The State of the NGO Sector Today
- The NGO Darpan database reports approximately 2.65 lakh active NGOs in India; states such as Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh have a high number of NGOs due to their large populations.
- The top five focus areas covered by NGOs are education and early childhood care; arts, culture, and heritage; rural development; health and nutrition; and livelihoods and skilling.
Voice of the NGOs: Insights from a Survey of 400 NGOs
- Notably, 91 percent of NGOs surveyed operate with micro, small, and medium annual expenditures of less than INR 10 crores; 1 percent of NGOs had an annual expenditure of more than INR 50 crores.
- Moreover, 26 percent of NGOs focus their reach nationally or internationally; 44 percent of NGOs maintain a regional geographic focus, while 30 percent operate at the hyperlocal level.
- Only a striking 22 percent of NGOs reported having a corpus fund during the last fiscal year; 72 percent reported they had a funding deficit, largely due to erratic short-term funding they receive.
Social Impact Taxonomy
- All NGO work can be classified into one or more of three key activities:
- Knowledge building refers to the generation and dissemination of information through research and communication.
- Service delivery refers to the direct provision of services and products, fulfilling needs within communities linked to human development outcomes, including crisis response.
- Ecosystem development refers to the consolidation and reinforcement of efforts, processes, and systems at a macro level through multistakeholder engagements.
- NGOs articulate, measure, and attribute success in diverse ways. All NGOs track tangible and traceable inputs, activities, and outputs along a results chain.
- In describing the impact, there is a need to distinguish between output and outcomes and consider the connections between the two. NGOs count time and attribution while measuring change
NGO Evolution and Scale
- NGOs evolve and change course due to internal factors such as changes in resources and leadership. External factors include crises, regulations, community response, and technology.
- Evolution pathways of NGOs include intensifying existing activities, pivoting and changing the scope of activities circumstantially, or ceasing operations or programs due to the above factors.
- Scale is a context-dependent, directional representation of NGO strategies to maximize impact. Community and systems determine the three scaling dimensions observed:
- Scaling deep covers direct support or new programs to communities in focus, intensifying direct support or building new programs for a specific underserved community or geography.
- Scaling across covers direct or indirect support through existing or new programs, expanding direct or indirect support via programs to more communities or geographies.
- Scaling up covers indirect support to communities by targeting systems and concentrating on decision-making institutions, systems, or the overarching development environment.