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Funding the story of hybrid ventures: Crowdfunder lending preferences and linguistic hybridity
Authors:Todd W. Moss  Maija Renko  Emily Block  Moriah Meyskens
Affiliation:1. Whitman School of Management, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244, United States;2. College of Business, University of Illinois-Chicago, Chicago, IL 60607, United States;3. Alberta School of Business, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2R6, Canada;4. Management Department, School of Business, University of San Diego, San Diego, CA 92110, United States
Abstract:Prosocial crowdfunding platforms are venues for individual lenders to allocate resources to ventures that specifically pursue economic and social value. In a setting where hybridity is expected, do crowdfunders respond positively to category-spanning ventures, or do they prefer to fund ventures that are more clearly situated within a single category? Drawing on theory rooted in category membership and spanning, our hypotheses test whether prosocial crowdfunding lenders will more quickly allocate resources to hybrid microenterprises that communicate their hybridity, or to those that communicate a single one of their dual aims. Our study demonstrates that even in such a setting, crowdfunders lend more quickly to microenterprises that position themselves within a single linguistic category in which the social is emphasized over the economic. This suggests that how hybrid organizations position themselves in their linguistic narratives has a significant impact on resource allocation by external prosocial audiences.
Keywords:Hybrid organizations  Prosocial organizing  Categories  Crowdfunding  Social entrepreneurship
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