Recommendation
Be explicit about which role you are playing at a given time (as both a funder and advocate in the field), understand where the boundaries of that role lie, and be aware of the conflict that may crop up when switching roles. This is relevant both in private (e.g., in a conversation with a prospective grantee) and in public (e.g., when writing a white paper).
Related Insights
Funder rolesRelated Resources
A practical guide to outcome-focused philanthropy
A philanthropic framework that emphasizes rigor, results, learning, and adaptation. This guidebook and set of worksheets helps foundation staff integrate this approach across all stages of philanthropic work.
Knowledge Base
Source: Lori Grange, Hewlett FoundationParticipant Bill of Rights
An informed consent document conveying the ways field research participants are entitled to control the interview or observation process. The document outlines rights related to: (1) the power to ask questions, (2) compensation just for showing up, and (3) control over what information is captured and how it’s shared.
Article
Source: Simply SecureHigh Risk User Research
A video on working with high-risk users or in contexts where security and privacy are critical.
Knowledge Base
Source: Simply SecureIDEO Service Design Tools
An open collection of communication tools used in design proccesses that deal with complex systems.
Knowledge Base
Source: IDEOOn Trust & Transparency: Full Report
Download the full report.
Report
Source: Simply SecureOn Trust & Transparency: Interview Guide
The interview guide used for the participant interviews during the Partner Perspectives project.
Report
Source: Simply SecureOn Trust & Transparency: Survey Guide
The survey guide used for the Partner Perspectives project. This was hosted in LimeSurvey an open-source survey tool that can be self-hosted or hosted via Limesurvey’s website.
Report
Source: Simply Secure