Collective Impact

Collective Impact

Substantially greater progress could be made in alleviating many of our most serious and complex social problems if foundations, nonprofits, governments and businesses focused on achieving broad cross-sector coordination, instead of focusing on the isolated interventions of individual organizations. Collective Impact happens when a group of cross-sector actors commit to a common agenda for solving a specific social problem and agree to each be accountable to a single overarching goal. The New York Times has called the Collective Impact approach “one of the most important experiments occurring in the social sector today”. Stanford Social Innovation Review first featured this approach in the Winter 2011 Issue, in an article published by FSG managing director John Kania, with FSG co-founder Mark Kramer. Since the article, the concept has been shared at the White House and named a top philanthropy buzzword.

Content from this campaign

New Video Series on Collective Impact
This series of short videos describes the concept of collective impact, a collaborative approach to solving large-scale social problems. The video explains the idea, and shows collective impact in action using The Elizabeth River Project and The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) as examples.
Jun 26, 2012 1:00 PM ET
Register for Channeling Change: Making Collective Impact Work
March 20, 2012 (11:00–noon PT, 2:00–3:00pm ET, 7:00–8:00pm CET): Join Us for a Stanford Social Innovation Review & FSG Webinar, "Channeling Change: Making Collective Impact Work." Learn more about implementing collective impact and hear real stories of collective impact success. SSIR editor Eric Nee will moderate conversation with FSG's John Kania, Communities that Care Coalition's Kat...
Mar 6, 2012 9:25 PM ET

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