A preconference workshop proposed for the 2013 Academy of Management: Applying the lean startup model to social and sustainable ventures. Hands-on workshop and intensive discussion, Terrific crew of organizers and more.
1. Proposal for Professional Development Workshop #15297
Title: Sustaining the Sustainable: Business Modeling for Social Ventures
Primary Sponsors: Entrepreneurship (ENT); Other Co-sponsors: Organizations & Natural
Environment (ONE); Teaching Theme Committee (TTC); Practice Theme Committee (PTC);
Technology and Innovation Management (TIM), International Management Division (IM).
(Also: Academy of Management Strategic Doing Initiative)
Sustaining the Sustainable: Business Modeling for Social Ventures
Dr. Franziska Günzel, Aarhus University, Denmark Aarhus
Dr. Jill Kickul, NYU, New York,
Dr. Norris Krueger, Entrepreneurship Northwest,
Dr. Jacob Park, Green Mountain College, VT
Dr. Florian Forster, visiting scholar at Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley;
Prof. Jennifer Walske, UC Berkeley, Director of Social Entrepreneurship
Dr. Suresh Kumar, founder of an Inc. 500 sustainable venture (GreenEarth),
Special guest:
Mr. Trevor Owens, founder of the Lean Startup Machine (#1 lean startup bootcamp)
(also invited; may participate by video)
Dr Alex Osterwalder, author of the Business Model Canvas (invited)
Mr. Bill Drayton, founder and CEO of Ashoka (invited)
Mr. Tom Park, CTO of the United States, DC (invited)
Ms. Leah Nichols, AAAS/NSF project lean public policy development, DC (invited)
Mr. Franck Nouyrigat, co-founder of Startup Weekend, Seattle/France.(invited)
n.b.: we refer to “sustainable” as not just „green‟ but triple bottom line sustainable which many
call “social” ventures. Our intent with the language is to be inclusive.
Abstract
Despite the best efforts on both sides, there are still disconnects between social and sustainable
entrepreneurs and their academic counterparts. However, brilliant use of state of the art tools
such as design thinking and social media have led to great innovations. It was social and
sustainable entrepreneurs and academics who led the way for the revolution of crowdfunding.
Before there could be Kickstarter, Kiva blazed the trail.
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The key to the lean startup model (and most business modeling tools) is vigorous, ruthless,
continuous questioning of the venture‟s most cherished assumptions. Absent very strong market
forces, it falls to the entrepreneur, for-profit or non-profit, to keep testing and re-testing what lies
beneath their value propositions – if they wish to continue identifying and delivering great value
to their stakeholders.
Social and sustainable entrepreneurship is at the leading edge for teaching, practice and research
in business modeling. These bleeding edge tools are almost essential for identifying and
validating triple bottom line opportunities. We expect that this is just the start of developing an
even more comprehensive “entrepreneurial” tool kit to promote sustainability.
However, social and sustainable entrepreneurship faculty members are thus far surprisingly
under-informed about these tools, despite fast-growing interest. (At the recent NYU social
entrepreneurship conference, out of ~50 scholars queried only 5 knew the lean startup model (or
even Startup Weekend.) Many are “winging it” but want to get better. They also recognize the
great research potential.
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Sustaining the Sustainable: Business Modeling for Social Ventures
[a/k/a “Questioning Capitalism” with “Questioning” as an adjective, not gerund]
Rationale
The lean startup phenomenon has gone global and is at the heart of the revolution not only in
startups but also new product development and now… social entrepreneurship? And what better
way to help identify and deliver triple bottom line sustainable opportunities that are….
Sustainable!
The new focus on business models is not only popular, it seems to be a powerful tool. Steve
Blank‟s new (free) online Lean Launchpad course [Udacity] has already led to multiple
successful sustainable technology launches via NSF and entrepreneurs globally. In particular, the
obsessive focus with creating value for stakeholders seems apt for social ventures. As social and
sustainable entrepreneurs look toward this phenomenon, it is clear that there are equally powerful
implications for them. However, it remains to be seen how those implications may differ. Let us
give a quick overview of the key constructs and the initial implications we see.
What IS a Business Model?
Business models are the „recipes‟ for how a venture becomes sustainable economically. They
typically have three critical components:
Value Identification – identifying genuine value desired by customers and/or other
stakeholders (that is, in their eyes, not the entrepreneur‟s)
Value Delivery – figuring out how to deliver that value, once identified, to intend
recipients
Value Capture – if significant value is identified and delivered, rents accrue to the
venture (and other stakeholders) i.e., who gets paid and how? The venture‟s revenue model(s)
are usually at the heart of this.
A successful ventures needs to develop all three, almost always iteratively. The interplay of the
three also is most likely to evolve, making this a seemingly most complex process. Also note that
“sustainable” is easily extended to social and environmental sustainability. Makes the process
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still more complex on the surface but actually offers increased opportunities to design a viable
venture.
