philanthropy Archives - India Leaders for Social Sector https://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/tag/philanthropy/ Tue, 24 Sep 2024 12:12:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/cropped-cropped-logo-ilss-32x32.jpg philanthropy Archives - India Leaders for Social Sector https://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/tag/philanthropy/ 32 32 We have a duty to give back https://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/we-have-a-duty-to-give-back/ https://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/we-have-a-duty-to-give-back/#respond Fri, 25 Sep 2020 07:35:32 +0000 https://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/?p=4624 On the occasion of Daan Utsav (India’s week-long festival of giving, October 2 – 8 every year), Ujwal Thakar talks...

The post We have a duty to give back appeared first on India Leaders for Social Sector.

]]>
On the occasion of Daan Utsav (India’s week-long festival of giving, October 2 – 8 every year), Ujwal Thakar talks about Individual giving and what 2020 teaches us about giving. 

Having turned seventy recently, I often reflect on the seven decades of my life and realise how lucky I have been. Being born into an upper-middle class family, there was enough attention given to my education and nurturing my potential – an investment that has paid me dividends all through my life. This realisation has become even more acute in the COVID19 era where the survival of much of humanity seems to be at stake with hundreds of millions of human beings not knowing where their next meal will come from or how their children will survive.

It is hard not to see the disproportionate impact of the crisis on different sections of the population.  It is equally hard not to recognise how lucky several of us are and how kind the universe has been to us.   Acknowledging that we have received more than a fair deal is the first step towards recognising our responsibility and ability to pay it forward.

To give — and to give

The corollary to acknowledging your good fortune or privilege is to identify where and how you can put your abilities or your resources to the best use. I have found that encouraging, mentoring and guiding young people gives me immense pleasure. My idle time has become my biggest asset because over the years, word spread that I have time, the ability to ask questions, suggest solutions and perhaps make connections that would be useful to young people seeking help either with their enterprise, job, profession or ideas.

I spend almost all of my mornings on calls with youngsters or meeting them in person to discuss their ideas in diverse spaces such as education, livelihoods, health, kindness, governance, artificial intelligence, blockchain and so on.

We are all inherently good and want to help others. Some of us may lack discipline and consistency in our giving, or we may simply not be aware of the giving landscape in general. We, therefore need to start off with being more self-reflective and figuring out for ourselves what giving means to us as individuals and how we can give back. How much we give in terms of time or resources really depends on each of us as individuals and will differ from person to person.  

Every individual counts

One of the reasons we often hesitate to give is because we underestimate the difference we can make as individuals. The COVID-19 crisis has however helped surface gaps within our society and has provided a big motivator for people to contribute to various causes.

The power of individual giving has become quite clear over the past few months. People have become increasingly aware of the impact they can create on others, directly or by supporting the efforts of social organisations. There is a need to sustain this momentum. Especially now, with CSR and foreign funding shrinking and becoming unreliable. This can only happen when we stay engaged with issues of social change and continue to acknowledge our role in the process of change. The potential is huge, make no mistake. If 25 percent (roughly about 2 billion people) of the global population is living below the poverty line, the top 2 billion should be working to negate that, to make sure what they received is equalising and harmonising. It is our duty.

Vulnerability as a propeller for giving

We are experiencing unprecedented vulnerability and uncertainty today. Being in this situation has helped us reflect on the life we have had so far and also think about what went wrong. This vulnerability is making people understand the co-dependency that exists in society and the need to stand together, reinforcing the need to give. Having seen and experienced these truths, we have an opportunity now to make sure we never forget either our own vulnerability or our interconnectedness with others.


This Daan Utsav is as good a time as any to begin your giving journey. Start with your community, make a donation, use your skills, express gratitude, look for ways to support vulnerable communities. At the end of the day, there is nothing more satisfying than knowing that you are genuinely able to contribute towards positive change, be it for a family, a community or society at large.  The sense of joy and fulfilment that comes with giving is unlike anything that has ever been experienced.

The post We have a duty to give back appeared first on India Leaders for Social Sector.

]]>
https://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/we-have-a-duty-to-give-back/feed/ 0
Building an ecosystem for the social sector https://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/building-ecosystem-for-the-social-sector/ https://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/building-ecosystem-for-the-social-sector/#respond Fri, 17 May 2019 17:25:33 +0000 http://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/?p=2314 A set of intermediaries who create transparency and enable better decision-making is critical to India’s non-profit sector at this juncture,...

The post Building an ecosystem for the social sector appeared first on India Leaders for Social Sector.

]]>
A set of intermediaries who create transparency and enable better decision-making is critical to India’s non-profit sector at this juncture, says Ashish Dhawan, founder of Central Square Foundation and Ashoka University.

