Hybrid organisations embedded in resource-poor contexts: linking organisational capabilities and individual capabilities – a slippery ground?

IF 2.8 Q2 BUSINESS Social Enterprise Journal Pub Date : 2024-08-07 DOI:10.1108/sej-11-2023-0145
Simone Strambach, Stephen Omwenga Momanyi
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Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to contribute to research on hybrid organisations operating within the information and communication technology for development paradigm to foster socio-economic inclusion through the capacity building of marginalised individual youth to enable their entry and participation in the formal labour market.

Design/methodology/approach

Using a qualitative research design, the authors investigated impact sourcing service providers and their beneficiaries to unpack how hybrid organisations fulfil their social mission and to provide a nuanced understanding of their needed capabilities. Data triangulation through document analysis, participant observation and semi-structured interviews were conducted for the empirical findings’ robustness and in-depth analysis.

Findings

This paper illuminates how hybrids strived to build beneficiaries' capabilities through empirically grounded approaches of “standardised” and “individualised” skills development, which were strongly connected to the perceived capabilities among the beneficiaries. Organisations that practiced the “individualised” approach imparted technical knowledge and, depending on individual needs, relevant social skills. Critically, the empirical findings call into question the effectiveness of the scalability model, as the results showed that the creation of standardised, low-skilled and low-paid jobs contradicts the idealised self-help status that employment advocates. In addition, the findings underline the central role of constant experimentation, resilience and organisational learning in revamping capabilities of hybrid organisations. Remarkably, compared to organisations committed to the “standardised” technical competency path, the results underscored the difficulties that organisations taking an “individualised" approach face in developing organisational capabilities for their financial sustainability. Further, organisations engaged in standardised” skills development were found to readapt their business model to the economic value and kept the wording of dual mission as a narrative.

Originality/value

The paper makes a conceptual and empirical contribution bringing together two separately developed literature strands – the organisational capability approach and – the individual capability approach, to enhance a more profound understanding of how both capabilities are connected to each other in the dual-mission orientation of hybrids embedded in resource-poor environments, global value chains, Global South, hybrid organisations, organisational and individual capability building.

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资源匮乏环境下的混合型组织:将组织能力与个人能力联系起来--一个模糊的概念?
设计/方法/途径作者采用定性研究设计,对影响采购服务提供商及其受益人进行了调查,以了解混合组织如何履行其社会使命,并对其所需能力提供细致入微的了解。本文揭示了混合组织如何通过 "标准化 "和 "个性化 "技能发展这两种以经验为基础的方法来培养受益人的能力,这两种方法与受益人的认知能力密切相关。采用 "个性化 "方法的组织传授技术知识,并根据个人需要传授相关的社会技能。重要的是,实证研究结果对可扩展性模式的有效性提出了质疑,因为研究结果表明,创造标准化、低技能、低报酬的工作岗位与就业所倡导的理想化自助状态相矛盾。此外,研究结果还强调了不断试验、应变能力和组织学习在改造混合型组织能力方面的核心作用。值得注意的是,与致力于 "标准化 "技术能力路径的组织相比,研究结果强调了采取 "个性化 "方法的组织在发展组织能力以实现财务可持续性方面所面临的困难。此外,参与 "标准化 "技能发展的组织被发现重新调整了其商业模式,以适应经济价值,并将双重使命的措辞作为一种叙述方式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
14.30%
发文量
14
期刊最新文献
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