“…Column (3) in Row (2) deals with situations involving high creative or absolute uncertainty and high ex post information asymmetry, such as those where it is unclear how a social problem may best be solved. In such cases, the comparatively efficient governance arrangements may be social entrepreneurship (Martin & Osberg, 2007;Santos, 2012;Zahra, Rawhouser, Bhawe, Neubaum, & Hayton, 2008), that is, initiatives that develop new technologies and business models combining social and business objectives (Battilana & Lee, 2014;Fosfuri, Giarratana, & Roca, 2016) in order to benefit disenfranchised stakeholders and be financially rewarded for doing so, for example, Method products, or Drinkwell (a startup that offers villagers in South Asia a low-cost system to purify well water). In such cases, the fact that the social mission is an explicit part of the firm's strategy, often from its very inception, serves as a credible commitment to playing a fiduciary role, as does the adoption of hybrid regulatory forms such as benefit corporations.…”