Guide To Developing A Social Enterprise

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 45
At a glance
Powered by AI
The key takeaways are that a social enterprise plan helps move an idea to measurable impact, provides a common plan of action for the team, and is a document to pitch to stakeholders. It also outlines the different sections that should be included in a social enterprise plan.

The main components of a social enterprise plan outlined are the executive summary, problem statement, vision/mission/values, theory of change, solution, social impact, target market, competition, social marketing, partnerships, team plan, financial plan, impact monitoring and evaluation, risks, implementation plan, and funding request.

Developing a theory of change in a social enterprise plan provides a clear story or roadmap of how the social enterprise will bridge the gap from inputs to achieving its desired social mission and impact.

www.ysei.

org
Social Enterprise Plan :
The Guide
By Sunit Shrestha
& Sailendra Dev Appanah
www.ysei.org
Why should I write a
social enterprise plan?
It helps you move from solution-idea to measurable impact.
A common plan of action among your team members.
A document to pitch to donors, investors and other stakeholders.
www.ysei.org
Feedback
& adjustment
Develop
enterprise
plan
Social Enterprise Planning
Develop
enterprise
concept
Choosing
type
Understanding
social
enterprise
plan
Social enterprise planning process
What is social
enterprise?
Social entrepreneurship
Social enterprise plan
as a story
Key plans key
messages (logical f low)
Social enterprise
spectrum
Choice of expansion
paths
Products/services/
hybrid
Choosing type
What is social
enterprise?
Social entrepreneurship
Social enterprise plan
as a story
Key plans key
messages (logical f low)
What is social
enterprise?
Social entrepreneurship
Social enterprise plan
as a story
Key plans key
messages (logical f low)
What is social
enterprise?
Social entrepreneurship
Social enterprise plan
as a story
Key plans key
messages (logical f low)
www.ysei.org
What is Social Enterprise
Social enterprises are organizations whose mission is to bridge social
opportunity into sustainable reality innovatively, effectively and
efficiently.
They shift the future for the better by innovating social solutions to solve
human development problems whether in poverty, hunger, environment,
human rights, education, political freedom and other important issues.
Their teams are balancing passion, excitement, discipline, private and social
benefit through organizing creative destruction of undesirable status quo as
well as creating constructive changes in the world.
They focus on the sustainability of their solutions by generating strategic
value to their stakeholders, which have measurable
social/environmental/economic outcomes for their beneficiaries, develop
strategic fit as well as social return on capital that match their
donors/investors preferences and, in many cases, earning income from
products and services.
SOCIAL INNOVATION /
EFFECTIVENESS / EFFICIENCY
SUSTAINABILITY / CHANGE
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT /
FREEDOM / PASSION
EXCITEMENT / DISCIPLINE
PRIVATE-SOCIAL BENEFITS /
CREATIVE DESTRUCTION /
CONSTRUCTIVE CHANGES /
STAKEHOLDERS
www.ysei.org
Social entrepreneurship
SOCIAL INNOVATION /
EFFECTIVENESS / EFFICIENCY
SUSTAINABILITY / CHANGE
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT /
FREEDOM / PASSION
EXCITEMENT / DISCIPLINE
PRIVATE-SOCIAL BENEFITS /
CREATIVE DESTRUCTION /
CONSTRUCTIVE CHANGES /
STAKEHOLDERS
Social Entrepreneurship Is about
Innovation and Impact, Not Income
We have seen that the function of entrepreneurs
is to reform or revolutionize
the pattern of production . .
Joseph A. Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism and
Democracy
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
as a story
inputs Mission Innovative story
As the mission tells how social enterprise bridges social opportunity into
sustainable reality. The goal is to reach the desired mission.
Social enterprise plan should provide a clear story or road map on how
to get from inputs to the mission of desired social impact.
www.ysei.org
The plans key messages:
Making a logical flow in the storyline
inputs Mission activities outputs outcomes
goal/
objectives
The social enterprise process The Enterprises theory of change
The key plan messages (the full plan)
www.ysei.org
Ask yourself: What kind of social enterprise you would prefer to run?
