The Spinach King’s social enterprise scaling strategy during and post COVID-19 pandemic
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Date
Authors
Mamabolo, Anastacia
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Emerald
Abstract
LEARNING OUTCOMES : Analyse a social business model; explain the scaling motives in a social enterprise; identify and defend scaling strategies in a social enterprise; and use the social enterprise scaling barrier model to evaluate factors that contribute to scaling failure and suggest ways to address the identified barriers.
CASE OVERVIEW/SYNOPSIS : Lufefe Nomjana, a Cape Town-based social entrepreneur, decided in 2011 to launch a social enterprise that promotes an affordable but healthy lifestyle by baking and selling spinach bread at a low cost. Nomjana combined a for-profit business venture with the social aspect of providing healthy products at a cost people can afford. When the lockdown was implemented in South Africa in March 2020, he still grew his business despite the strict restrictions. Inspired by the growth of the enterprise, in August 2020, and at the height of the national lockdown necessitated by the Covid-19 pandemic, Nomjana decided to open a company-owned outlet in Johannesburg miles away from the Cape. However, the launch of this company-owned outlet was not successful. The failure of the Johannesburg outlet left him with a dilemma, as he had planned to scale up his enterprise into other cities in South Africa. Launching his business in Cape Town had not been a challenge, but he struggled to launch outlets of his social enterprise outside of the Western Cape Province.
COMPLEXITY ACADEMIC LEVEL : Social Entrepreneurship, Commercial Entrepreneurship and Business Management at the Postgraduate Diploma and Masters level.
Description
Keywords
Social enterprises, Entrepreneurship, Value creation, Case study
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Mamabolo, A. (2022), "The Spinach King’s social enterprise scaling strategy during and post Covid-19 pandemic", Emerald Emerging Markets Case Studies, Vol. 12 No. 1. https://doi.org/10.1108/EEMCS-06-2021-0195.