1. Introduction
There are many definitions of collaborative economy or collaborative consumption [
1]. For this paper, collaborative economy is a business model in which activities are facilitated though collaborative platforms that create a market for the temporary use of goods or services often offered by individuals or a mediator [
2]. It includes all those models of economic exchange in which there is communication between equals, either between organizations or individuals, with or without economic consideration [
3,
4]. Now, for an activity to be considered as collaborative economy, it requires the interaction of three actors: (a) a platform provider who allows the exchange, (b) a service provider, and (c) a client who seeks access to assets and consumes [
4,
5].
The growth of sharing models is also having an increasingly relevant impact on the revenues captured by traditional companies, and it is as an alternative to the traditional economy because of advantages such as cost reductions obtained by customers or users through the services of the collaborative economy companies [
4] due to increments in efficiency through better access and use of resources [
6], their great scalability potential [
7], and also the client’s willingness to socialize with service providers (among peers) or with other users who share the platform [
8,
9]. Another advantage is that the consumer is given the opportunity to enjoy a particular good without having to buy it [
7,
10,
11], which implies less risk and responsibility [
5].
However, all these benefits are overshadowed by certain aspects of the collaborative economy, such as the lack of distribution of wealth among those who produce it, precarious working conditions [
12], legal and tax loopholes, poor working conditions, etc. [
13]. In light of this reality, it is necessary to know if the more successful companies can actually continue their operations without reformulating their business models towards more social perspectives [
7] by conjoining both the interests of users and the general interest with the application of the principles of solidarity and responsibility [
14]; that is, whether it is possible for social companies and collaborative companies to converge in a company that has the best of both sides [
15] and whether this collaborative–social perspective can allow for the development of quality products and services, which permit a sustainable position to be maintained over time.
About the social economy, the main definition considered for this paper is” a group of organizations that do not belong to the public sector, have a democratic governance with equal rights and obligations of its members, and practice a particular regime of ownership and distribution of benefits, using surpluses to expand the entity and improve the services provided to its partners and society. These companies can be in these families: cooperatives, mutual, associations, and foundations” [
16].
One approach to the collaborative economy and the social economy is proposed in platform cooperativism [
17], but there are other collaborative companies that take the form of a social economy without being a cooperative. Perhaps then we can discover a new type of company? But how are these companies? Can a collaborative company be social? Can a collaborative company only be social if it is a cooperative? Can a social and collaborative company compete with other companies in a global market? What must workers/partners do in terms of governance to ensure long-term sustainability? How can this kind of company compete in a collaborative environment with quality products and services?
To answer these kinds of questions, the present paper’s objectives are to conduct a literature review to get to know collaborative and social companies, to propose a new concept for a social collaborative company, to understand how this type of company considers these two realities, and finally to propose a quality model for the social collaborative companies validated by experts from field of both collaborative and social economy, to offer guidance to help to be more sustainable by delivering quality products and services.
2. Convergence of the Collaborative Economy and the Social Economy
It is necessary to compare the collaborative economy and the social economy and observe how they can complement each other and where they can be found. Starting with the collaborative economy, it has positive expectations beyond financial aspects, such as efficiency derived from the use of underutilized resources as a potential solution to income inequality [
6], the possibility of citizens becoming small-scale economic agents capable of generating and exchanging value with other citizens directly [
6,
17], greater availability of and more qualified workers, more personal connections between users [
18], and many sectors that can take advantage of this new business model [
7].
However, not all is good in a collaborative economy; there are some grey aspects such as concentrated investments, the existence of dominant players in some sectors [
17], and the value generated not always being shared with the users who helped create it [
17] (reducing marginal costs, investing, growing fast, selling, and moving forward [
6], and lack of clarity regarding where taxes must be paid). In some cases, activity is not regulated by law [
19], worker’s rights could be threatened [
20], and one wonders what would happen if massive information is captured on multiple platforms [
19].
Social economy refers to the economic activities of a society seeking economic democracy associated with social utility [
21]. In this context, social enterprises are aimed at the social benefit of the community or its partners, and this mission is at the center of the management [
22], for whom profit is often secondary. They have management autonomy with respect to public powers, and the decision-making process is democratic (one person one vote). Adherence is voluntary, and there are equal rights and obligations among the partners [
15]. There is a particular regime of ownership and distribution of benefits, with surpluses being used to expand the entity and improve the services provided to its members and the community in general [
23]. The organization emphasizes restrictions on the private appropriation of results and on the constitution of collective patrimony [
15,
22].
