Scaling Social Enterprises through Product Diversification
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“Margins are thin, which means you need to run the treadmill much faster. The moment you start chasing money then you have to compromise on a lot of things. That drives mission drift. That is the main challenge.”
2. Methods
3. An Overview of Scaling Strategies
3.1. Scaling up Strategy
“It is a cookie cutter, replication model. Expanding within a state is reasonably straightforward. However, when we get into a new state, we have to hire people with the local language familiarity. Scale up was slow in the initial stages but once we got a foothold, it went faster.”—CEO of MFI-E
“There are regional nuances to factor when you replicate. The per capita income is different. If you go to Bihar, the per capita income is low, and you start with very small loans, whereas in Punjab the loan size is much bigger. In Gujarat, entrepreneurship is in-built into people as compared to other parts of the country. If you go the North-east and South, it’s a matriarchal society as compared to Haryana, where the men are the decision makers.”—CEO of MFI-G
“What we identified at that time was that the urban poor in India was a significant population, may not be as large as the rural poor, but a significant number, and one of the fastest growing segment of population in India, and frankly no microfinance institution has been directed towards urban poor even Grameen was focused on the rural poor.”
3.2. Scaling Deep Strategy
“When we thought of MFI, it was more of community-based approach, you need to go hinterland, understand the people, go to the excluded population. Then I thought it was very important to understand the local language, culture and the environment. This institution (another subsidiary) was made for the purpose of focusing on health and education space and to the extent we can do it for our target market. We may not be able to cover all our customers or members…in fact, that was a huge task. We have got partners like IFC (another NGO) who were our partners during that time.”
3.3. Diversification Strategy
“What happens is today one of the good income sources for rural customers is milk because the price is almost constant … there is a local breed and there is a crossbreed. If you give the choice, they will go for a local breed because it is much sturdy, and the risk of dying is not that much. Crossbreed gives more yields but there is a risk. We introduced insurance for these cows and also helped them to actually select the right cow. It is a very simple thing, but it is so important. That worked out very well.”
4. Findings
4.1. The Two Dimensions of Product Diversification
4.1.1. Relatedness
4.1.2. Locus of Impact
4.2. Product Diversification Strategies
4.2.1. Related Developmental Diversification
“We are talking about women, largely in the slums … clothing and tailoring is a huge thing. Some of them run small shops, that kind of segment. They need loans to put their kids to school or to upgrade their housing or they had a medical emergency … if you allow diverting the loan for consumption, you are promoting bad habits. So, we have formed a separate organization where the main work that they do is financial literacy because that is a very important aspect of this. They have actually trained over a million women. Generally, we have seen that women who have gone through financial literacy are much more disciplined borrowers. They don’t default that much and also they have saving habits, so this has definitely a positive impact.”
“We have a large financial literacy programme that operates on two main principles-information to action looking at literacy modules that translate into real behavior and enrolment into specific products. The second one is around consumer protection i.e., identification and prevention of financial frauds”.
“What we did was to train all the members before we gave out loans or other products. We need to be responsible. Only after they understood the training modules—household budgeting, necessary and unnecessary expenditure, debt management, insurance and pension—did we roll out the products”.
“The initial first two, three years, we were getting into a lot of financial literacy. We had people from outside, I mean our field officers were not able to train them. So, we had external people coming in, helping our customers with financial literacy and bookkeeping but as the microfinance penetrated, the awareness level of the customer was very high. So, we slowly withdrew this kind of training.”
4.2.2. Related Commercial Diversification
“We started with credit. In addition to credit, people also started saying they wanted savings. At that point we started something called the gulakbachat (savings box) program. It’s a savings box with a lock and key. The gulak (box) is with the customer and the key stays with us. Once a month, when we come to collect credit installments, the gulak is opened publicly and the customers pay from it. This supported daily regular savings which went towards loan installments and other needs”.—CEO of MFI-D
“We did a massive household survey of 10,000 members and we tried to see what they wanted/needed. Our survey revealed that they wanted insurance and pension products. We became one of the early aggregators of the national pension scheme. We also started voluntary life insurance product in partnership with IDBI.”.—CEO of MFI-F
“Our core credit product was a livelihood enhancement loan. Over time, we noticed that about half the loan was going towards house repairs. Even after 5–6 years, the family was spending half the money towards the house and it was never getting completed. So, we came up with Purthi, a house completion loan. It was large sized loan and we combined it with mason advisory service.”—CEO of MFI-D
“We made the loan products specific. We had three products-One was cattle loan that was tied to insurance, second for asset purchase and third was working capital. We also offered education loans. Smaller amount loan over a six-month duration given out during the start of the school year to help with school uniform, fees, books.”—CEO of MFI-F
“We were very clear about one thing. What is my core strength? I can do finance…As long as borrowers are having any income generation activity-agriculture, non-agriculture, industrial, trading-doesn’t make a difference. Besides the credit portfolio, we are doing retail banking, little bit of corporate banking, business correspondent and the entire finance vertical. You can scale this up and build as a commercial institution, at the same time it takes care of the social bottom line and that was the key.”
4.2.3. Unrelated Developmental Diversification
“Our objective was to help people, to help them come out of their poverty, have a better quality of life. We had multiple products and services. We used to measure the poverty level, and how they are progressing. If you say that you need to improve quality of life, that means support income generation, education, health, emergency needs. We were always supporting it. If not, they (may) actually fall back into poverty.”
