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The Centre for Management Practice

Sisters in Solidarity: Breaking the Bondage of Marginalised Women in India

Sisters in Solidarity: Breaking the Bondage of Marginalised Women in India

By: Saumya Sindhwani , Lakshmi Appasamy
Discipline: Community Relation , Competitive Strategy , Growth Strategy , Social Enterprise , Social Enterprise and Ethics

Description

Set in November 2015, the case follows Sisters in Solidarity (SiS), a social enterprise established to emancipate marginalised women in Lucknow, India. SIS was an offshoot of Study Hall Education Foundation (SHEF), a non-profit organisation that promoted feminist pedagogy in the educational establishments under its wings. SHEF also provided high quality education to underprivileged girls from the slum areas through the Prerna Girls School (PGS). The mothers of PGS students, deprived of economic opportunities due to lack of skills and education, suffered in a vicious cycle of poverty, domestic abuse and oppression. Observing the positive outcomes that education and employability brought about in the lives of their daughters, these mothers approached SHEF for help.

Shibani Sahni, daughter of SHEF’s founder, spearheaded the establishment of SiS, which aimed to emancipate the women by improving their employability through vocational training. The enterprise had three business units—DiDi’s Foods, DiDi’s Driving and DiDi’s Creations. However, while the food unit of SIS had evolved into a self-sustaining and profitable unit and the driving unit was a cost neutral vertical integration that helped SiS achieve operational efficiency, the creations unit (the crafts and fashions business) was struggling and unprofitable.

Sahni had to overhaul the business strategy of DiDi’s Creations and turn the unit around. Resources were stretched; she would have to revisit all the business segments in the portfolio to sustain profitability and growth. More importantly in order to support more beneficiaries, SiS would have to scale up, but Sahni must assess the organisational readiness for this to take place.

This case offers an opportunity to learn about revenue growth strategies, profitability evaluation and divestment decisions and various expansion strategies available for a social enterprise. The case would also be helpful in understanding the elements of sustainability and scalability essential for social enterprise.

Inspection copies and teaching notes are available for university faculty. To receive an inspection copy and teaching note, please email cmpshop [at] smu.edu.sg with your registered faculty email ID and a link to your contact information on the faculty directory at your university as verification. An inspection copy and teaching note will then be sent to your faculty email account.

Download Information

SMU Faculty/Staff can download the case & teaching note on iNet with your SMU login ID & Password via the following links:

· The Case (SMU-17-0005)

· Teaching Note (SMU-17-0005TN)

For purchase of the case and supplementary materials via The Case Centre, please access the following links:

· The Case (SMU-17-0005)

· Teaching Note (SMU-17-0005TN)

For purchase of the case and supplementary materials via Harvard Business Publishing, please access the following links:

· The Case (SMU-17-0005)

· Teaching Note (SMU-17-0005TN)

Industry

NGO

Temporal Coverage

2017

Year Completed

2017

Education Level

Executive
Postgraduate
Undergraduate

Data Source

Field Research

Geographic Coverage

India

Published Date

Price

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