Motives,
Methods &
Goals
Purely philanthropic Purely commercial
Appeal to goodwill
Mission driven
Social value
Mixed motives
Mission driven &
market driven
Social & economic
value
Appeal to self-
interest
Market driven
Economic value
K
e
y

s
t
a
k
e
h
o
l
d
e
r
s
beneficiaries
capital
workforces
suppliers
Pay nothing
Subsidised rates or
mix of full of payers &
those who pay nothing
Market-rate prices
Donations &
grants
Below-market capital, or
mix of donations &
market-rate capital
Market-rate capital
Volunteers
Below-market wages, or
mix of volunteers and
fully paid staff
Market-rate
compensation
Make in-kind
donations
Special discounts, or mix
of in-kind & full price
donations
Market-rate prices
Choosing type:
The Social Enterprise Spectrum
The social enterprise spectrum
www.ysei.org
Social and/or Environmental Return
Economic Return
Social Enterprises walk a tightrope in
trying to balance the generation of
both social/environmental and
economic returns to remain effective
and sustainable at the same time.
The balance between economic and
social/environmental return are
choices base on each enterprises
preference.
Purely commercial enterprises
Purely philanthropic enterprises
Understanding the balance you have to generate between social/
environmental and economic returns as a social entrepreneur.
Choosing type:
Choice of expansion paths
?
www.ysei.org
Types of
social
enterprise
Hybrid-
enterprise
Ebannok.com is one of the most successf ul
projects of Mirror Art Group, a social enterprise that
provides an e-commerce platf orm f or hill tribes in
northern Thailand to sell the handicraf ts that they
produce in between harvest seasons. This increase
employment and allows the communities to reap
higher income levels over the year as well as more
f unds f or development activities.
Digital Divide Data (DDD) is a very
successf ul social enterprise that delivers highly
accurate data-entry and digitization services
f or customers while maintaining a mission to
employ underprivileged youth and f acilitate
their human development through providing
f air wages, health care, education, and career
advancement opportunities.
TRN is a social enterprise involved in various
initiatives. Its f lagship work involves preserving
indigenous agricultural knowledge in Thailand,
combining it with global best practices to deliver
appropriate knowledge and best solutions using ICTs
to rural communities, specif ically in the northeast of
Thailand.
Econ
Social
Econ
Social
Econ
Social
Choosing types :
Product/service/hybrid
www.ysei.org
Choosing type of social enterprise
Product-oriented Service-orientated Hybrid-enterprise
Pure social value
Blended value
Why do this?
By clarifying the type of social enterprise, it is easier to think through the rest of planning
process. And it is easier to communicate what exactly do your enterprise does.
Ebannok.com
DDD
TRN
Your
enterprise?
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
What is the concept and its elements?
The Social enterprise concept is an overview of your full plan (basically your executive
summary for the full proposal). It helps you think through key concepts about enterprising
social innovation that needed to be clarified before expanding them in the full plan itself.
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
THE PROBLEMS (OPPORTUNITY)
What is the problem?
Develop the problem statement that by providing context,
problem situation (initial) and desired situation (goal).
Visit innovative problem solving tool.
What cause the problem?
Develop a logical argument on the causes that create
the problem situation (using logical/issue pyramid)
Visit innovative problem solving tool.
Why is it important, what is the scale?
Give clear explanation why the problem matter. What
damage would it do, what good will it prevent, what
opportunity it brings? How big is the problem and opportunity?
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
VISION
What change in the world would you ultimately want to see?
Crafting a vision gives you an image of the future you seek to create.
Imagine what the world would be if the problem is solved. Describe it in
clarity will not only allow you to see to what direction you must shift the
future to, it will also help your team developed a clear shared-vision,
making sure everyone is having the same ultimate goal.
What will be the future of your organization?
