The issue of competencies is elaborated by Pache & Chowdhury with a reference to Kirby (2004), who presents a model that “outlines a skill that is essential and unique
to social entrepreneurs' success: the skill to bridge competing social-welfare, commercial and public-sector logics” (Pache & Chowdhury, 2012) These traits or competencies correspond to the relevant factors of social entrepreneurship in the form of cooperation between spheres and the attention to solve social issues by turning them into opportunities