TRANSITION e-Mag #1 | Page 5

_5 incubators and practitioners in developing their own journeys of scaling social innovation. Before presenting the Social Innovation Journey (SIJ), we would like to briefly introduce some of the premises that guided the overall work of TRANSITION and that are at the base of the elaboration of the SIJ. _Social innovations often emerge from bottom up initiatives, from citizens’ activism, from spontaneous group of neighbours. TRANSITION action format aims to support innovators from the very early stage of an idea, empowering communities to grow solutions to social needs and raising awareness around them. Moreover it aims to deliver supporting activities to groups and innovators usually excluded from traditional path of incubation. _Social innovations find a “fertile ground” in hybrid spaces where the community sector overlaps with the public one, where the private one meets the third sector, and in all the interactions between them. TRANSITION aims to experiment with the social innovations coming from a range of sources, including new ventures as well as innovations based within existing organisations, or delivered through strategic partnerships, voluntary initiatives or campaigns. _Social innovation overlaps with, but is not the same as, social entrepreneurship. Supporting social innovation is a broader task than supporting social ventures to scale and grow. _Social innovations aim, by definition, to meet social needs. The capability of maximizing social impact must be placed at the centre of each process of social innovation incubation. TRANSITION aims to support both initial concepts but also mature organizations in increasing their social impact, by designing new solutions or re-orienting existing ones. _Social innovations produce innovative social forms and value creation systems. They often base their processes on co-creation and peer-to-peer collaboration, on local