It’s Not a Bug, It’s a Feature
The „lean startup‟ approach takes this complexity as an advantage (Ries 2011). The only way to
build a great business model is to ruthlessly identify every possible assumption that underpins
the model, drilling down as deeply as possible – then testing each assumption equally ruthlessly
and rigorously. If the assumption passes muster, then proceed; if not, „pivot‟ [adapt your
business model].
Two things of relevance for us: First, the business model will change dramatically (and swiftly),
hence the business model is far less important than its evolution (Gunzel & Krueger, 2012).
Second, the lean model appears to be closely associated with the expert entrepreneurial mindset
(hence it has big implications for entrepreneurial learning). Both are essential for moving
forward with social ventures and sustainability.
Existing business model research has tended to quite static, focusing on different characteristics
of business models and tends to come from a more organization theory and strategy perspective;
however, this is a supervenient process - dynamic, bottom-up, nonlinear. This suggests that
social entrepreneurship researchers have a certain advantage. More important, it means this
approach is all but necessary for practitioners.
Interesting Specifics for Research (and Practice)
“MVP”: A key concept of the lean startup is the “MVP” or “Minimum Viable Product”. It
builds on the reality that successful ventures launch “too early.” (If you are not embarrassed later
by your MVP, you waited too long.) Fail early, fail fast, learn even faster.
However, failing early can have very different implications to someone fighting disease or
hunger than to someone launching a cool web app. Paul Hudnut has been vocal about the need
for us to dig more deeply into what “MVP” needs to look like in high-risk, high-stakes settings.
This is a golden opportunity for researchers in social & sustainable entrepreneurship.
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“Pivot”: Similarly, the notion of pivots is an arena where social entrepreneurship researchers can
contribute. In a social venture, pivots can be extremely difficult given institutional and
stakeholder pressures. It is rare that we can manage a true randomized field experiment in our
domain, despite the enormous advantages of using them (Kistruck 2011)
In sustainability, what we might focus on profitably are pivots at the system level, echoing Bill
Drayton‟s mantra of “re-inventing the whole fishing industry.” (Or why we invited Bill to join
us!)
Design Thinking: A cliché, we know but as entrepreneurs we know that creating a viable
venture is not an optimization problem, it is a design problem. With the complexity of a venture
amplified by the added complexity of triple bottom line sustainability, design thinking is
imperative. However, it needs to be tested rigorously. (The Stanford D-School is looking at this
right now, as is Andrew Hargadon at UC-Davis.)
In sum, we lack rigorous research into business model evolution. Entire tracks on business
models were featured at recent European entrepreneurship conferences and it is clear that –
because of their constraints - social entrepreneurs may well be the ideal venue to explore
business model evolution. Nor would it be excessively optimistic to argue that the practical
impact will be higher as well. But to do great research, great teaching and great outreach, our
scholars and educators need to really understand lean startup, etc. and internalize it – here‟s how
we will do that.
Focus
We focus here on the absolute cutting edge of business modeling tools, primarily the dominant
lean startup model. However, to truly “get it”, we need to experience it first-hand, hands-on and
guided by top experts.
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The first “Sustaining the Sustainable” AoM workshop was in 1999 and it crystallized thinking
for many of us that this is important for teaching, important for outreach, important for research
and… .important for the future.
Sponsor Rationales
Why TTC?
Shouldn‟t perhaps the single best set of tools available to teach and train entrepreneurs be
available to Academy members, especially those working with social ventures and
sustainability? We already know that social entrepreneurship scholars are eager for these tools,
not just for the impact on entrepreneur and the implications for great research but also for its
power as a teaching tool. The result of this PDW will be Academy scholars and educators
leaving fully familiar with the key elements of a powerful tool kit for developing business
models that are triple bottom line sustainable.
Why PTC?
This PDW brings together perhaps the top minds in social and sustainable entrepreneurship
currently engaged deeply in working with social and sustainable entrepreneurs globally with
world class expertise at business modeling, especially the lean startup approach. The result of
this PDW will be Academy scholars and educators leaving fully familiar with the key elements
of a powerful tool kit for developing business models that are triple bottom line sustainable.
Why ENT?
Back in 1999, ENT and ONE co-sponsored a preconference workshop entitled “Sustaining the
Sustainable” – two of the presenters are co-organizers of this PDW. ENT has always been a
friendly, supportive home for social entrepreneurship and sustainability and has always
championed engaged scholarship. This PDW brings together practitioner-engaged scholars and
practical tools that we all need to learn more about. The result of this PDW will be Academy
scholars and educators leaving fully familiar with the key elements of a powerful tool kit for
developing business models that are triple bottom line sustainable.
Why ONE?
