The Futurist: Finding your way in a reshaped Social Sector

seeker 300x224 The Futurist: Finding your way in a reshaped Social SectorJust finished reading a new research paper, Convergence: How Five Trends Will Reshape the Social Sector.  The research was commissioned by the The James Irvine Foundation of California.  The researchers, La Piana Consulting identified five key trends that they believe have significant implications for the future of not-for-profit organizations. I discovered the research via Sylvia Cheuy, who highlited the same, on Tamarack, the community engagement organization in Ontario.

I liked the way this research was done.  It’s well presented, its’ content challenges the reader (in true California style!), invites follow-up dialogue, and well worth the reading.  Here’s my bare bones summary of the research, along with my “hit list” of collaboration-oriented actions for organizations wanting to “do well by doing good.”

Five Trends reshaping the Social Sector

  1. Demographic shifts redefine participation. Younger generations are making up a growing percentage of the workforce.  They bring new experiences and expectations to the workplace, including leadership roles.
  2. Technological Advances Abound. Social media is everywhere.  And with it are new ways of connecting and communicating which demand greater openness and transparency.
  3. Networks Enable Work to Be Organized in New Ways. Technology and new norms of working collaboratively are exponentially increasing the impact of networks and allowing far deeper and more meaningful collaborations than ever before.  “The organization as an entity is becoming less central and important.”
  4. Interest in Civic Engagement and Volunteerism Is Rising.  The mix of an aging society (with time on their hands) and a new generation of young professionals with a strong community service ethic will create a vast pool of potential volunteers. 
  5. Sector Boundaries Are Blurring. New structural options are now available to individuals and organizations wanting to do well by doing good.  Social enterprises are a good example of this trend.

The authors believe the interplay between these trends will accelerate the emergence of a fundamentally new not-for-profit sector.  “The future will demand a collective rethinking of what it means to be an organization, how individuals define their work and how best to both compete and partner across many permeable boundaries.”

Into the future

The authors suggest that nonprofits, funders, and capacity builders alike must become “futurists”; attuned to shifts in the environment, continuously leaning, open to experimentation, curious, and willing to take risks.

In the spirit of a futurist, and synched with the trends identified above, I’ve culled and extended the research into a first-cut list of actions that I think flows with the trends.

Demographic Shifts

Technology Abundance

Networks

Civic Engagement & volunteerism

New structures

Are you involved with the social sector, and have some applied experience with these new ways of approaching traditional non-profit activity?  Care to share?

If you enjoyed this post, please consider leaving a comment or  subscribing to my blog. Always appreciated, Ben.

Photo credit: h.koppdelaney

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