Kingdom Strategist » geography http://www.kingdomstrategist.com Christ Centered | Spirit Led | Homeward Bound Wed, 17 Aug 2011 13:59:57 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.1 Business as Mission Methodology – Business Organization and Resource Coordination (part 2) http://www.kingdomstrategist.com/business-as-mission-methodology-part-2/ http://www.kingdomstrategist.com/business-as-mission-methodology-part-2/#comments Fri, 05 Feb 2010 15:17:10 +0000 Kevin Ring http://www.ecgroup-intl.com/consulting/?p=27 The following is another excerpt from the BAM Survey 2007 Report. The BAM Survey 2007 Report is an in-depth assessment of the state of the Business as Mission movement based on survey responses from 497 people in 38 countries. You can purchase an electronic copy of the BAM Survey 2007 Report for $14.99 here.


Business as Mission movement

Creating Eternal Value through Strategic Management

Business as Mission Methodology – BAM Business Organization and Resource Coordination (part 2)

Impact of Company/Business Attributes on Business as Mission Objectives

Research suggests that links exist between respondents’ perceptions of how different attributes of an organization (development stage, size, and geographic focus) impact BAM goals (Exhibit 7). [1]
(Note: The colored bars on the scale reflects specific opinions pertaining to General Businesses (not explicitly BAM) [yellow], Missions Organizations [red], and Business as Mission Companies [blue], respectively.)

Key Insights:

Development stage (7.1-3)

  • Respondents believe that start-up companies are more influential than established (95 percent agree start-up BAM companies are better; 87 percent agree start-up businesses are better). (7.1 and 7.2)
  • The preference for start-up missions organizations is not as significant (only 64 percent agree). (7.3)
  • Development stage is strongly linked to all Business as Mission objectives, with the greatest correlation with building the economy and blessing the nation.
  • Implication: the newness of an organization creates perceived benefits that are valued by the Business as Mission movement. Primary among these is the creation of new value in the form of products/service enhancements, additional wealth, and jobs in the economy. Start-up companies could also be assumed to be more dynamic and flexible which theoretically would make it easier for the company to incorporate BAM goals. Of course there is a trade off between the benefits of newness and the efficiencies and learning that a company gains as it develops. It makes sense that respondents seem to favor the benefits of maturity more for traditional missions organizations given that missions organizations do not create as much market value to offset early stage inefficiencies.

  • The development stage of a missions organization is not correlated to profitability or the ability to provide access to locations. (7.3)
  • The development stage of a company (both BAM and regular) is negatively linked with the ability to provide access to locations. (7.1 and 7.2)
  • Implication: the relationship between a company’s development stage and “Provides access to many locations” may result from closed-access countries valuing existing companies more than entrepreneurial efforts. The established size and structure of a mature business may lessen the government’s fear of exploitation.

Size (7.4-6)

  • Respondents prefer large Business as Mission efforts to micro-enterprise.[2] (7.4)
  • In general, respondents favor large companies over small; however the preference is not as pronounced as it is for BAM companies. (7.5)
  • Respondents prefer small missions organizations over large. (7.6)
  • A focus on micro-enterprise is believed to limit the benefits that profit can create for the kingdom. Additionally, respondents associate micro-enterprise with the goal of providing access. (7.4)
  • Larger companies are perceived to have a greater impact on building the local economy and blessing the nation. Larger companies are also perceived to have a negative impact on ability to evangelize and focus on developing nations. (7.5)
  • Large companies are negatively correlated with providing access to many locations while large missions organizations are positively correlated. (7.5 and 7.6)
  • Implication: the preferences exhibited toward organization size highlight that size is proportional to perceived impact within a host country. However, the BAM movement strives to maintain a balance regarding size because of the perceived trade-off between size and ability to evangelize. The results suggest that there is a size at which it becomes more difficult for a BAM company to effectively evangelize. This belief (if validated) will greatly influence the goals set by the Business as Mission movement in terms of growth targets. Similarly, respondents may recognize that some developing nations or remote regions do not have the infrastructure needed to support larger companies, which tempers size preferences.

Geographic focus (7.7-9)

  • Respondents overwhelmingly embrace the global focus of the Business as Mission movement. (7.7)
  • Global presence is believed to impact all Business as Mission objectives. The biggest impact is believed to be on profitability and ability to build the local economy.
  • Global presence is negatively correlated with providing access to many locations.
  • Implication: the results reinforce the central role that globalization plays in creating opportunities for Christians to further the kingdom through Business as Mission. The negative correlation between global focus and “Provides access to many locations” most likely is a consequence of reactions to the simplification of Business as Mission as a means for overcoming prohibitions against missionaries in closed countries.


[1] For all three attributes (development stage, size, and geographic focus), three questions were asked to gauge opinions on businesses (not explicitly BAM), missions organizations, and Business as Mission companies. Each question represented one opinion as superior to an alternative opinion and respondents were asked to rate the extent that they agreed/disagreed.

[2] The two primary differences between Business as Mission and micro-enterprise in view are size of operations (generally measured in revenue) and funding sources (micro-enterprise is typically donor dependent).

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