One for one (business model)

One for one (also known as "buy-one give-one") is a social entrepreneurship business model reputedly developed by Blake Mycoskie of TOMS Shoes, in which one needed item is given away for each item purchased.[1]

History

The One for One business model is largely credited to TOMS Shoes. Founded by Blake Mycoskie in 2006, TOMS Shoes donates one pair of shoes to a child in a developing country for each pair sold to consumers.[2] Based on the success of TOMS Shoes, other companies began following the business model. Warby Parker began donating eyeglasses to people in need while companies like Soapbox Soaps and Two Degrees Food employ the model to help with poor hygiene and hunger.[2]

Concept

The One for One model is a viable way to create commercial and social value. A study conducted by Stanford Social Innovation Review stated that trends in consumer behavior that put high values on social issues are a way for companies to leverage their competencies for a social cause.[2] It also showed that market saturation and adoption by larger companies make it more difficult for consumers to differentiate between competing companies and also cause them to question the authenticity of the concept.[2] It was also criticized by Fast Company as only being a band-aid in addressing social change and that companies use it as "selling ego boosts disguised as social change."[3]

gollark: I'm not certain you can go around assuming wide-ranging patterns from three dragons.
gollark: __R A T I O S__or something.
gollark: Ah, randomness, most annoying thing in the universe, except for the more annoying things.
gollark: Maybe there's actually a prize bubble. Who knows.
gollark: People pay lots for, say, lineage projects, despite them not often being too rare.

References

  1. Joyner, April (7 April 2014). "Beyond Buy-One-Give-One Retail". The New Yorker. Retrieved 26 October 2017.
  2. Marquis, Christopher; Park, Andrew (2014). "Inside the Buy One Give One Model" (PDF). Stanford Social Innovation Review. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  3. Janzer, Cinnamon; Weinstein, Lauren (17 November 2015). "The Buy-One-Give-One Model Might Make You Feel Good, But It Doesn't Make The World Better". Fast Company. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
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