Friday, May 21, 2021

Corona demotivation

Last month have been very demotivating for me. My ability to push myself, finish work and achieve-oriented lifestyle has diminished. I am finding it difficult to live a simple disciplined life with a set routine.

Part of this could be attributed to Corona. Everyday is either invested in Corona related health issue or SOS message handling or dealing with bad news. However, in last week the bigger reason is my phone addiction. 

Now the key question is how to put life back on track.

1. Observe yourself, Observe your habits and rationale

2. Keep walking how so ever slow

3. Remember, not walking will make situation worse

4. Control phone usage, reduce your conversation time

5. Keep diary, be observant about your usage of time

6. Speak only when necessary. Control it by being extra vigilant about words coming from your mouth.

However, I had some new experiences in this period.

1. Sometimes health does not allow you to work.

2. Laziness is not always lack of discipline. Rather it could be induced due to health issues.

3. It is perfectly ok to work at your own pace and not run behind deliverables.

4. Try to sleep early if your day was not productive.

5. Your bad days should help you in feeling happy about your past and productive days. 

Take it easy. Just know the direction. Pace may vary. Effort and Effort fullness should always be there.

Corona discharge

Finally after a full year of escape, Corona caught up with me. 

Devastating wave

Bed, Plasma, Vaccine, Oxygen, Medication, Fundraiser,  what help is required?

Health issues: four phases

Funeral, Loss of humanity

Leadership and Accountability crisis

Technical imagination missing in bureaucracy

Time to revamp India

Technology as the key: IT infrastructure 



Life Situation

When some one quotes you fees after discharging service and you find the charges unreasonably high, then what are your options?

1. Bid time and do your research

2. Pay immediately and build a reputation/trust

3. Negotiate and pay the reduced fee 

4. Make it a point to tell the other person about exorbitant and unprofessional nature of fee

5. Consult third party and pay genuine amount

6. Pay and extract the work later

7. Don't pay at all

8. Consider it as his fortune and pay

9. Pay with difficulty

10. Pay and find some other professional for future

Friday, May 14, 2021

Fundraisers

 India is severely hit by Covid's second wave. The sudden and unforeseen nature of this man-made disaster has exposed the gaps in the governance process especially in the health sector. The bureaucracy which lacks socio-technical imagination and innovation has failed in ensuring efficient use of resources in these tough times. As the crisis deepens and governance structure collapse due to overload, today India stands on two often-ignored pillars of soft power to fight the Virus. These pillars are Civil society network at home and NRI-citizenry abroad. Civil society at home has the ground network to extend support to the needy people, whereas NRI citizenry has deep pockets to fund this extension and can mobilize international resources. As a result, many Indian institutions, alumni networks, and informal groups have come forward to collaborate with friends abroad in raising funds and using them to extend help to the needy. As an estimate, there are more than 200 fundraising campaigns are being run to support this informal collaboration. 

Fundraising is an exercise of crowdsourcing resources through voluntary, and charitable contributions for a specific cause. The fundraising campaign is a marketing, and public outreach exercise. However, raising funds is a small step in the process. The larger issues like how to consume, where to consume etc need clear answers for effective management of the campaign.   I was fortunate to witness a fundraiser and draw some lessons from it. Below I list some of my lessons.

1. Team: No man can run the whole orchestra alone. One needs a team. First, the team should be of the people who strongly believe in the social cause. Otherwise, campaign fatigue may result in attrition. Second, the team should have a strong networking capacity so that maximum impact outreach could happen. Third, the team should set a common code/norms about campaign pitch, how, what, and where of fund usage. The absence of a common code of conduct and ethical-operational value statement will certainly result in internal bickering.  Fourth, the team should have a clear understanding of the roles and responsibilities of each person. For instance, who is going to be the face of the campaign is often a flashpoint of ego conflicts.

