Mate or menace? Exploring organizational identity threats in nonprofit-business partnerships
Abstract
Nonprofit organizations frequently engage in partnerships with profit-oriented businesses to fulfill their goals and social mission. Although nonprofit-business partnerships can benefit both parties, they are a potential source of intra-organizational controversy and conflict, especially when social objectives clash with business interests. An increasingly recognized risk of nonprofit-business partnerships lies in organizational identity threats. Adopting a sensemaking perspective, we investigate how nonprofit members make sense of nonprofit-business partnerships and how these appraisal processes influence whether they perceive these inter-organizational partnerships as organizational identity threats. Our qualitative study draws on semi-structured interviews and shows that nonprofit members’ evaluations of partnership congruence (i.e., the perceived fit of a partnership with members’ organizational identity expectations) and partnership relevance (i.e., the perceived meaning of a partnership for an organization’s identity) influence whether they perceive partnerships as organizational identity threats. In doing so, we extend research on organizational identity threats (and opportunities) of nonprofit-business partnerships.
Citation
Kandel , I , Baluch , A M & Piening , E P 2023 , ' Mate or menace? Exploring organizational identity threats in nonprofit-business partnerships ' , Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly , vol. OnlineFirst . https://doi.org/10.1177/08997640231210780
Publication
Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0899-7640Type
Journal article
Collections
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