In both the U.S. and UK, you can set up your social enterprise as either a non-profit/charity or a for-profit business, such as a sole proprietorship or LLC. In the UK, however, you can also choose to set it ups a Community Interest Company (CIC).
Motivations & Journey
Purpose over Profit - The Triple Bottom Line
Board & Governance structure
Income generation methods
Staffing Structure
Intellectual Property
The biggest difference between a for-profit business and a social enterprise is motivation. The social entrepreneur is motivated by purpose over profit. A social enterprise can still be profitable, but the purpose or positive impact is the primary motivation. So, while a traditional, for-profit business has one bottom line (to increase profit), a social enterprise has a Triple Bottom Line.
“The triple bottom line is a business concept that posits firms should commit to measuring their social and environmental impact—in addition to their financial performance—rather than solely focusing on generating profit, or the standard “bottom line.” It can be broken down into “three Ps”: profit, people, and the planet.”