There seems to be a meeting point between the social economy and the collaborative economy in platform cooperativism [
24]. In this is found a participatory decision-making that distances the power of decisions from investors and benefits favoring a collective heritage [
25]; all this is combined in the execution towards a platform [
26]. There are also collaborative companies that, without being explicitly cooperative, fit within the principles of the social economy [
22]. This type of company attempts to have its activity benefit many and not a few [
27], reducing inequalities and contributing to the distribution of benefits to society [
28]. This approach includes the collective and community aspect [
29] as well as the need for trust and participation to carry out the activity and extends the scope of the collaborative economy beyond information and communication technologies, including exchanges and collaboration in the local environment [
18]. It is also oriented towards reformulating concepts such as innovation and efficiency to develop mechanisms that allow for putting the person and their community at the center of the activity [
24].
Companies that are collaborative and social need bear in mind that, from the collaborative point of view, it is necessary to make visible the positive consequences that they generate and make social sense of the activity that they carry out [
22], and from the social side, must be able to face the difficulties related to the participative style of governance and not neglect the efficiency and sustainability of the organization [
26] in addition to the achievement of social goals [
12]. The
Table 1 presents a comparison between social and collaborative companies with respect to two aspects:
3. A Social Collaborative Company Definition and Its Features
After reviewing the characteristics of both economies and considering the common and different points found in the literature review, such as social companies belonging to the private sector [
24], considering the primacy of the person and the corporate purpose over capital [
15], operating democratically with equal rights and obligations for partners [
23], aiming to have a positive impact on society by taking into account the principles of solidarity and responsibility [
30], using their surpluses to achieve objectives for their own sustainable development [
23,
27], and requiring the interaction of three actors (a platform provider (website or app), a provider of goods or services, and those seeking access to those goods and services [
4,
5]), the following is proposed as a definition for the new concept of a
social collaborative company (SCC):
“A social collaborative company is a private organization that is dedicated to promoting the exchange between people to sell or share products and/or services through a digital platform (website or app), for profit or not, whose explicit purpose with respect to its activity is to have a positive impact on the community. The company places the importance of the person before capital, with management decision-making processes being undertaken in a democratic way among its partners. It uses the outcome of economic performance (surplus) for the economic benefit of those who contribute to creating value and for the sustainable development of the company”.
Based on the main features of collaborative companies such as the use of the internet, interconnection between groups of people and/or assets, access to the use of underused assets [
31], the achievement of significant interactions (trust), having an inclusive and global character [
12], and considering the social collaborative company definition in this paper, the following characteristics for an SCC can be established in the
Table 2.
It is important to clarify that for this paper, the following are not considered social collaborative companies: G2G (government to government), in which public organizations interact through the platform, even if they have an explicit objective of benefitting society [
28], companies that have interrupted activity for more than a year, and those whose activity does not require exchange in legal tender, for example time banks, barters, etc.
4. Quality in Social Collaborative Companies: A Literature Review
In collaborative social companies, there are at least three actors, the service provider, the platform, and the client [
5], and quality depends simultaneously on them and their interaction [
2]. None of the actors can be neglected, even more so in social collaborative companies, since these social companies operate in the context of capitalism [
13], which must be competitive to be sustainable and to guarantee their long-term viability [
32], for which quality is considered a key aspect [
33].
Therefore, in this field, we need to ask the following questions: How can standards be applied in a SCC? How can the quality of a product or service of an SCC be measured? What is the impact of the platform on customer satisfaction? To try to find an answer to these issues, a literature review has been carried out on the most relevant quality models and those related to the collaborative economy in order to present a quality model that serves to guide SCCs in their quest for competitiveness, sustainability, and survival.
4.1. Quality Models in Social Activities
The most important quality model related to quality in social activities is proposed by the European Quality of Social Services (EQUASS). EQUASS aims to improve the social services sector by involving providers in quality, continuous improvement, and learning and development to guarantee service users the quality of these throughout Europe [
34]. This certification was adopted by more than 650 companies in different European countries from 2012 to 2015 [
35], with a satisfaction rate of around 85% among the companies that have been certified [
36]. The EQUASS 2018 system comprises 10 quality principles: leadership, staff, rights, ethics, partnerships, participation, continuous improvement, results orientation, being person-centered, and comprehensiveness [
37].