A vision drives you, your team and your enterprise toward the same
direction. You might want to be the top IT-training centre for
underprivileged youth, or eradicate poverty in a fishing village.
If you do not have a vision, you should not be writing a plan.
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
MISSION
What impact would you like to accomplish and be accountable for?
The mission would give you a sense of purpose or the reason why your
social enterprise exist. The mission should contains clear goal and specific
objectives for your social enterprise to achieve as practical steps towards
your vision.
The good objectives are SMART (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Result-
focused and Timely). These objectives are the outcome or impact you will
be accountable at some clear specific points in time.
It should also explain clearly what will be the value/benefit you will be
creating for all your key stakeholders, e.g. target community, partners,
funders, the society as a whole and even your team.
The trick is to describe what you will be doing over the next 1 to 2 years.
Generally, it works best to focus on the enterprise and on the target groups
needs and benefits.
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
THEORY OF CHANGE
What is your theory of change?
Theories of Change is a way of thinking about how the outcomes of your
activities lead ultimately to your desired social impact.
For example,
If rural communities can sell their local handicraft produce through an
online e-commerce platform, there will be economic development in rural
communities
The basic format of any theory of change can be express as
To make desirable CHANGE happen,
Condition1, Condition2, Condition(n) must be met.
Or
If Condition1, Condition2, Condition(n) are met, then,
the desirable CHANGE will happen.
So, its always something like IF-CONDITIONS-THEN-CHANGE
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
THEORY OF CHANGE (continue)
So, more examples of IF-CONDITIONS-THEN-CHANGE
If low-income, marginalized teenagers have first-hand experience running
a business, they will be more successful in their careers
If poor women in Africa have microbicidal contraceptives they control,
AIDS will spread less
If customers water usage is metered and they have to pay for it, they will
use less water
If people buy organic yogurt instead of non-organic yogurt that may be full
of pesticides, their health will improve
If jobs are created in low-income areas, personal well-being will increase
and the quality of life in those neighborhoods will increase.
Notice that in each example the ultimate social impact is expressed as a
change, and increase or a decrease. This is the same thing as the social
mission you are trying to achieve.
FOR MORE ON THE THEORIES OF CHANGE CLICK HERE
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
THE SOLUTION
What is your solution (products or services)?
Explain exactly what is your solution to the problem, especially in term of
products or services offering to your target community or stakeholder. What
are key activities needed in achieving your mission?
Who are your customers?
Identify the users of your product/service solution. Who are they? Where
are they? What is the size of your target customers? How do you plan to
access them?
How do your solution innovatively remove the pain (solve the
problem)?
Describe exactly how the problem would be solved by your solution. What
benefit or value your solution will generate for the target group. Why and
how innovative is your solution? Why should they use your solution
compare to others? What is the limitation of your solution?
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
THE SOLUTION
Who else are solving the problems?
Identify those who are trying to solve the same or similar problems as you
do. What are their solutions? How effective they are? What are their
problems, strength and weakness? Is the market for your solution
competitive?
Who are your competitors/complimentators/partners?
Classify them into different category. Identify your competitors or those
whose solutions/works are competitive to yours. Identify your
complimentators or those whose solutions/works can compliment with
yours. And identify your partners or those who might want to work with you.
What can do you better or different from them?
Explain how your solution is uniquely more effective or efficient compare to
your competitors. What exactly is the difference between your solution and
theirs.
How is ICTs a critical and integral component to your solution?
Give clear explanation why Information and Communication Technologies
is needed to enhance the effectiveness of your solution and how it is
integrated to your solution.
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
SOCIAL IMPACT
What is your ultimate desired social change?
Explain your what social change is your final goal based on your mission
and theory of change.
What are outcomes derived from your planned activities?
Group your activities into components and explain clearly what social
outcomes or impact will be generated through each of these activity
components. The outcomes described should have both qualitative and
quantitative dimensions. Phase your outcome into quarterly (four times a
year) manner.
How are these outcomes contribute to your ultimate goal?