“The goal for our education program is that at least one child of each borrowing family should complete high school. We have setup MFI-A education centers that do two things–coach dropouts from lower grades so they get back to school and provide specialized coaching for higher grades.”—CEO of MFI-A
“We have built awareness around health and hygiene practices. We also provide info about govt programs and how to avail those benefits.”—CEO of MFI-H
“Our aim was always to have microfinance and then layer it with other non-financial services. We started the legal rights awareness training program. We trained women on different laws related domestic violence and sexual harassment, basics of gender and patriarchy. We also picked out community catalysts who were vocal and wanted to work on these issues. We gave them additional training to become change agents at the grassroots level.”—CEO of MFI-F
“Our partner has a skill training academy through which they do a lot of vocational training (e.g., mobile phone repair, two-wheeler repair). We started a loan product for alumni of the training program who had undergone an apprenticeship and were setting up their own businesses.”
“Customers see us as a preferred institution, they trust us more. We have better relationships with them, due to our products and processes.”—CEO of MFI-H
4.2.4. Unrelated Commercial Diversification
“We first started with Microcredit. Many of our members approached us for help with mobile phones. As a company, we saw this as an opportunity because mobiles are leading to digitization. The price at which they were purchasing in the rural areas was 20–25% higher. We approached Samsung, they were able to customize to the demand and deliver to the doorstop. We provided the financing. We also got a marketing fee of 7–8%. The customers realized a saving of 10–15%. It is a win-win. For Samsung, they were paying commission to multiple layers of dealers which they were able to avoid with this direct model. Some customers want two-wheelers because it helps them with their businesses. It given them mobility and they can reach their customers. Road infrastructure is improving, they can sell their products in nearby markets, which is difficult on bicycles. We haven’t yet started this but there is demand.”
“We always tell them (borrowers) take it (microloans) for income and do not take it for consumer goods, do not take it for things where there is no return. Every customer is very important, every customer needs to be protected against multiple loans.”—CEO of MFI-B
“For these customers, the aspirational value is different from what it is for those of use elsewhere. Their aspirations are not really aspirations, they are bordering on necessity. When we talk about a solar lantern, a pressure cooker, a mixer-these are all bordering on necessity. They only take it when they know they have use for it and they can earn out of it. It’s foolhardy of us to assume that they are vulnerable and don’t know when they should stop taking debt”.—CEO of MFI-G
“We also work in a really impoverished community. The average incomes here are around 8000 Rupees a month. So, our idea is to focus on the basic needs rather than go beyond to products like these.”
5. Discussion
5.1. Balancing the Tradeoffs in Product Diversification
5.2. Practical Implications
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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S. No. | MFI Name | Legal Form | Founding Year | No. of States | Loan Portfolio in Indian Rupees ₹ (10 million) FY 2019 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | MFI-A | Non-profit | 2002 | 5 | 1406.23 |
2 | MFI-B | For-profit | 2009 | 4 | 567 |
3 | MFI-C | For-profit | 1999 | 5 | 6679.8 |
4 | MFI-D | Non-profit | 2009 | 3 | 9.18 |
5 | MFI-E | For-profit | 2008 | 16 | 2475 |
6 | MFI-F | Non-profit | 2007 | 4 | 189.69 |
7 | MFI-G | For-profit | 1990 | 22 | 6374 |
8 | MFI-H | For-profit | 2016 | 22 | 621.7 |
9 | MFI-I | For-profit | 2004 | 24 | 9353 |
10 | MFI-J | For-profit | 2009 | 11 | 4139 |
Scaling Strategy | Organizational Challenge | Source of Social Value | Source of Financial Value | Articles on the Topic |
---|---|---|---|---|
Scaling Up | Localizing the business model | Number of beneficiaries impacted | Volume of transactions from increased customer base or franchise/license fee | Bradach (2003) Dees et al. (2004) |
Scaling Deep | Co-opting partners to shape institutions | Stronger ecosystem leading to systemic improvement | Greater efficiency due to reduced friction in transactions | Grant and Crutchfield (2007); Bloom and Dees (2007) |
Diversification | Synergy between business models | Deeper engagement with beneficiaries to address multiple pain points | Volume of transactions from expanded product portfolio | Fosfuri et al. (2016) |
Quadrant | Social Impact | Financial Impact |
---|---|---|
Related–Developmental | High (Empowers beneficiaries to take informed decisions and make productive use of credit) | Med (Synergy with core product but involves additional costs upfront) |
Unrelated Developmental | High (Builds capacity and resilience in target community) | Low (Little synergy with core product, Indirect and long-term impact if any) |
Unrelated Commercial | Low (Threat of making the beneficiaries over indebted) | Med (Direct and immediate but involves additional costs upfront) |
Related Commercial | Med (Complementary products build household resilience) | High (Direct and immediate) |
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Jha, S.K.; Bhawe, N.; Satish, P. Scaling Social Enterprises through Product Diversification. Sustainability 2021, 13, 11660. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132111660
Jha SK, Bhawe N, Satish P. Scaling Social Enterprises through Product Diversification. Sustainability. 2021; 13(21):11660. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132111660
Chicago/Turabian StyleJha, Srivardhini K., Nachiket Bhawe, and P. Satish. 2021. "Scaling Social Enterprises through Product Diversification" Sustainability 13, no. 21: 11660. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132111660
APA StyleJha, S. K., Bhawe, N., & Satish, P. (2021). Scaling Social Enterprises through Product Diversification. Sustainability, 13(21), 11660. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132111660