2. Campaign pitch: Donors often contribute to the campaign for three reasons. First, Donors believe in the social cause. This leads to the question of why should they contribute to this campaign? Second, Donors believe in the fundraising team. This is a prominent reason for small fundraisers which has less media and marketing coverage. Third. Donors believe in the ethical end-use of money. For this, donors need to be told about the complete plan of fundraising and consumption. Hence, the fundraising team should decide beforehand about the complete operational process of consumption of resources to the last detail and should provide regular updates to the donors. Else there is a big question on leadership, accountability, and transparency. Even from a donor perspective, mere donation of the money is a lame approach to help. The real fight is against the governance breakdown hence, establishing accountability for the donated money is essential.

3. End-use: The criteria of a successful campaign is not about how much money was raised and how beautiful was the pitch. Rather it is about how effectively funds were used. How well the funds helped in addressing the problem at the grassroots. In this perspective, the idea of where and how to use the fund is critical for evaluating the effectiveness of the campaign. Three principles help here. First, one should know the precedence of duty. The foremost duty of a fundraiser is to the social cause, then to the donors, and lastly to the needy. Everyone else is immaterial. Second, Fundraisers should know the key problem they are trying to solve and how is it going to help in the crisis. For instance, in Covid, the crisis is of Governance of resources and not of money. Hence giving away money to last-mile connectivity providers may not be as effective as setting up your own channel of Governance. Third, on basis of a common understanding and common cause, people should devise clear broad criteria about the usage of funds. Any such criteria listing should leave scope for last-mile variations. This outlining the criteria for end-use and process of governance of funds should happen before pitching to donors. Fourth, transparency, accountability and last-mile use of funds should be clearly visible to the donors as well as fundraisers. This is what brings the true joy, satisfaction, and feeling that "we made the difference".

Hence in summary.

Do's

1. Have a team that believes in the social cause.

2. Have a common code of conduct, do's and don't, and broader contours of the campaign.

3. Be transparent and accountable to the donors.

4. Know about the end-use and full operation of funds before starting the campaign. 

5. Know the answer to "why my campaign"?

6. Assign each person's roles and clearly communicate it

7. Have a vision and intent towards the cause.

8. Know the terms and conditions of usage beforehand. 

9. Keep people with high EQ and SQ in the team, people who understand the grassroots.

10. Know the process of decision-making. Have mentors, neutral people with no vested interest, and larger-than-life vision. 

11. Be a leader, know the conflict points in advance, work collectively to diffuse them, build trust and avoid groupism.  

 Don't

1. Do not be whimsical and authoritative in the use of funds. When in conflict, refer to the code.

2. Do not let secondary motives supersede your primary motives. In case of conflicts, either leave the campaign or leave the secondary motive. Some people have secondary motives like testing their network strength, increasing their PR, benefitting their own organization, fame, and recognition, finding business out of it.

3. Do not bring your personal biases, prejudices and lack of understanding come in between.

4. Do not mix the need of immediate social cause with post-crisis plans. This delays the deployment of resources and golden hour intervention. Understand the crisis.

5. Do not hurry up. Fundraising is not the only way to help people.

6. Do not confuse leadership as authoritarianism or a one-man army.

7. Do not consider one task as supreme to the other. Like fundraising as supreme to procurement etc. Do not demean anyone's contribution.

8. Do not consider fund management as a corporate management exercise. Understand the social perspective. 

9. Do not play politics.

In the event of a conflict

1. Ask yourself why did you join? The answer can not be abstract. It has to be detailed to know the hidden unconscious motives.  If such secondary motives are there, then better accept them and be open about them. 

2. When in doubt, go back to donors. There is no shame. If not everyone then at least some of them.

3. Evaluate things in the social context with deeper social understanding. For instance, as soon as the money hits the account, people start treating the seeker organizations as a subject. Campaign team often forgets that they hold the money in a fiduciary capacity. 

4. If you can't use the money then better return it.

5. Respect the last mile connectivity providers and take their views into account.

6. Most importantly, Trust. Most people donated money to campaign out of trust. So when the campaign sub-loan the funds,  trust the smaller organization or the needy.

7. Dig within. Know the limits of rationality.

8. Evaluate everything on the ethical benchmark of transparency and accountability of fund usage.

9. Accept the fact that some wastage, irrational use, etc are bound to occur. 

10. Never say no to anyone seeking funds as long as they are not making a profit out of it. Division of chunk should be decided as per the pre-agreed criteria. 

Goodbye.