4.2. Quality Service Model
The main reference for quality service is the Parasuraman model [
38], which is still consulted today. The model proposes a service quality model based on an expectation–confirmation paradigm, which suggests that consumers perceive quality in terms of their perceptions. Thus, when customer expectations are greater than their perceptions of the delivery received, service quality is considered low. When perceptions exceed expectations, the quality of service is high. This model presents five “gaps” between customer expectation and service delivery that might have a negative effect on perceived service quality: knowledge gap, design gap, performance gap, communication gap, and customer gap. In addition to considering expectation–confirmation, other proposals define quality as an aggregate of technical quality that measures the results of the service (the what) and the functional quality of the processes (how the service is made) [
39].
4.3. Quality and Excellence Model of European Foundation Quality Management (EFQM)
EFQM is a globally recognized model of quality and excellence that aims to help organizations achieve success by identifying and understanding existing gaps to find the best solutions available. This model has had variations over time, and although it retains its original principles in the most recent version of the year 2019, it is based on the importance of the primacy of the customer; the need to take a long-term, stakeholder-centric view; and understanding the cause-and-effect linkages between why an organization does something, how it does it, and what it achieves as a consequence of its actions [
40].
The structure of the EFQM model answers three questions (blocks): direction, results, and execution. Direction: this block prepares the way for the organization to be a leader in its ecosystem and be well positioned to carry out its future. Results: the direction block sets the direction for the company, but then the organization needs to execute the strategy effectively and efficiently. Execution: this is what the company achieves because of the direction and results blocks, including a forecast for the future.
4.4. Business Models in Collaborative Economy
The quality management model for collaborative companies has been presented to evaluate the quality of the services provided by collaborative companies [
41]. It is an adaptation [
41] of the Gap service quality model presented by Parasuraman et al. (1985). The model is reformulated in a cyclical model to consider that gaps can exist every time the service is repeated. Additionally, if the service is repeated, it can be revised and improved over time by introducing best practices according Deming’s cycle of PDCA (plan–do–check–act or plan–do–check–adjust) [
41,
42,
43,
44], and this proposal included an additional gap to take into account external and internal communication and later closed the gap between quality of service provided and customer perception. Additionally, there is another adaptation to be introduced in order to adjust the model for quality management in in collaborative consumption services. It includes another cycle to consider the differences between the expectations and perceptions of the client vs. the platforms. This second cycle includes six new gaps; these two different cycles overlap in time, requiring simultaneous analysis. Although these two cycles have been represented concentrically, this does not imply that there is dependency between both cycles.
Another business model to consider is the sharing business model compass [
6]. In this proposal, the model affirms that current models cannot account for the complexity underlying sharing business value propositions, nor can it offer a way forward for those interested in crafting models for the creation and delivery of sharing-based value. The compass specifies six distinct dimensions, which in combination allow for expanding the scope of business model possibilities for sharing start-ups and corporate ventures. These dimensions are platform type (actors being connected in the two-sided market by the intermediary), technology, transaction types (on the platform), business approach (profit-driven, hybrid with explicit social or environmental objectives, and mission-driven, where the primary goal is social and/or environmental benefits), shared resources (optimizing of new resources, finding a new home for used resources and the optimization of underutilized resources), and the governance model (with respect to decision-making and value exchange). Instead, the compass offers a range of 18 variables to choose from and combine across the six dimensions, providing orientation and supporting the profiling of sharing business. Regarding the valuation of collaborative economy and collaborative social economy companies, this model has four dimensions of these models, which are at the “core” of the model (platform type, transaction types, business approach, and governance model) for considering the differences between models that are market-oriented and models that are closer to collaborative manners. In this way, the authors propose that it is possible to consider the realities of cooperatives and corporations.
4.5. Some Considerations about the Platform and Governance
Other studies that are not about quality models for collaborative companies or for collaborative social companies also provided useful information when making the model presented in this document. For example, the European Agenda for Sharing Economy [
45] proposes the importance of the platform considering three key criteria: price, key contractual conditions, and key asset ownership. When these three criteria are met, there are clear indications that the collaborative platform exercises significant influence or control over the underlying service provider, which may in turn indicate that it should also be considered as providing the underlying service. This also forces us to consider that if the level of influence of the platform is high, it must respond to the client for a service/product quality that does not meet their expectations [
29].