Describe exactly how the component outcomes would contribute directly
and indirectly to your ultimate desired social change. Which outcome will
contribute the most? Which will have significant contribution in short-term
and long-term?
How do you measure your social impact?
In what way or what technique will you be using in measuring your phased
social outcomes and their contribution to your ultimate goal? What indicator
will you be using in measurement? Would it be continuously measured
monthly or quarterly? Who will measure the impact?
activities outputs outcomes
goal/
objectives
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
THE TEAM
What is your human resource requirement?
Explain exactly what is your solutions needs on human resource. How
many team or position will be needed to make your solution operational?
What knowledge/skills are needed?
What is your advisory and mentorship needs?
Identify your needs for advisers and mentors, especially from the fields
related to your solution. Who among your key stakeholders is needed in
order for you to gain insight into each stakeholder as well as the support.
Who you have already had as your advisers or mentors?
Who are your core team?
Explain your core team and why they are competent to deliver your solution
in solving the problem. What is their education background and work-
experience? What are their unique expertise?
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise concept
FINANCIAL SUMMARY
What is your financial need?
Describe what will be the major cost elements in order for you to achieve
your goal. In most cases, human resources, physical facilities and
technology are key cost elements. Explain what proportion will the budget
will be generally allocated to each component and why it is allocated that
way.
What is your budget?
Providing key budget items based on your cost elements. Break them
down into activity-based costing (based your costing on each activities you
will be doing) as well as those fixed cost that is pretty much the same all
year round such as core staff and rent. Also explain who will be financing
your budget, have you talk to them? Did they agree, in the process of
proposing or reject.
How would you sustain your social enterprise?
What is your strategy in sustaining your enterprise. Would your social
enterprise in the medium to long-run be based on donation, investment,
earn-income or combination of them? What is your unique value that will
convince your donors, investors and consumers (in case of earn-income
strategy) to continuously support your social enterprise?
The concept elements
The problems (opportunity)
Vision and mission
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
The team
Financial summary
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
THE PLAN ELEMENTS
Social enterprise plan consists of many elements that
guide you through the thinking in transforming your
innovative solution into reality.
It basically connects your inputs requirement all the
way to the final impact mission.
Without the plan, you will have a messy project
implementation nightmare even youve somehow got
financed.
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Here you should provide a summary of the plan so that the reader could
understand the key elements of your whole social enterprise right away. You can
actually work on this section after you have finished all other plan elements.
You should outline briefly your
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Your target and how you would access them
Partnership
Finance
Evaluation
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
THE PROBLEM / VISION, MISSION ANDVALUE.
THEORY OF CHANGE, THE SOLUTION, SOCIAL IMPACT
These elements are actually part of the social enterprise concept except for the
VALUE. Therefore, you could use the same or update the information from the
concepts elements.
THE VALUE
How will you behave along the way? Your guiding concepts, beliefs, principles
and underlying philosophy of the enterprise are outlined here. Your value should be
of those principles your enterprise considered as critically important to its culture,
integrity, meaning and day-to-day activities.
For example,
you might be running an enterprise that trains underprivileged youth in IT skills. You
might want to make it a principle to recruit a more diverse group of young
people (from across all ethnic, linguistic and socioeconomic groups). On the other
hand, you might want to promote continuous collaboration amongst your team
members to broaden and enhance your enterprises ability to serve the target
group. Or even make a priority to ensure gender balance in all your operations.
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
TARGET MARKET
Identify and give details on the target group of your social enterprise. They are those who
you will make an impact with. You should exhaustively segment them into differentiated
groups as well as classify which group is primary target and which is secondary.
Information about their size, value, challenge/opportunity and other notes should also be
provided.
Target segments Size Value Challenge/ Validation
Opportunity
Identif y key user segments
that will be benef iting f rom
your social product/service.
Each segmentation should
share similar attributes
(demographic, interest,
needs, lif e-style, age,
income, etc. )
Classif y which segment is
primary or secondary.
Estimate the
size of each
segment in
term of
number of
people,
villages,
population
and so on.
