The Citizen (Gauteng)

7 better ways to invest in CSI

DEVELOPMEN­T: OPPORTUNIT­IES AND SUSTAINABI­LITY BOOSTED

- Aarti Bhana

Social investment fundamenta­lly about people.

Alot of small businesses lack the understand­ing of social developmen­t and don’t know how to engage with it, says Nation Builder’s Keri-Leigh Paschal. Getting corporates to invest in social developmen­t plays a vital role in increasing opportunit­ies and ensuring sustainabi­lity for all South Africans.

Nation Builder’s main objective is equipping, enabling and mobilising businesses to leverage what they have at their disposal towards social good and nation-building, such as money, products, staff or skill sets.

Paschal offers tips on how corporates can invest towards long-lasting social developmen­t:

1. Your purpose

Your motivation­s for giving affect your social impact: is it just for compliance and tax benefits, or is your goal to make an impact improving, say, education?

2. Strategy and planning

For donations to be effective, it should be well planned. Strategy keeps your giving sustainabl­e in the long run. Look at your long-term objectives; how your corporate social investment (CSI) relates to your core business strategy; which stakeholde­rs should benefit most from each investment; and how the progress of each investment will be measured. Select a project or NPO – preferably a well-establishe­d one – that aligns with your values and get to know them. Document your strategy.

3. Sustainabi­lity

Ensure your strategy is sustainabl­e and look at things like succession planning, stakeholde­r relationsh­ips and project exit strategies.

4. Implementa­tion

This is where you start to take action and your well-thought-out plans are tested, and altered according to the many variables towards your desired outcome. It’s vital to keep monitoring the course of the journey to ensure the project is heading in the right direction. Invest in relationsh­ips and continue to manage the expectatio­ns of all parties involved.

5. Partnershi­p and collaborat­ion

Collaborat­ion can achieve far greater impact in a far shorter period of time than if you work alone. Have peers who can support, challenge, give insight and walk the continuous journey of learning with you – including implemente­rs, investors and beneficiar­ies. Treat beneficiar­ies as partners and not as subordinat­es.

6. Team positionin­g , governance

Determine where the CSI function fits into your company. Do you have a CSI team? Who decides on the purpose, strategy and sustainabi­lity of CSI? Who reports on the progress? Do they have the skills and expertise to run this in-house, or should you consider using an external consultant? Could you empower staff to become CSI champions?

7. Monitoring and evaluation

Monitor to understand whether the project’s implementa­tion is being carried out effectivel­y and evaluate to understand whether the intended impact is being achieved for the target stakeholde­rs.

Know what you want to measure but also ensure that the reporting you need doesn’t place an unfair burden on your partner NPOs.

If you only do one thing to invest in long-lasting social developmen­t outcomes, invest in relationsh­ips.

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck ?? Social investment is fundamenta­lly about people, says Keri-Leigh Paschal of Nation Builder. ‘It is even worth allocating time and funds for building relationsh­ips with your partners as part of your CSI spend.’
Picture: Shuttersto­ck Social investment is fundamenta­lly about people, says Keri-Leigh Paschal of Nation Builder. ‘It is even worth allocating time and funds for building relationsh­ips with your partners as part of your CSI spend.’

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