Regarding governance for social collaborative companies, for good management it is necessary to take four categories of effects derived from the governance mechanisms established by a cooperative platform into account [
21]: redirecting capitalism: limitation of wages, restriction of capital investments, distribution of benefits, and search for alternative sources of financing; engaging the community: commitment to open community access, access to conflict scenarios, collective decision-making, and consensus building; democratic participation: democratic values, one member one vote, responsibility and accountability, and development of self-management strategies; and mandatory transparency: publishing information about company activities, publishing the use of user data, and allowing members to monitor and supervise.
5. Quality Model for Social Collaborative Companies (SCCs): A Proposal
The quality model for an SCC aims to present a guide so that it can offer products and services with an adequate level of quality so that their clients can grow [
46] and the company can be sustainable over time [
47]. This model is a theoretical exercise based on the literature review and in-depth insights provided by experts from the field. Expert rationale was added to ensure the quality of our analysis and to answer our objectives. We accomplished this step using validation from five experts included in the study using purposive sampling technique, who interpret the meaning and context to the findings from the literature review included in the formation of the quality model.
The SCC has just been defined in this paper, but it is already possible to find some examples of it operating in the market; in fact, some companies are showing growth and resilience [
21], and could be taking advantage of a quality model to understand themselves better, given the complexity of the sharing economy for companies with a social mission [
30] and a democratic governance.
This quality model aspires to provide useful insights for all stakeholders, not only with respect to understanding, but also with respect to finding solutions oriented towards the general strategy and its future. The quality model is a guide that can be used together with other existing models. It is desired that SCCs apply it in the future, reflecting on other dimensions that can be developed or different aspects that can be improved or adapting certain aspects that are very particular to their activity.
Considering that quality is about providing products and services in accordance with customers’ expectations [
41], customers of the sharing economy have their own particularities. Currently, individuals create ideas and entertainment in addition to consuming them [
7]. Consumers often become prosumers (this is a new work endeavouring towards accomplishing the conceptual mix of the terms: producer and consumer) [
48]; that is, they have gone from being isolated individuals to being connected. When they make decisions, they no longer do so out of ignorance, but are informed [
5]. They are no longer passive, but are an active source of information feedback for companies [
47].
With this type of customer, the objective of collaborative quality is focused on satisfying the customer in a functional, emotional, and holistic way, since one of the consequences of globalization has been the generation of an interconnected economy, which is not synonymous with equitable. This has led to a change in the profile of the consumer, who has become more aware and sensitive not only to their immediate environment, but also to the global one [
21]. However, how can the SCC have presented all the complexity? What is the importance of the platform? What is the importance of the product or service that it offers? What is the relationship between them?
The quality model proposes an easy answer to this type of question without losing sight of the fact that in SCCs the decision-making processes are participatory and more complex, the products and services needs to be competitive, but also remain engaged with their social mission [
49], and all this without losing sight of having viable financial results. The idea is that social enterprises generate wealth, are competitive, and can survive with good results in the current conditions that are so difficult [
24].
The literature review of the models allows us to consider the most important aspects that have been considered for the quality model, as can be seen in the
Table 3:
After having identified the aspects to consider and from the expert validation, three dimensions of the quality model are proposed:
management,
operations, and
continuous improvement. An uninterrupted cyclical relationship arises among them, in which each of these dimensions mutually influence each other; the aim is to combine the management with an excellent operation and keep improving (see
Figure 1).
In order to explain the relationship between each model reviewed and the dimensions proposed before in this quality model for social collaborative companies, it is presented in
Table 4:
5.1. Management
Management is where it all begins; it is the world of ideas, where the directors think about what they want to do, why this value offer is socially collaborative, and what makes sense for this SCC—in short, what needs to be done to deliver a sustainable value proposal for the stakeholders inside the collaborative economy environment. The management dimension is composed of four subcategories: strategy, leadership, social management, and governance. These subcategories work together and influence each other. This can be represented in a circle such as (see
Figure 2):
5.1.1. Strategy
For this quality model, the purpose of the definition is to answer the following questions: why is it important to work on this? How does is it intend to fulfil it? How can this purpose be kept over time? It is recommended that the company have a present mission and future vision and be very clear about what it wants to achieve in the short and long term. The purpose and vision support the strategy.