Explain key
needs of each
segment and
why it is
satisf ied by
you. What is
your value to
them?
What are unique
challenge and
opportunity to
each segment.
How do you
overcome or
capitalize them?
Provide evidences
that clearly validate
why there is a real
need in this
segment and/or
that they are
interested in your
or similar social
product/service.
Primary
Segment A xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx
Secondary
Segment B xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx
Segment C xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
COMPETITION
In providing your social products/services, you actually have competitors providing similar
value. Although in social development you are not in cut-throat competition, but by
understanding who are providing similar value to your target groups, it helps you to plan
your positioning compare to others in capturing unique value to better addressing your
target groups needs.
Your competitors include direct competition, substitutable products/services and potential
entrants. Complimentators, or those providing complimentary services are equally important.
Competitors Type Differentiation and competitive strategy
and their services
Identif y key competitors
providing similar,
substitutable or
complimenting
products/services.
Classif y type of
competitors;
direct,
substitution, new
entrant or
complimentary.
Explain why your social products/services are
dif f erent f rom the competitors (through f eature,
unique value, etc..) What can you learn f rom
them? How will you compete or cooperate in
order to maximize the social impact and
sustainability of your social enterprise?
Competitor A Direct xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
provides xxxx services
xxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Competitor B xxxxxx Substitution xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
SOCIAL MARKETING
Any enterprises ultimate clients that are critical to their survival fall into two groups. As in
business enterprise where the two are customers and investors. Social entrepreneurs need to
be equipped with a two pronged marketing approach in serving their target users group and
donors/investors.
Two different types of marketing campaigns have to be designed to satisfy the donors and to
obtain the attention of the target groups.
Both groups have to be told clearly of what they can expect from your social enterprise.
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
Social Marketing
Target-group marketing
Investor/Donor marketing
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
SOCIAL MARKETING
TARGETS Wants & needs Access strategy Relationship building
Identif y key users
segments, donors,
investors that are
crucial in achieving
your mission and
sustainability.
Inf ormation about
their locations should
be provided.
Explain wants & needs of
each group, especially
those that are perceived
as immediate and
important in order to
know what will attract
their attentions.
Explain how will you
access each of these
groups. What
communication channel
will you be using
(traditional media,
internet, event, social
network, etc.) How to
attract them?
TARGET USERS
Target segment 1 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Target segment 2 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
INVESTOR/DONOR
Investor1 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Donor 2 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
General public xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
Once youve access to them.
How will you build trusting
relationship? What technique
will you be using? (visiting,
meeting, emailing, calling,etc.)
In business enterprise, this is
call Customer Relationship
Management (CRM) and
Investor Relations (IR).
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
PARNTERSHIP
As no one can be the best at everything, partners are needed in order to maximize your social
impact,. These are people and organizations that care about your mission. You share the
similar goal to them. They might be in the field longer than you, they might have competency
that you cant match. What is important is to identify and learn how to work together in order
to achieve synergy, i.e. the whole impact of partnership is greater than the sum of its parts.
Partnership only make sense when together you can achieve something that each of you
cant do it alone.
Partner Value contribution Strategic fit Status
Identif y partners that will be
needed in order to
achieving the mission,
especially in term of
competency need.
Explain what value that
each partner bring to the
partnership. What is unique
contribution derive f rom
each partner? Are they
highly competent,
experienced, connected?
Why do your social
enterprise need them.
Why will they need or
want to work with you? Do
your mission/activities f it
with theirs? What is the
value your social
enterprise have f or each
of them? What is the
synergy between you and
them?
Partner1 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Agreed
Partner2 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Contacting
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
Describe the
status of
partnership.
Did you contact
them? Did they
agree to work
as partner?
Do you have
their management
support?
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
TEAM PLAN
Creating a team plan is also part of social enterprise concepts elements. At a social
enterprise plan level, we need to work out some details. Social enterprise consists of
individuals, they are the team that make or break everything. Team plan is among the most
important element in planning as talent is everything. The team plan consist of at least three
parts, the competency plan, the core team and the advisors/board.
