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Philanthropies: Are We Utilizing Our Resources And Skills To Reach Our Goal And Benefit The Most Marginalized?

Philanthropies: Are We Utilising Our Resources And Skills To Reach Our Goal And Benefit The Most Marginalised?
Philanthropies: Are We Utilising Our Resources And Skills To Reach Our Goal And Benefit The Most Marginalised?

Philanthropies – be it private foundations, corporate and family funders, LLC’s, or other vehicles for giving – often struggle with the same set of fundamental questions around how to best leverage resources for greater impact. Operating Archetypes, developed by Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors along with members of the Theory of the Foundation Learning Collaborative, aims to be a new framework for helping funders understand both who they are and what kind of impact they aspire to have. Each of the eight archetypes is based on a series of core attributes – such as value proposition, capabilities, equity, and audience. Different archetypes may need very different skills, capabilities, and activities. Using this framework, funders can analyze and reflect on how to align their resources and their decision making to create more effective and equitable philanthropy.

Philanthropies – be it private foundations, corporate and family funders, LLC’s, or other vehicles for giving – often struggle with the same set of fundamental questions: Are we best leveraging our resources and capabilities to not only fulfill our mission but also bring transformational change to the people and communities who need it most? What kinds of decision-making frameworks could help us have that greater purpose and impact? And how do we make these decisions as quickly and efficiently as possible?

The idea of operating archetypes was born in response. Developed by Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors (RPA) along with members of the Theory of the Foundation Learning Collaborative and dozens of funders and thought partners around the world, operating archetypes present a new analytical tool for reflection, alignment, and action. The idea is that a philanthropy’s operating archetype helps an organization articulate exactly what it seeks to achieve and how it deploys resources, capacities, talent, and relationships to achieve that vision and strategy. This, in turn, can inform better decision making across the organization.

Being an impactful and responsive funder is not simply dependent on what one does and why. It is equally important to consider how you achieve change and who you employ to implement the work. To that end, one of the most significant challenges facing funders internally is aligning talent and capabilities with operating models, mission, and impact.

Operating archetypes can help funders better understand where they are (current state), where they want to go (aspirational state), how they compare to other players and their unique position in the ecosystem. They can help funders map potential gaps. And, they can create a shared language for evaluating an organization’s expertise, talents and capabilities.

Each of the operating archetypes is defined by a set of core attributes. These were developed and honed through a multi-year iterative process, including deep listening sessions and field testing with funders, grantees, and thought partners; quantitative and qualitative data collection; and client work. They represent core questions any funder needs to be able to answer with clarity and confidence:

Building on these attributes as a foundation, RPA has identified eight distinct operating archetypes:

Of course, some funders may – and do – recognize themselves in more than one archetype, as many philanthropies employ different models to advance their initiatives. However, we have observed that funders using a blurred array of archetypes may also be diluting their impact: Different archetypes may need very different skills, capabilities, and activities. Trying to bridge these disparate requirements may put significant strain on staff, creating misalignments and tensions. It may also muddle strategic clarity and make impact evaluation difficult.

While the application of this instrument is in early phases and relevant insights continue to be collected, funders who have experimented with the operating archetypes, have experienced a number of “Aha!” moments. One of the most frequent learnings has to do with the realization that the archetype with which the funder has long identified is different from what it is in reality (based on its expertise, capabilities, operations and grantmaking approaches).

As organizations identify and analyze their desired current or future operating archetypes (or both), funders can leverage this framework for holding internal and external conversations about strategic goals and trajectories, organizational shifts, resourcing, talent, and equity. Below are a few questions that might serve as a helpful starting point for such discussions:

As philanthropies apply this these frameworks, we expect to learn more about how they apply to the many different kinds of philanthropic organizations around the world. Our hope is that those insights will contribute to creating more thoughtful, effective, and equitable philanthropy, advancing best practices and yielding more powerful impact for our sector as a whole.

originally posted on hbr.org by Olga Tarasov

About Author: Olga Tarasov is the Senior Director of Inquiry and Insights at Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors. She leads research, publications and donor education efforts, as well its hallmark thought leadership initiatives, including the Theory of the Foundation and Strategic Time Horizons.

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