On the strategic level, it is necessary that the SCC have an understanding about the stakeholders’ needs (leadership, social management, and governance). Finally, the strategy should have a concrete implementation plan, which explains how the mission and vision will be achieved.
5.1.2. Leadership
In an SCC, leadership takes on a sensitive nature; its social mission should be accompanied by behaviors that are aligned with it at all levels of the organization. In leadership, it is important to highlight the need to develop a culture based on co-creation [
40] (like teamwork), where a win–win paradigm is part of it. The main objective of the leadership role is to inspire appropriate behaviors, redirect deviations, and give credibility to stakeholders on the alignment of the organizational culture with the company’s social mission.
The leadership role defines the values, including the social mission inside the collaboration and participation environment; creates the conditions for realizing its activities according these values; enables creativity, innovation, diversity, solidarity, etc.; and finally, promotes engagement to fulfil the mission, vision, and strategy.
5.1.3. Social Management
A social mission is not enough. On the social edge, the collaborative social enterprise partly has doing well as its reason for being a positive influence in society. It is part of the “why”; therefore, a company need to consider its relationship with the society to which it belongs or which it wants to influence.
Management should include a deep analysis of the context, considering everything that happens around it, such as the environment, the relationship with the public administration, knowing who the stakeholders are, the needs and expectations of its customers, leadership, relationship with its suppliers, communications, perception of the values of its brand, etc. When the context is clear, it can give support to the strategy.
5.1.4. Governance
The most critical voices of the collaborative economy point out that part of the problem is that power and wealth are concentrated in the hands of few people, so the benefits of scalability offered by platforms are overshadowed by something that resembles aggressive capitalist practices. One answer to this is found in platform cooperativism, or more broadly in SCCs as defined in this paper.
These companies have a democratic style of government, where one person equals one vote. However, it is essential that companies can handle the complexity that this form of decision-making involves, with its advantages and disadvantages. The main advantages are that greater involvement of workers is achieved, their decisions matter, and they learn from general aspects of the business; in short, what “happens” in the company depends on them, and they are not passive bystanders. However, this governance model faces difficulties such as needing to spend more time and effort in the search for consensus and the apparent contradiction that the worker acts as “boss” at the same time.
Added to this, the SCC needs to guarantee transparency in the information for decision-making; it should have all the concrete mechanisms necessary to obtain consensus, along with appropriate leadership and control management that fosters participation and collaboration framed in solid values and the adequate integration of the mission and vision in each of the decisions that are made.
5.2. Operations
This dimension refers to all the processes that are necessary for a person to enjoy the products or services offered by the platform with an adequate quality [
50], necessary for current and future success.
For the operations, the quality model considers the importance of all the actors (provider, customer, and platform) in the quality perceived by the client [
51]. An SCC may have the best product or service, but if it does not have good quality on its platform, the “total” quality perceived by the client will not be satisfactory. The same is true the other way around; a company can have the best platform, but if the product or service does not have the required quality, it will not leave the customer satisfied either. For this reason, all of these actors must work towards operative excellence (see
Figure 3).
5.2.1. Provider of Products and/or Service
In collaborative business models, anyone can be a provider of a certain product and service. Now, taking into account that the quality perceived by the client is higher when their expectations and their perception of the product or service received are aligned, it is important that the SCC applies professional tools for development, evaluation, and measurement of its performance. Another very important aspect about providers is that the company assumes the responsibility of defining in detail and efficiently communicating the needs and expectations of the client regarding the product and service and the platform that acts as an intermediary. This quality model does not include the type of contract, agreements, or terms and conditions that apply to each part, but only highlights the essential parts to improve the quality of products and services delivered for SCC.
The company needs to develop requirements for choosing providers and carry out an evaluation to determine their “suitability”. It should also develop actions to advance suitability that do not meet the requirements and complement them to develop and improve their performance. A provider must have clear aspects such as operational capacity, cost structure, customer requirements, process indicators, platform operation, on time delivery, ethical code, etc.