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Back in 1999, ONE [and ENT] co-sponsored a preconference workshop entitled “Sustaining the
Sustainable” – two of the presenters are co-organizers of this PDW. ONE has always been a
friendly, supportive home for sustainable entrepreneurship and has always championed engaged
scholarship. This PDW brings together practitioner-engaged scholars and practical tools that we
all need to learn more about. The result of this PDW will be Academy scholars and educators
leaving fully familiar with the key elements of a powerful tool kit for developing business
models that are triple bottom line sustainable.
Why TIM?
TIM has long been a strong voice for sustainability and for engaged scholarship. The result of
this PDW will be Academy scholars and educators leaving fully familiar with the key elements
of a powerful tool kit for developing business models that are triple bottom line sustainable.
Why IM?
The IM Division has increasingly sought to promote sustainability as part of an increasingly
global world. The lean startup model has become a lingua franca for entrepreneurs and potential
entrepreneurs globally. Put those together and we realize the value of exposing sustainability
scholars and educators to the bleeding edge of business modeling. The result of this PDW will be
Academy scholars and educators leaving fully familiar with the key elements of a powerful tool
kit for developing business models that are triple bottom line sustainable.
Also: Why Strategic Doing Initiative?
The creation of this new AoM initiative tells us that we need to re-double our efforts toward
highly actionable projects where activities such as PDWs yield tangible, visible, productive
action. The result of this PDW will be Academy scholars and educators leaving fully familiar
with the key elements of a powerful tool kit for developing business models that are triple
bottom line sustainable.
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Format
(15 minutes) Brief overview and introductions [slides, etc. will be sent out in advance]
(60 minutes) Hands-on experiential workshop led by one of the world‟s top consultants, Trevor
Owens whose Lean Startup Machine marries the lean startup tool kit to the
Startup Weekend immersion approach. Trevor will be supported by several
experienced, trained experts on business modeling (Forster, Günzel, Krueger,
Kumar)
(30 minutes) Implications for teaching and practice – facilitated discussion (Kickul, Kumar,
Walske)
(30 minutes) Implications for research – facilitated discussion (Forster, Günzel, Krueger, Park)
(15 minutes) Wrapup and Action Items [nobody leaves without a public commitment to action]
Suggests a 2.5 hour session (3 hours would give us more discussion time; 2 hours
is doable, of course)
Audience Takeaways
Pre-registrants (and others, as feasible) will get a bleeding-edge tool kit of resources that will
both prepare them for the PDW and also be directly applicable to their work back home. This
tool kit and training would normally be relatively costly (but it‟s important to sustainability that
we are making this effort.)
Audience members will take away a deeper insight in how and why to use these tools and we
anticipate that the experiential learning will provide specific insights for their own critical issues.
Audience members will also see the remarkable array of research issues that can be uniquely
addressed at the intersection of business modeling and social/sustainable entrepreneurship.
We also hope to build a community of practice around all this; this must not be a one-off event
(no matter how much fun we will be having).
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Key Organizers
1. Dr. Franziska Günzel, Aarhus University, Denmark, rising scholar and educator in
entrepreneurship, leads Business Modeling group for Aarhus entrepreneurial community
2. Dr. Jill Kickul, NYU, New York, perhaps the leading program developer in social
entrepreneurship, also cutting edge educator and scholar of social entrepreneurship
3. Dr. Norris Krueger, Entrepreneurship Northwest, experienced researcher and global
expert on developing entrepreneurial mindsets and ecosystems, Startup Weekend
organizer and veteran lean startup consultant, ID.
4. Dr. Jacob Park, Green Mountain College, experienced sustainability researcher (both
theoretical & applied), social and environmental innovation & entrepreneurship with
special expertise/interest in emerging economies, chair of U.S. Sustainable &
Responsible Investment Forum‟s International Working Group Steering Committee, VT
5. Jennifer Walske, UC Berkeley, Director of Social Entrepreneurship, experienced in
venture finance and impact investment and rising star in social entrepreneurship
Key Participants
6. Mr. Trevor Owens, founder of the Lean Startup Machine (the #1 lean startup bootcamp)
7. Dr. Florian Forster, visiting scholar at Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley; certified
Lean LaunchPad trainer, co-founder of entrepreneurship centers at two universities,
social entrepreneurship dissertation, California/Germany
8. Dr. Suresh Kumar, founder of an Inc. 500 sustainable venture (GreenEarth), trained lean
startup trainer (and Startup Weekend mentor) and entrepreneurship policy scholar,
US/India.
Invited Participants/Discussants [potentially via video]
9. Dr Alex Osterwalder, Business Model Generation, author of the Business Model Canvas
[the guy who built the tool kit we will use], Switzerland
10. Mr. Bill Drayton, founder of Ashoka and still a top thought leader in social
entrepreneurship.
11. Mr. Tom Park, United States CTO (joint practitioner-academe-government projects), DC
12. Ms. Leah Nichols, AAAS/NSF project lean public policy development, DC
13. Mr. Franck Nouryigat, co-founder of Startup Weekend, director of Startup Weekend
Research, Seattle/France.
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