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Volume 16, Number 4: Faculty Focus
April 2010
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Listen to
a
6-minute interview
with Oana Branzei and Marlene
Le Ber on
non-profit and for-profit organization
partnerships
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(6.1MB)
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Born out of a
shared interest in a current problem, non-profit
and for-profit organizations are partnering up
in order to achieve social goals. Ashleigh
Nimigan recently sat down down with Oana Branzei, Assistant Professor of
strategy at the Richard Ivey School of Business,
and Marlene J. Le Ber, PhD Candidate and
Lecturer at Ivey to discuss these unique
partnerships, how they work, and how they can
best work together and achieve their goals.
Ashleigh started by asking them if
cross-sector partnerships between non-profit and
for-profit organizations a relatively new thing?
Marlene J. Le
Ber: We know that in the media, it really
took off in the early 90’s with Greenpeace
looking at ozone free refrigeration and they
collaborated with a for-profit organization.
Oana Branzei:
If you were holding a Starbucks cup, you
would also be able to see that some of the
successful alliances have been around for at
least 10 years. The family of cross-sector
partnerships are part of strategic alliances.
They tend to bring organizations to work
together to achieve a social goal. They
typically engage in what we call social R&D.
They want to get behind a current problem and
find a collaborative solution that does not yet
exist in the domain of either the for-profit or
non-profit organization. The best way to think
of this cross-sector partnership is as social
R&D. They create new solutions to old problems.
Q. What
are some of the benefits or outcomes when
non-profit and for-profit organizations work
together?
Oana Branzei:
The great benefit is that it changes who they
both are by accomplishing greater social good as
well as greater profitability. The alliance
between Conservation International and Starbucks
has had a very rocky history but it’s also being
credited for accomplishing significant change in
the lives of coffee farmers around the world.
That is a great example because they stuck with
the partnership and they stuck with it through
the tough times of controversy and animosity and
they were committed to a goal that neither
organization could achieve on their own. So in
short, when for-profit and non-profit
organizations get together they can pull
together sets of resources and capabilities that
neither organization on their own can have
access to. The trick is, as in often the case
with strategic alliances, those benefits are
very hard to see ahead of time. Uniquely to the
cross-sector partnership often times it takes
years of getting together to get over the
cognitive barriers and the difference in values,
and the difference in expectations and the
difference in evaluations, so that people can
actually pull the social resources together for
the greater good.
Q. What
are some barriers to the success of these
partnerships?
Marlene J. Le
Ber: Fundamentally, the non-profit and the
for-profit organizations are quite different in
their logics, how they think about the work that
they do, how they go about doing their work, and
what their bottom line is. One [for-profit] is
typically, traditionally, very oriented to the
bottom line, the financial bottom line. The
other [non-profit] being not as concerned and
being more concerned just about their social
mission. So you have these differences in how
they’re structured, what they value, what the
bottom line is, and how they actually do
business.
Early successes
of the partners seems to hinge on either,
selecting the right partner - are they willing
to look at cooperating and listening to the
other party or what we’ve called relational
risks - the ability of the partner to predict
the potential outcomes of the alliance. So there
needs to be a fair bit of flexibility on both
partner’s side. They need to evaluate each
other, listen to each other and then continue to
adjust. Some of the things that we found made a
difference in terms of success or getting back
on track after things seem to derail a little
bit, has to do with the relational attachment
between the two parties. Also, that things
aren’t taken for granted - that there is a
continual investment in the partnership.
Oana Branzei:
Strangely enough, the greatest barrier is the
goal. If people are impatient with the goal,
these partnerships fail very early and very
bitterly. Because both parties tend to value the
strategic goal at a personal level, which is not
often the case when you have alliances between
biotech and pharma, for example, it is much
easier for the strategic decision makers
involved to disconnect themselves from the
business deals themselves. However, in this
case, you are talking about saving lives, about
changing lives, about children gaining access to
education, about healthier food or safer
products or just a new way of living or
conceptualizing consumption in some cases. So
here you are dealing with things that people
value at a personal level. They tend to be less
patient and more consumed by the need to
accomplish this goal. But unfortunately often
times these organizations because they are so
different to begin with approach this goal from
very different vantage points. And when they
lock into this goal they can create some sparks!
Those sparks can create huge fires, which are
hard to put out, again because these are things
near and dear to everyone’s heart. In any
marriage, if the fights are overcome, then the
partners can develop a deeper awareness for each
other’s priority and they can figure out where
their synergies lie. And that creates a basis
for imagining combinations to get to that goal
that would have been closed to both of the
partners before hand. So in very short words,
the biggest barrier is wanting to get there
one’s way, very fast.
That was
Oana Branzei, Assistant Professor of
strategy and Marlene J. Le Ber, PhD Candidate
and Lecturer, both from the Richard Ivey School
of Business.
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