On the other hand, it is necessary to evaluate the performance of providers, considering the comments and to go beyond the observation of customer comments on platforms. There may be dissatisfied customers who does not write a review. Additionally, when a customer writes a negative comment, negative perception of the quality of the product or service delivered is already in an individual’s mind; therefore, it is not possible to carry out preventive actions.
5.2.2. Customers
Even before defining the strategic aspects (value proposition, purpose, vision, etc.), the SCC need to know what its client wants, what it does not like, what it likes, etc. Knowing customer requirements and expectations is a key factor for sustainability and for designing operational processes capable of giving responses to customers. It should be borne in mind that the consumer is very informed and has great power; at the click of a button, a consumer can go to another platform and leave a very bad recommendation on the platform.
For the other side, do clients know what they can expect regarding quality of the products or services they obtain through an SCC? For the answer to always be affirmative, the SCC should ensure that the customer knows that they can expect the product and/or service that they have purchased, like an in-person experience, and what they should expect from the suppliers and the platform separately. This is important for the customer to have expectations that are in line with reality and for the SCC to assess its ability to adjust to certain customer requirements.
In addition to the specific requirements of the products and/or services that clients obtain through the platform, it is necessary to identify good practices that will generate an approach to customers, for example: communication strategy, brand image, the media where messages are transmitted, the availability and transparency in the handling of data, etc.
5.2.3. Platform
In this quality model, the platform is considered part of the operational management. It is a facilitator of the delivery of products or services that correspond to the company’s value proposition.
As in the case of the supplier, it is recommended for the SCC to invest part of its efforts in knowing the expectations and needs of the client regarding the operation of the platform so that its operations are adequate and do not interfere with the perception of the quality of the products or services delivered.
In the case in which the company has an external platform provider, it is very important for the company to have a very close relationship with it, which includes adequate control over this subcontracted process, which can be a legal agreement about the ability to make changes, data processing, and other commitments about the ability to respond to changes in the organization to adapt to the products or services provided. If the platform is developed and managed internally, it must be considered a key actor, and the organization should be able to control that the platform has adequate capacity and efficient operations.
In any case, the company needs to ensure that it adequately communicates the client’s requirements regarding the platform and that the platform is really in charge of facilitating contact between supplier and client and also facilitating the delivery of products and services in accordance with what is established.
The platform is considered an added service to the product or service, but in addition to this, it is a great provider of data that must be analyzed for continuous improvement.
Finally, one cannot lose sight of the fact that any change in the provider’s or platform’s operations may affect the quality of the products or services; therefore, it is necessary for the organization to constantly analyze these changes and ensure that actions are taken so that the perception of customer quality is not negatively affected.
5.3. Continuous Improvement
Continuous improvement is the consequence of data analysis or technological innovation. Data has great value; the digital environment allows us to record every action automatically and permanently, and consequently enormous amounts of information are generated. In this context, the SCC should ensure the reliability of the information it handles. On the other hand, the organization needs to ensure its ability to establish key indicators to analyze operational results, financial results, customer satisfaction results, and social results and can have an adequate an efficient management vision and control. In addition to this, it is important that the company makes sure robust data capturing systems are established in addition to defining key indicators suitable. All this is managed with tools according to their size and particular needs.
Once the SCC has the appropriate information systems, it should analyze the data and assess whether the results are aligned with the defined strategy, and from there, establish appropriate action plans. On the other hand, this data analysis should also allow models and predictions to be made that allow for more information about the future to be had.
After examining the data and defining the action plans according to the strategic guidelines, the analysis of non-financial indicators must also be taken into account; that is, the organization needs to carry out an analysis of the environment with a frequency appropriate to its size and activity, allowing for the needs of stakeholders to be continually reviewed, changes in market players to be possibly made, and for technological innovations and other changes in the environment that may affect an organization.
Finally, the organization needs to base part of its strength on encouraging continuous improvement from within, creating a mindset for creativity and innovation, including disruptive thinking as an essential ingredient in helping an organization generate increased value and an improved level of performance. The cyclical relations between the elements described before are shown below (see
Figure 4).
The quality model for social collaborative companies is represented in the
Figure 5.
After this detailed literature review and development of the quality model for social collaborative companies, we have now reached the stage where we need some independent feedback as to how well our model meets our objectives. We perform this validation through involving a group of five experts (practitioners and academics) in examining our quality model components and completing a detailed questionnaire (see
Appendix). A major part of this expert feedback is devoted to explaining the validation of the proposed model.
