COVID-19, climate change, resource scarcity, conflict and instability: These and other complex global challenges deeply impact today’s businesses. They damage the bottom line and threaten a business’s growth, resilience, and stability—but they are too big for one company to tackle alone. Here, cross-sector partnerships can be a powerful tool: Collaborations between businesses, NGOs, governments, universities, and other institutions can generate innovative, multifaceted solutions to shared challenges, to advance global good and private sector opportunity.
But those solutions are only valuable if they are implemented effectively. Many meticulously planned projects fail to make an impact on the ground due to fumbled execution.
Careful planning before launch is essential to build the foundation for a strong partnership, but it can still be challenging to manage the relationships between partners to sustain momentum, effectively confront unforeseen issues, and take advantage of unexpected opportunities.
Once the partnership is up and running, we’d argue that there are six key factors for successful partnership management and implementation:
Developing trust from the outset is essential to uniting cross-sector partners who may have radically different mandates and organizational cultures. But maintaining and reinforcing trust over time keeps a partnership together. Partnership projects shift over time as they adapt to the complexity of the real world, but trust is the glue that holds partnerships together and helps partners adapt. Partners who trust each other can handle unforeseen circumstances by sharing information effectively, providing feedback constructively, and resolving differences as they arise.
To foster and maintain trust, be explicit and up front about your goals related to the partnership: In other words, what does success really mean for you and your organization? What does the partnership need to achieve—and by when—and who within your organization needs to be on board?
At the same time, it’s critical to accept the legitimacy of your partners’ goals, objectives, and organizational constraints. When events happen—within or external to the partnership—you should be open about your reaction to them, particularly when those events are unexpected and require a response from the partnership. And you should be open to feedback, both positive and negative. Taken together, these strategies facilitate trusting relationships.
It takes a substantial investment of time and energy to build and launch a partnership, which raises the stakes within many organizations. It can take extra time to develop a working relationship in the early days of a partnership, so it can be helpful to design some quick wins to keep supporters engaged and skeptics at bay.
These don’t have to be major victories, but they should demonstrate progress toward the goal. You should identify targets that:
When you’re innovating to solve a complex problem, there will always be unforeseen challenges and new opportunities. So, it is critical to adapt as you go, pivoting when necessary and learning from mistakes, but also proactively scanning for new and better ways to scale impact. Related to this: Your partnership will need a monitoring plan—it could be fairly “light touch” or more extensive—to track the results that matter and allow you to learn and adjust in real time to optimize results.
And remember: As your partnership evolves and changes, don’t lose sight of your primary partnership goals, core values, and the aspirations and abilities of your partners.
For partnerships, accountability is absolutely key. First and foremost, partners need to be accountable to each other, fulfilling agreed-upon roles and responsibilities, and also communicating clearly and effectively when commitments fall behind or below expected levels.
Then, partners need to hold themselves accountable for external stakeholders who may be interested in or impacted by the partnership. You should have a plan for communicating regularly and consulting with key outside stakeholders, to keep your partnership grounded in local realities and to ensure that those impacted by your partnership are informed and engaged.
By the same token, you should provide stakeholders within your organization with regular updates on successes, failures, and lessons learned. Without appropriate accountability, partnerships weaken, founder, and lose touch with the places and people who matter most.
Executing a project in a single organization is complex and doing so with multiple outside partners in the context of a wickedly complex problem is even more so. So, rigorous project management is essential. As a baseline, it’s important to break goals into discrete tasks, assign them to partners, set deadlines, and track completion using a partnership scorecard that can be as simple as a Google Doc or can draw on more sophisticated project management software.
If you’re developing an innovative solution and moving into untested waters, using a stage-gating system can help manage the process by breaking it into clear phases separated by distinct decision points. At each decision point, partners review progress and determine whether they are prepared to advance to the next stage. As you go, documentation and reporting are key, and partners should build a shared archive of meeting notes, activity summaries, and correspondence files.
As complex as they can become, partnerships are relationships at their core. Managing those relationships and communicating clearly are essential to success. Here, these five factors will help set you up for success:
Cross-sector partnerships are a critical tool for solving the world’s biggest problems; yet, too many partnerships achieve very little after their launch event. Thoughtful implementation is paramount if your goal is to have real-world results.
The six success factors above will help you start your partnership off on the right foot and execute effectively across the partnership life cycle.