COMPETENCY PLAN
Talent needs Position requirement Recruitment Status
Identif y key talents needed
to achieve your mission.
Generally you would need
management talent,
technical talent depending
on which area you are
working on, administrative
talent and so on. You
should assert key talent
characteristic as well, e.g.
managerial talent with
special f ocus on innovation
and partnership building.
Base on your identif ied
talent needs. What
positions and how many
are needed to match those
talents needed? What
background and experience
do you need f or each
position? Which position is
short-term, long-term, part-
time? What kind of attitudes
do you need f or each of
your positions, energetic
yet patient?
How do you plan to recruit
each of the position
required? Where are the
potential recruits stay?
How do you access to
them? What will attract
them?
Talent1 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Recruited
Talent2 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Searching
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
Describe the
recruitment
status, whether
the position is
recruited,
contacted or
still in searching.
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
TEAM PLAN
THE CORE TEAM
Name/Position Talent Background/experience
Provides names and
positions of the core team
members.
What are their talents?
Explain shortly their unique
competency, what they can
do? what are the skills they
are particularly great?
Provides a summary of their background
and experiences. Key important things to
include are education, certif ication,
citizenship, interest, work experiences (part-
time, f ull-time), past unique contribution to
business/social ventures or conf erences,
personal membership/networks. And any
other thing to prove that the person is
uniquely f it f or the task, the mission and the
team as a whole
Name1 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Position: Team lead/director xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Name2 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Position: ICT manager xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
..
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
TEAM PLAN
ADVISORS/BOARD
Name Role Talent Background/experience
Names What are their talents?
Explain shortly their unique
contribution to the social
enterprise as advisor/board
member.
Provides a summary of their background
and experiences. Key important things to
include are education, certif ication,
citizenship, interest, work experiences (part-
time, f ull-time), past unique contribution to
business/social ventures or conf erences,
personal membership/networks. And any
other thing to prove that the person is
uniquely f it the role, the mission and the
team as a whole d
Name1 xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Name2 xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
.
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
Identif y role as
well as
responsibility of
each
advisor/board
members.
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
FINANCIAL PLAN
The planning and management of your money or financials are among the most critical
tasks in determining whether the social enterprise would be cost-effective and sustainable.
There are at least three elements in social enterprise financial plan to consider, namely, the
budget, the fund-raising plan and the revenue-expense projection.
THE BUDGET
Expense category Expense items Cost Total
Identif y key expense
category by grouping all
expense items into various
groups. Generally it
consists of human
resources, physical
f acilities, technologies,
activities and so on.
Outline all expense items.
Try to break them down into
understandable elements.
However, you do not need to
break it down so small that the
expense items f or 15,000 USD
project will take 3 pages long.
Try to explain some items that
other people might f ind it
dif f icult to understand or why it
is really needed. Quantity and
unit inf ormation should also be
provided.
Describe the cost f or each
of the item.
Management Compensation (12m x 2persons) xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 5,000 USD
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
Category2 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
Sum total on
each line.
Make sure
you BOLD the
f inal total sum.
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
FINANCIAL PLAN
FUND RAISING
The activity The expected profit The requirement
Provide key f und-raising
activities. Generally they
are special event and sales
of good/services or other
special revenue such as
those coming f rom interest
rate f rom project saving or
endowment f und.
How much do you expect to
prof it f rom each of the
activity. You can give the
expectation in range, such
as f rom 3,000 to 5,000
dollars.
Explain what are the requirements that must
be satisf ied in order to make each of the
f und-raising activity possible. Most of the
time, it is some initial investment (cost),
partnership with other organizations,
specially competency needs (satisf ied by
hiring a part-time f or the activity) and so on.
Risk f actors such as whether condition or
inability to attract media interest should also
be provided f or each planned f und-raising
activities.
Activity1 3,000- 5,000 USD Partnership with XYZ media, USD1500 cost
Explanation of activity1 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Activity2 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Explanation of activity2 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
..
