Social enterprise: Whats in a name?
Tara Anderson
Tara Anderson examines some of the myths around defining social enterprise and why they are problematic.
By their nature, definitions are exclusionary
Definitions by nature are exclusionary and that?s a good thing. It means they become uniting because they allow us to stand up loud and proud and say - this is who we are! We are the businesses that specifically exist for good - how exciting is that?! If you?re not a social enterprise and create impact in a different way, then we respect and applaud you! We need˜all˜the impact organisations we can get in the economy - cooperatives, First Nations businesses, B Corps, charities etc. When we conflate these different impact types, we reduce the value and uniqueness of all of them. Rather than attempting to merge these different impact models into an amorphous category of ?impact?, let?s join forces, collaborate, celebrate the unique contribution of each and collectively build a wellbeing economy. And if you?re not yet a social enterprise but want to be - either a charity converting to build trade activity, or a business looking to embed purpose, then we applaud you too! We?re here for you on the journey and look forward to you becoming a social enterprise when you?re ready.Without a special legal form, how can you define it?
Yes, there isn?t a specific legal structure that defines a social enterprise. But that?s one of the fabulous things about them ? they can take any form. Because it?s not about what social enterprise˜is˜(i.e., a legal structure), it?s about what does enterprise˜does˜(it?s a business model). And that doesn?t mean we can?t define it. While there may be further legal forms created in Australia, similar to the Community Interest Company model in the UK, the important point is that multiple are needed, because social enterprises are diverse. The shared definition is what provides the common ground across any legal structure.We can?t agree on a definition, so˜isn?t it OK to have many?
In Australia, we do have an inclusive definition of social enterprise. It was first developed through the˜Finding Australia?s Social Enterprise Sector (FASES)˜research in 2010. Then it was operationalised by Social Traders over five years of working directly with the sector, to ensure the definition was inclusive of˜all˜social enterprises - any structure, any stage of development, any impact model. The definition is very simple:- A primary social, cultural or environmental purpose.
- A substantial proportion of income through trade.
- Investing efforts and resources into purpose so public benefit outweighs private benefit.