About

Partnerships for delivery, expertise, funding and institutional development

We build cooperation around clear roles, useful expertise and practical implementation.

Partnership formats

We can work with organizations and experts where the partnership strengthens implementation quality.

Implementation partners

Organizations that co-deliver programs, trainings, research or capacity-building work.

Expert network

Independent experts and sector specialists engaged for assignments that require specific knowledge.

Funding ecosystem

Donors, foundations, companies and institutions connected to project funding and social investment.

Academic and community partners

Universities, communities and civic actors working on long-term institutional and development agendas.

What makes a partnership useful

1
Shared purpose and audience.
2
Clear role separation.
3
Practical implementation route.
4
Transparent communication and quality control.

Partnerships as delivery capacity

We work with partners when an assignment needs additional expertise, access, implementation capacity or sector knowledge. Partnerships are not decorative; they should make the work stronger for the client.

Some partners support delivery, some bring technical expertise, some are ecosystem allies, and some are clients or institutions with whom we have built repeated cooperation. Public use of logos and names should always be based on permission.

A good partnership has a clear role, shared standards and transparent responsibility. It should help move a project from concept to credible implementation.

Partnerships extend what can be delivered

We work with partners when an assignment needs additional expertise, access, implementation capacity or sector knowledge. Partnerships are not decorative; they should make the work stronger for the client.

Different types of partners

Some partners support delivery, some bring technical expertise, some are ecosystem allies, and some are clients or institutions with whom we have built repeated cooperation. Public use of logos and names should always be based on permission.

What we look for

A good partnership has a clear role, shared standards and transparent responsibility. It should help move a project from concept to credible implementation.

Partnership areas

  • Funding, grant writing and donor cooperation.
  • ESG, audit, legal or compliance expertise.
  • Civil society and community implementation.
  • University, research and training cooperation.

Have a partnership idea?

Send the context and what each side would bring. We will test whether the collaboration has a real working shape.