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The Social and Commercial Two-Step
Hosted by Lindsay Clinton (December 2009)

Are dual structures the best way to do this dance?
The desire to combine social and commercial in the pursuit of an outcome has led to creative ways to structure an enterprise—often known as a hybrid model or dual structure, because it combines a nonprofit arm with a for-profit arm. The for-profit allows an enterprise to facilitate investment, while the nonprofit can facilitate grant capital and provide non profit-making services to a community.
While hybrid structures are innovative, they are, in essence, stopgap measures to get around the fact that in most countries, there is no legal label that meets the needs of an entity that exists to provide social good and yet makes a profit.
However, the legal system is catching up in some countries: Community Interest Companies (CIC) in the UK enable a proprietor to run a business for the benefit of the community rather than for the benefit of the owners of the company. In the US, a few states have adopted a low profit, limited liability company status or l3c, which is unique because it lets companies facilitate investments while simplifying compliance with IRS rules for PRIs (Program Related Investments). There’s also the B Corp movement, which has no legal ramifications yet (except in Philadelphia!), but serves as a “trustmark” and signifies social responsibility to customers.
While the US and UK are on the cutting edge of the blended value business space, most countries have to work with what they’ve got. As a result, more and more entrepreneurs are choosing to launch both a nonprofit and a for-profit to get the best of both models. But this choice is not without its challenges, including questions about branding, positioning to investors and donors, competing work cultures between the for-profit and nonprofit, transparency, and more.
We’d like to explore elements of hybrid ventures with you over the next few weeks, and have posed the following questions.
- Is splitting a venture into for-profit and non-profit actually just a crafty way of getting around the fact that your venture is NOT economically self-sufficient?
- Is it truly possible for a profit-making company to separate itself from its nonprofit counterpart?
- Might it be better from a transparency standpoint as well as a community-building standpoint to find an NGO partner with a similar mission that is unaffiliated with your company?
- Where do cooperative business structures fit into this system?
And, here’s the biggie, the elephant in the room, about hybrid legal forms:
- Could the creation of new legal structures actually slow down real large-scale change in mainstream business? Does a new structure—take the l3c for example—take away the incentive for large corporations to change the way they work?
Join Lindsay Clinton, with Intellecap in Mumbai, in the conversation.


Some Initial Thoughts
Here are a copule of initial thoughts:
1. CIC's have not been broadly adopted (much to everyone's chagrin). Largely, the reason seems to be a retisence on the part of entreprenuers to allow some government entity to determine what does and does not qualify. In fact, the entire filling process for the CIC seems cumbersome and does not necessarily promote transparency in the marketplace.
2. The L3C has been sweeping the country, but I wonder about its worth as well. First, it addresses a single issue -- funding. It does not address mission anchor, or transparency, or governance issues, all of which become (or can become) serious friction points in the context of mixing mission and money. In addition, the LLC (or L3C) form is not favored by the markets generally, which limits the capital that might flow to these enterprises. Finally, the proposed benefit (the expedited PRI process) has not yet been realized and probably will not until a private letter ruling issues.
In the meantime, one has to wonder whether the L3C craze is distracting legislatures from tackling some of the bigger issues and, possibly, using the once (in a few years) opportunity to get the full attention of a legislative effort on something that may not ultimately make much difference.
3. As you note, the B Corp is a certification process, not a form. Although it is a mark needed to distinguish between who is actually doing good and who is just doing good marketing, it does not address the other issues.
In my next post, I will put forth 5 friction points that I believe must be addressed if we are to achieve a "hybrid" form that works for the social enterpreneur.
Then, if your discussion thread stays open that long, I will publish here the final proposal from the 15-month effort that is concluding in California to attempt to address those friction points in the form of a legislative proposal.
Stay tuned.