All the expert analysis and feedback of the model suggested similar viewpoints with some individual and important contributions. All the experts agreed that is not necessary to add one on more dimensions (management, operation, and continuous improvement) to the quality model, and that there is no key missing point in any dimension proposed. However, they have made comments and questions that were an appreciated input for the development of the model in each of these aspects.
About the management dimension, Expert 2 asked: “Does governance include management control?” To answer this, we considered that it was important to include the control management in this dimension; for the other side, Expert 5 recommended considering a Leadership dimension separately if the SCCs ask for it.
Regarding the operations dimension, Expert 4 suggests: “I would be explicit in what type of contracts, agreements, term and conditions apply to each link”. With this comment, we are aware that this legal aspect is out of the quality model scope, because it is in the scope of this field of research, but the quality model offers the guideline of how these relations need to work for the SCC to deliver products or services in good quality conditions.
About the continuous improvement dimension, Expert 1 stated: “I am not sure if the society is represented in the model (not only the customer, but also society as participant and beneficiary)”. For this reason, we added in the proposed SCC definition that these types of companies must have a social mission, a positive impact in society. Expert 2 stated: “Control seem to be missing”; to answer this, we highlighted that the information received from of the data is necessary for an adequate decision and control management. Furthermore, Expert 3 stated: “Why not a PDCA model?” We include the Quality service model for collaborative companies in the literature review, including the PDCA model. Finally, Expert 4 recommended: “In future, you also need to look at disruptive tech or management ideas that could have impact on your company (SCC companies), even in other sectors”. This is a very important comment for future research. Expert 4 added: “I would just add data somewhere as the source for this continuous loop”. Regarding this comment, we highlight the use of data, like a source of information to business decisions towards a better performance.
Regarding the overall valuation based on a scale from 1 (not at all) to 5 (absolutely), almost all the experts except for one (who gave 5 points) gave 4 points for the question “it is clear enough to provide an idea of how the model works”. Furthermore, all experts gave equal importance to all the three dimensions of the quality model.
Therefore, we conclude that this quality model can be an important tool to help SCCs to know themselves better, and to have a guide for management with focus on delivering product and services at an adequate level of quality. Also, to record the data related with the key point and to develop actions oriented to improvement each time and be inputs for the current and future strategies.
6. Conclusions, Implications, and Future Research
Having reviewed the literature on the collaborative economy and the social economy, and having analyzed the points at which they meet, the new concept of a social collaborative company is proposed, which aims to frame companies that have a social mission and a democratic style of governance, whether or not they are cooperatives or operate through a platform in a collaborative environment, taking advantage of the benefits of efficiency and scalability, among others. This concept contributes to the recognition of companies; it is useful, because they can begin to delve into their particularities and develop more knowledge in this field.
The literature review has also included a search for quality models that apply to these types of companies regardless of the product or service they offer to the market, thereby detecting a gap that has been resolved with the proposal of a quality model for social collaborative companies with these objectives: (i) offering a management guide for excellence; (ii) being a tool for benchmarking; and (iii) being a tool for internal and external communication, which was validated by experts.
The quality model established has three categories (management, operations, and continuous improvement) that aim to provide answers to the most important aspects of management that have an impact on the quality of products or services. In the management category, the focus is on strategy, leadership, the social mission, and the complexity that this type of governance can have; in the operations category, the focus is on operational excellence, considering the platform as a facilitator of the product or service that must be treated simultaneously with the product or service, and finally the category of continuous improvement focuses on the importance of measuring the key aspects of management and making decisions based on objective data, which should constitute input for improvement. This quality model is open and can be combined with other management tools.
This study opens up interesting future avenues for research in the field of social economy and collaborative economy as regards the deepening of the concept of an SCC. On the other hand, the quality model has been based on a literature review and has not yet been validated; therefore, a qualitative or quantitative validation could be valuable research that would provide knowledge that would allow adjustments to the model and that could be improved so it can better serve the purpose for which it was designed.
The quality model presented in this research was designed for an SCC, which is a new concept that has been introduced in this document. To find these companies, it will be necessary to establish compliance criteria and evaluate whether the characteristics that have been initially defined are applicable to real companies. After this, another investigation can be the application of this model to real cases of SCCs and evaluate its effectiveness.