Subject category:
Ethics and Social Responsibility
Published by:
International Institute for Management Development (IMD)
Version: 02.05.2022
Revision date: 17-May-2022
Length: 21 pages
Data source: Field research
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https://casecent.re/p/182035
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Abstract
Angaza's story is not a typical solar light story, but the story of a female social entrepreneur with a for-profit Silicon Valley mindset transforming a social enterprise from a hardware to a software business model. It is about pivots, changing value propositions, and new products and business models as Angaza evolves to escalate social impact while still making money. Angaza began as a solar-light company founded in 2010 by Stanford graduate Lesley Silverthorn Marincola to address energy poverty in rural off-grid communities. In her quest to address affordability, Lesley realized that the main problem confronting rural off-grid communities was not the price of solar lights per se, but finding a way to spread payments over time. In 2012, Angaza pivoted from being a solar-light producer to a software provider offering pay-as-you-go (PAYG) metering and monitoring technology to players in the solar-light ecosystem - manufacturers, distributors and mobile network operators. The PAYG technology allowed end consumers to buy solar-light products by paying small amounts over time, until they eventually owned them outright. At the end of the case, students are confronted with a very real dilemma facing the founder and leadership team of many start-ups, including Angaza - what are the next opportunities for the company? Is it further scaling (if so, scaling up or deep), a pivot (into data), or an exit (sell the business)?
Hear from the authors
During their award presentation in 2022 the case authors shared insights into writing and teaching this case.
Educators, trainers and PhD students with teaching responsibility can login to view the video interview.
Time period
The events covered by this case took place in 2010-2019.Geographical setting
Region:
World/global
Countries:
United States; Kenya
Featured company
Angaza
Employees:
51-200
Industry:
Computers; Information technology
Featured protagonist
- (female)
About
Abstract
Angaza's story is not a typical solar light story, but the story of a female social entrepreneur with a for-profit Silicon Valley mindset transforming a social enterprise from a hardware to a software business model. It is about pivots, changing value propositions, and new products and business models as Angaza evolves to escalate social impact while still making money. Angaza began as a solar-light company founded in 2010 by Stanford graduate Lesley Silverthorn Marincola to address energy poverty in rural off-grid communities. In her quest to address affordability, Lesley realized that the main problem confronting rural off-grid communities was not the price of solar lights per se, but finding a way to spread payments over time. In 2012, Angaza pivoted from being a solar-light producer to a software provider offering pay-as-you-go (PAYG) metering and monitoring technology to players in the solar-light ecosystem - manufacturers, distributors and mobile network operators. The PAYG technology allowed end consumers to buy solar-light products by paying small amounts over time, until they eventually owned them outright. At the end of the case, students are confronted with a very real dilemma facing the founder and leadership team of many start-ups, including Angaza - what are the next opportunities for the company? Is it further scaling (if so, scaling up or deep), a pivot (into data), or an exit (sell the business)?
Hear from the authors
During their award presentation in 2022 the case authors shared insights into writing and teaching this case.
Educators, trainers and PhD students with teaching responsibility can login to view the video interview.
Settings
Time period
The events covered by this case took place in 2010-2019.Geographical setting
Region:
World/global
Countries:
United States; Kenya
Featured company
Angaza
Employees:
51-200
Industry:
Computers; Information technology
Featured protagonist
- (female)