Outsourcing is a type of vertical partnership, where the
non-profit transfers an entire business function to a partner. Types of outsourcing
include contract manufacturing, Business Processing Outsourcing (BPO), Information
Technology Outsourcing (ITO) and innovation outsourcing (Product design &
development).
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Deciding to Outsource
Better Partnerships
Non-profits form partnerships for a
number of different reasons. They provide resources, knowledge and skills,
improve cost efficiency, speed time-to-market, open new markets, gain market
share, and develop innovations, new products or complementary products.
Choosing the right business model
How your non-profit organizes, creates and delivers value is
your business model. They can be focused
on products, services, subscriptions, licensing, advertising and hybrids. While determining your strategic position as
it relates to your solution, consider your business model too.
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Identifying the greatest opportunities
Social impact opportunities become real when you have a
solution that leverages your advantages to solve an important problem for a
specific under-served population. Take
action on your real social impact by defining the problem, creating a
competitive solution, building your advantage and forming the right team.
Labels:
competitive advantage,
demand,
opportunity discovery
Innovative Value
The social
entrepreneur aims to change and benefit society by
creating value. To do this, the non-profit pursues a mission-related impact using its strategic position. Creating value is done by either
cost-savings or offering new solutions or a combination of both.
Strategic Planning
There are many benefits for strategic planning including cost savings, better cash-flow, faster decision making, more efficient resource allocation, improved competitive position, more timely information, more accurate forecasts and reduced feelings of uncertainty.
Strategic Positioning
The value creation of a non-profit is dependent upon its
strategic positioning. This means a social entrepreneur must define the
position, make trade-offs and forge a fit among all possible activities related
to the mission. Your non-profit cannot
be all things to all people, so you must choose what not to do.
Monday, January 20, 2014
Satisfying Real Social Needs
After identifying a true social need, social entrepreneurs
must determine how to satisfy those needs in the best way. Once you have determined an innovative
solution for your social cause or issue, do a feasibility analysis before
proceeding further.
Saturday, January 18, 2014
Exploring the greatest market needs
As a social entrepreneur, building a highly successful non-profit you need to
introduce a solution with a mission-related impact better than the
competitors at a price (time or money) that fits your business model.
Macro-economic change brings opportunity
Three major types of change increase opportunities for
non-profits and foundations. They are technological, social and demographic;
and political and regulatory changes. The
savvy social entrepreneur can identify the changes on the horizon and
strategically position the non-profit to ride the wave of opportunity that
advances.
Friday, January 17, 2014
Building the Best Brand
People prefer organizations they know themselves or through family and friends. Beyond that, they also prefer organizations with effective branding
efforts. So be thoughtful when investing time and money building a brand.
Complementary Assets
Tangible and intangible resources make up complementary assets, and it's critical for social entrepreneurs to take a
complete inventory. Tangible assets are physically measurable like money, equipment
and real estate. Intangible assets are knowledge,
relationships and reputation. Brand recognition
and patents straddle the two categories.
Mastering Competitive Advantage for Non-profits
Sustainable competitive advantage benefits non-profits by
providing a strategy that is not duplicated by the competition. Achieving competitive
advantage requires specific commitments, decisions and actions by the social entrepreneur. A unique mix of five essential components can create a
sustainable competitive advantage:
Industry Structure and Life Cycle
Industry structure is a term which summarizes the barriers
to entry and the competitive landscape of and industry. It comprises of capital
intensity, advertising intensity, firm concentration, and average company size.
It is important to evaluate prior to starting a non-profit to determine the feasibility
of the mission and model.
Selecting the Best Industry – Demand Conditions
In addition to understanding all the knowledge conditions of a
particular industry, the social entrepreneur should identify the demand conditions
to determine the chances of success in that particular field. There are three
aspects to demand:
Selecting the Best Industry - knowledge conditions
Selecting the best industry to serve, impacts the chances for
success. Social entrepreneurs need to identify the knowledge conditions that make an
industry favorable.
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