From margins to mainstream: The narrative dilemma in scaling social ventures

成果类型:
Article; Early Access
署名作者:
Jue-Rajasingh, Diana; Koo, Wesley W.
署名单位:
Rice University; Johns Hopkins University
刊物名称:
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL
ISSN/ISSBN:
0143-2095
DOI:
10.1002/smj.3737
发表日期:
2025
关键词:
growth strategy origin stories Rural social ventures stigma transfer
摘要:
Research summaryAs social ventures expand beyond their original marginalized customers, they face demand-side limitations to scale. This study examines how a common tool for managing strategic change - origin stories - affects non-marginalized customers' responses. In a survey-based field experiment with an Indian feminine hygiene company that initially served rural customers but now targets urban customers, we found that telling origin stories reduced urban customers' purchase intentions compared to not telling them. This result appears driven by stigma transfer: non-marginalized customers avoided stigma by not purchasing products associated with stigmatized groups. However, when framed around social responsibility, the origin story increased non-purchase support (e.g., joining the mailing list). Because it remains unclear whether the increased support is temporary or sustained, social ventures must weigh such gains against potential declines in purchases as they scale.Managerial summaryHow can social ventures expand beyond marginalized communities? A survey-based field experiment with an Indian feminine hygiene company reveals that sharing its origin story with urban, non-marginalized customers reduced purchase intentions. This response was likely due to stigma transfer, where urban customers avoided stigma by distancing themselves from products associated with rural users. However, framing the story around social responsibility increased mailing list subscriptions. An important takeaway for social ventures is that origin stories about marginalized customers may deter mainstream purchases. Since it remains unclear whether non-purchase engagement reflects symbolic action or sustained interest, social ventures must weigh whether the potential gains meaningfully offset purchase losses when telling origin stories to new customers.