|16 pages

Case study

PAX Scientific — learning to run

chapter 10|6 pages

Business lessons for hybrid organizations

chapter 11|4 pages

Reflecting back, looking forward