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
FINANCIAL PLAN
REVENUE-EXPENSE PROJECTION
Month Revenue Expense Balance
Provide total
estimated revenue in
that particular month.
Provide total estimated
expense of that particular
month.
Calculate the net balance
f or each months end. This
is of extreme importance
because it will help you
think through your money
situation, especially when
will be the crisis time!
Dont forget that the balance is
not the revenue minus
expense for each month, you
must include what was left
from the last months net
balance as well.
January 15,000USD Grant 3,000 13,000
Febuary non 2,000 11,000
. . ..
September 7,000 - 1,000*****
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
Alternatively,
if you are not
sure about
when will you
start the
project, you
can use
number
instead of the
months
names.
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
MONITORING & EVALUATION
What cant be measured? What cant be managed? That seems to be one of the most
important modern management mantra. In social enterprise management, measuring your
performance allows you to learn much more about how your idea performs in the real
world.
Monitoring and evaluation are not simply meant for funders or partners, they are most useful to
you. Without measurement, you would not know how to adapt your plan and action in order to
achieve highest impact and sustainability. Continuous evaluation ensures a better learning
ability.
Of course, the process can be difficult and complicated. But at least you should focus on
developing your evaluative logical model.
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
plan
actions
learning
Evaluation
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
MONITORING & EVALUATION
Evaluative logical model
A Logical model (LM) allows you to link your inputs, outputs, activities, outcomes and goals
together. For evaluation purposes, the most important basic task is to be able to logically link
your activities, outputs, short-term outcomes, intermediate outcomes and final goal together.
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
activities outputs
Short-run
outcomes
Intermediate
outcome
Objectives
Ultimate
goal
Describe
your key
objectives
that must be
accomplished
to reach your
ultimate goal.
(based on
your mission)
Describe
your ultimate
goal, i.e.
the desired
social change
you try to
create.
Identif y your
intermediate
outcomes
that must be
accomplished
in order to
achieve the
objectives.
Target should
be developed,
both in term
of quantity
and quality.
Describe what
are the specif ic
immediate
changes in
participants
behavior,
knowledge,
skills,
status and level
of f unctioning.
Target should
be developed,
both in term
of quantity
and quality.

TARGET! TARGET!
Describe what
are the direct
outputs of
activities and
may include
types, levels
and targets of
services to be
delivered.
Describe what
the enterprise
does with the
resources.
Activities are
the
processes,
tools, events,
technology,
and actions
that are
required in
order to
achieve the
mission.
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
MONITORING & EVALUATION
Evaluative logical model
This evaluative logical model provides a clear idea on how your activities link all the way to
your ultimate goal. It also give a clear outcome targeting both in short and medium term.
Therefore, you can easily use this target model as a guide to measure against the actual
performance in order to see what is the difference between the plan and the actual whether
in activities, outputs, short-term outcomes, intermediate outcomes and objectives. You can
monitor and evaluate your project monthly, quarterly, annually or other appropriate timing.
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
activities outputs
short-run
outcomes
Intermediate
outcome
Objectives
Ultimate
goal
Objective1
Objective2
Objective3
GOAL Im-outcomeA
Im-outcomeB
Im-outcomeC
OutcomeA
OutcomeB
OutcomeC
OutcomeD
TARGET! TARGET!
Output1
Output2
Output3
Output4
Output5
Output6
Output7
Group A
Activity1
Activity2
Group B
Activity3
Activity4
Group C
Activity5
Activity6
Activity7
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
MONITORING & EVALUATION
Beyond basic logical model
There are many other evaluative techniques such as a more comprehensive logical
modeling and theory of change, as well as balance score-card that allow you to integratively
measure operations, financial, customers and learning/growth perspectives.
No matter which technique you will be adopting, the key is to be able to answer the following
questions.
What outcomes are you trying to achieve f or your target population?
How will you measure whether youve achieved these outcomes?
What are your perf ormance targets?
