Hybrid organizations' success should effectively fulfill both beneficiaries' and customers' needs, requirements, and expectations, being embedded in the conflicting-and often incompatible-institutional logics of social mission and commercial activities. Despite the increasing attention to such a phenomenon in the business research literature, still little is known regarding how hybrid organizational structures may facilitate or hinder the co-existence of such conflicting institutional logics. Relying on an inductive comparative case study realized on 9 socially entrepreneurial NPOs-which represent significant examples of socially imprinted organizations involved in commercial activities (hybrid)-operating in the Italian socio-healthcare sec...