Focus must be on impact as funding lessens
SUSTAINABILITY planning is something organisations in South Africa cannot afford to overlook. The funding environment is increasingly constrained.
The possible reduction in international agency budgets and the notion that South Africa is a middle-income country and should fund more of its own development needs are things that will impact funding for the Aids response.
In the latest strategy of the President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief, South Africa is not listed as one of its 13 priority countries. All governments that support NGOs – including South Africa – are having problems with their budgets and seem to be cutting grant funding to organisations.
Nowadays an organisation must look at its own business model and focus on strategic planning and risk management. It must incorporate sustainability tactics in all its processes.
If they don’t look at ways of accessing new funding avenues and ways of developing their income streams, they are not going to make it.
Organisations such as the Networking HIV and Aids Community of Southern Africa (Nacosa) suggest there is a need to look carefully at opportunities for partnerships, consortiums and collaborations.
Groups need to be doing things together, where each partner can focus on their strong points and pool resources.
Nacosa has, over the past five years, been looking at other avenues for its funding, and our new strategy places even more emphasis on this.
As NGOs, we must find ways to link more with entities and businesses where there are synergies with what we are doing.
That is why we are focusing on developing strategic partnerships with corporate South Africa and other institutional partners where each of us can add our own special value.
Civil society has to learn to be more resilient but also find ways of cutting costs. We must do more with less.
There are some definite trends developing in the HIV/Aids response funding sphere.
UNAids’ 90-90-90 targets are to have 90% of all people living with HIV knowing their status, 90% of people on antiretroviral therapy and 90% of people receiving ART and having viral suppression is a major focus.
And so is the approach of saturating geographic areas and certain populations with highly focused interventions where it is going to make the most difference.
Organisations need the required knowledge but must also be able to show they are having an effect in these highly targeted areas and populations.
Organisations have to be able to show impact, to demonstrate their theory of change and also to pinpoint where in the bigger picture their organisation and its interventions fit.
Another element in need of exploring is more volunteerism. There are many skilled people who want to help and this is a golden opportunity for civil society to sensitise the public about the circumstances they work in.
This will help everyone to grow together towards making a change in society rather than continuing down parallel tracks.
True sustainability is looking at the whole picture of your organisation – from its finances, to its programming and operations – to ensure it can be resilient to external and internal shocks and keep on providing vital services.
Managing risk and performance (staff spending time on the right things) should be a golden thread from governance, planning and implementation through to evaluation.
The global funding environment is not going to get any easier in the near future and we must all be well prepared so that we do not simply survive, but grow and thrive.
Volunteerism is an area in need of exploring
De Vos is the programme director at Nacosa. Before joining Nacosa, she was the executive director of Mosaic Training, Service and Healing Centre