Those of us familiar with the growth story of the corporate sector know how corporations, both big and small, owe a great deal of their ability to dream big and achieve great success to a strong supporting ecosystem, including  funders who provided capital to get ideas off the ground, consultants who provided strategic inputs, recruiters who helped get the right talent, specialists who helped build organisational capability, and so on. It took many actors in an interconnected ecosystem to enable businesses to achieve their potential.

At a critical time in the history of India’s social sector, an ‘ecosystem’ of this kind is the one factor that will decide how the sector grows in the years ahead. At the moment, though, this ecosystem is still an idea being discussed, sometimes vaguely, by a handful of people in the social sector.  So, what is this ‘ecosystem’ we are talking about, why do we need it and, importantly, who is to build it?

The role of intermediaries

As in the corporate sector, a set of intermediaries who create transparency and enable better decision-making is critical to India’s non-profit sector at this juncture. There is a range of possibilities and roles for these intermediaries but, to my mind, the most critical are those involved with talent and capital.

Let’s use a parallel from the Indian venture capital industry, where a sudden influx of capital from the likes of Sequoia, SoftBank and Tiger, allowed our entrepreneurs to dream bigger than ever before. However, as the capital came in, we also saw a situation where there was so much more to do, but not enough talent to seize those opportunities. Similarly, as the non-profit sector is poised for a phase of growth, talent could be one binding constraint in the near term.

The huge influx of capital, especially the INR 50,000 crore from CSR in just five years, has dealt a comparable kind of shock to the non-profit system. Domestic philanthropy has also seen a surge: who would have thought Mr Premji would give away another $20 billion! Whilst there isn’t, obviously, another donor of that size, many more people are now committing to give money and are willing to be much more active participants, not just donors, in the process of social development.

Just as the VCs demanded more accountability from Indian start-ups—the reason today’s start-ups are more professional than those of 20 years ago—today’s donors demand better processes, better utilisation of funds and more professionalisation within non-profits.

The talent factor

Having built successful for-profit companies, individual philanthropists are now demanding that non-profits focus on the talent piece. People like Amit Chandra, for example, focus specifically on capacity building grants. CSR is also demanding systems, processes, auditing, governance, etc. And so, this is the moment when the social sector needs to respond.

We are already seeing how organisations that have responded to these demands have grown rapidly. The likes of Magic Bus, Kaivalya Education Foundation and Teach for India have grown tremendously in the last five years because they realised they could tap into this pool of capital if they did the right things, hired good talent and professionalised.

Talent will have to be the single biggest investment in this sector going forward. We’re at a stage where good quality junior talent has started coming into the sector. What we will also need is a leadership pipeline; it’s going to be almost impossible to build the leadership and skills from within organisations in a short span of time. Which is why we now see initiatives like India Leaders for Social Sector, to bring in experience, talent and skills from the corporate sector.

Information and data

Another area where the social sector needs expertise is evidence, monitoring & evaluation, and reporting. If we want the quality of the sector to improve, we should demand more rigorous evaluation to determine whether something is genuinely working or not. Unless we see more rigour on this front, we will continue to compromise our ability to take informed decisions regarding our response to societal problems.

We certainly have a gap in terms of the information available in the public domain regarding how much philanthropists are giving, where they are giving, etc. I don’t think there are enough intermediaries that have done a good job at making such data available. In addition to more rigorous evidence, we also need evidence that is more readily digestible so that people don’t make the same mistakes that were being made 20 years ago.

Like Pratham created ASER, there is also a need to create similar tools or public good that can transcend their limited scope within programs and organisations to become useful to different organisations, across sectors. That way governments and organisations get access to a ready set of tested tools and won’t need to reinvent the wheel.

The role of philanthropy

The question, of course, is what will it take to build such an ecosystem? Philanthropy certainly has an important role to play here. Rather than fund organisations to just do more of what they’re doing, philanthropists must be willing to encourage testing of innovative models, making more risk capital available to non-profits.

Donors must make budgets available for capacity building and not just for programs. As organisations grow, donors need to be okay with, say, 20-25 percent of their grants going towards ‘administrative costs’ of grantee organisations, including investments in human capital, M&E, marketing, brand building, fundraising, technology and systems.

As India’s non-profits negotiate the opportunities that come with increased investment and interest, our ability to put in place an enabling ecosystem will be the key that decides how well, how quickly and how effectively they respond.

This article was first published in Financial Express. The original article can be found here

The post Building an ecosystem for the social sector appeared first on India Leaders for Social Sector.

]]>
https://indialeadersforsocialsector.com/building-ecosystem-for-the-social-sector/feed/ 0