Hybridorganisations embedded in resource-poor contexts:
Abstract
Purpose– This paper aims to contribute to research on hybrid organizations operating within the
information and communication technology for development paradigm to foster socio-economic inclusion
through the capacity building of marginalized individual youth to enable their entry and participation in the
formal labour market.
Design/methodology/approach– Using a qualitative research design, the authors investigated impact
sourcing service providers and their beneficiaries to unpack how hybrid organizations fulfil their social
mission and to provide a nuanced understanding of their needed capabilities. Data triangulation through
document analysis, participant observation and semi-structured interviews were conducted for the empirical
Findings’ robustness and in-depth analysis.
Findings– This paper illuminates how hybrids strived to build beneficiaries’ capabilities through
empirically grounded approaches of “standardized” and “individualized” skills development, which were
strongly connected to the perceived capabilities among the beneficiaries. Organizations that practiced the
“individualized” approach imparted technical knowledge and, depending on individual needs, relevant social
skills. Critically, the empirical findings call into question the effectiveness of the scalability model, as the
results showed that the creation of standardized, low-skilled and low-paid jobs contradicts the idealized self
help status that employment advocates. In addition, the findings underline the central role of constant
experimentation, resilience and organisational learning in revamping capabilities of hybrid organisations.
Remarkably, compared to organisations committed to the “standardised” technical competency path, the
results underscored the difficulties that organisations taking an “individualised approach face in developing
organisational capabilities for their financial sustainability. Further, organisations engaged in standardised”
skills development were found to readapt their business model to the economic value and kept the wording of
dual mission asa narrative.
Originality/value– The paper makes a conceptual and empirical contribution bringing together two
separately developed literature strands– the organisational capability approach and– the individual
capability approach, to enhance a more profound understanding of how both capabilities are connected
to each other in the dual-mission orientation of hybrids embedded in resource-poor environments,
global value chains, Global South, hybrid organisations, organisational and individual capability
building.