ABSTRACT
The dual financial and social missions of hybrid social ventures can make it difficult for founders to obtain the financial investments needed to launch their startup. In response, founders may use various bricolage strategies to obtain funding. This study explores differences in financing strategies between hybrid social ventures and their non-profit and for-profit counterparts. As hypothesized in this study, social ventures earn higher revenue and more external equity than non-profit ventures, and less of both kinds of funding than for-profit ventures. The opposite is true for philanthropic support. Results are more nuanced for debt and ‘bootstrapping’ finance strategies related to founders’ own investments. While these findings support and contradict previous research in different areas, they also suggest that the nature of hybridity may force bricolage to interact with traditional finance theories to better explain the nature of hybrid venture financing.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank members of the Global Accelerator Learning Initiative for collecting and cleaning the dataset that was used for the analysis of this study.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Data availability statement
The data supporting the results and analyses presented in this paper can be found on the publicly available Global Accelerator Learning Initiative (GALI) website https://www.galidata.org/data-request/