What data will you collect and how will you collect it?
How will you use the results f or learning and reporting?
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES
You cannot see into the future with certainty, but you can do the next best thing: identify
potential risks and opportunities that will affect your plan. Try to predict and imagine the
potential risks that could create a minor or major problem for your social enterprise. Also,
think of the opposite, what opportunities might excel the ability to achieve your mission and
scale the impact.
Risk/Opportunity Potential impact Prevention/Capitalizing
Risk1 Extremely dangerous Preventive action1
Xxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Opportunity1 Very high Capitalizing action1
Identify key risk Describe degree Describe how you could prevent
and opportunity of potential impact various risks from happening
that will either (Extreme, very high, as well as how you could
make or break high, medium, low) capitalize or capture the opportunity
your plan. In order to safe-guard and increase
the effectiveness of your plan.
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
IMPLEMENTATION PLAN
An action plan is critical to the success of the social enterprise, no matter how ingenious the
strategy or concepts that are developed. This is because every idea/thought must be
translated into action. Therefore, the implementation plan will assign responsibility of the
tasks and the scheduling of the deliverables and necessary resources. Therefore, it is
important to clearly establishg tasks accountability and a realistic work schedule.
The Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) is a tool that can help you develop estimates,
assign personnel, track progress, and show the scope of project work. Through this tool
complex activity is subdivided into several smaller tasks. This can be continued until the
activity can no longer be subdivided.
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
Work Breakdown Framework
General Definition of Project:
Major Task Subtask 1
Date/Time/Duration
Team assignment
Subtask 2
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
IMPLEMENTATION PLAN
A Gantt chart can tell you what has to be donethe activities or tasks how long each
activity will take in what order each activity has to happen what the costs will be for
each activity who is going to be responsible for the activities
Gantt Charts are the basic bar chart that most people are familiar with.
Pros: Simple to construct, easy to read, an effective way to communicate with team
members what they need to do in a given time frame.
Cons: Difficult to assess the impact of a change in one area on the rest of the
project.
Tasks
Work Plan 2005 - 2006
Responsibility
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
www.ysei.org
Social enterprise plan
FUNDING REQUEST
Provides information on how you are requesting funding from different
donors/investors. You could restate the budget and break it down to the part
requesting for funding from Youth Social Enterprise Fund and other donors/investors.
Status of each request should be described as well.
The plan elements
Executive summary
The problem
Vision, mission, value
Theory of change
The solution
Social impact
Target market
Competition
Social marketing
Partnership
Team plan
Financial plan
Impact monitoring & evaluation
Risk and opportunity
Implementation plan
Funding request
BUDGET CATEGORY BUDGET ITEMS COST REQUEST STATUS
Management Compensation (12m x 2persons) 5,000 USD
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
Category2 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx YSEI Fund Submitted
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
Category3 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
Category4 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx UNDP Committed
.. . ..
.. . ..
TOTAL xxxxxxxxUSD
www.ysei.org
RESOURCES FOR SOCIAL ENTERPRISE PLAN
Business Plan Basics, Robin Jones, Freescale Semiconductor
Conceitos Bsicos de um Plano de Negcio para OSCs, Center for Social Entrepreneurship, Ashoka and
McKinsey & Company
An introduction to business planning for non-profit, Zoe Brookes, The Bridgespan Group (non-profit initiative of
Bain & Co.)
Logic Model Development Guide / Evaluation Handbook, W.K. Kellogg Foundation
Developing a Social Enterprise Business Plan, Stacey Childress, Harvard Business School
Financing Social Enterprise, Michael Chu, HBS Business Plan Contest & Social Enterprise Club
A BRIEF TUTORIAL ON BUSINESS PLANNING FOR NONPROFIT ENTERPRISE, Cynthia W. Massarsky
Theory of change as a tool for strategic planning, Andrea A. Anderson, The Aspen Institute
Theory of change, guided example: PROJECT SUPERWOMEN, ActKnowledge and the Aspen Institute

You might also like