034. How to generate greater innovation capability in your nonprofit: observations of an innovation coach
Summary
NGOs are sometimes labeled fairly critically as 'dinosaurs' or 'legacy organizations'. How can they create a more innovation-ready or innovation-friendly culture?
What can NGOs learn from other types of organizations when it comes to generating more innovation, either in the broader civil society sector or outside of it?
What stands in the way, in terms of organizational structures, processes, or ways of working when NGOs struggle? Leadership mindsets?
In this podcast episode, I interview Shervin Fekri at Board of Innovation. Board of Innovation (BoI) is a strategy and business design firm that coaches private and public sector organizations -- including INGOs and donor agencies -- on how to generate a healthy innovation pipeline.
Shervin’s Bio
We discuss:
o The big social sector organizations tend to be complex in organization structure (sometimes too much so) with distributed country offices/affiliates. There is also variation in the extent to which decision making is centralized or decentralized
o National cultures vary a lot, and NGOs sometimes have somewhat less of a ‘corporate’ culture
o NGO cultures tend to be very process-oriented; they are not very user-focused, fairly siloed and have a hard time simplifying what the user needs/wants
o Marketing/fundraising/comms people typically are more user-focused.
Quotes
“Some NGOs are good in starting innovation projects but bad in killing bad projects”
“It is best to use an innovation portfolio approach, where the organization and decision-makers have visibility into how many innovation projects they have going on at any one time, how long they have been going on, which ones are lagging and which ones have to be stopped. That oversight is sometimes missing”
Resources:
Shervin's LinkedIn profile
Board of Innovation Website
Tosca's Virtual Team Leadership Essentials Course
Joint MZN-Five Oaks
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