How did funders work together last year – and what’s next for the Hub?

February 14, 2023

7

minute read
Jim Cooke
Head of the Funders Collaborative Hub

It’s now more than a year since we launched the current version of the Funders Collaborative Hub website.

This blog looks back at how funders have been using the Hub to share and explore collaboration opportunities, and what we’re learning from this.  I’ll also share our plans for continuing to develop the Hub in 2023.

Sharing collaboration opportunities

The Hub was designed to make it easy for funders to share collaboration opportunities with their peers. It’s been great to see so many funders making use of this. We now have more than 120 opportunities available to explore, with new opportunities being added around once a week.

These include existing collaborations of all kinds, from informal networks to pooled funds.  Many of these have used the Hub to share information about their work publicly for the first time. This makes it easier for funders to find out about and connect with others who are already working on relevant issues.

The Hub also features a growing number of emerging collaboration opportunities. These allow funders to share early-stage ideas, plans or questions that they would like to explore with others.  Whether this leads to formal collaboration, or simply sparks a few insightful conversations, we hope that funders making relevant connections further ‘upstream’ will lead to better informed work, and ultimately greater impact.

Exploring collaboration data

As the number of opportunities published on the Hub has grown, we’ve built up a unique dataset about what funders are collaborating on and where. We’ve also gathered valuable insights into why funders are collaborating – the benefits they are working towards together that they could not achieve alone.

In May 2022, we published our first analysis of what issues funders are collaborating on. Since then, the range of issues on the Hub has widened considerably, with new categories added such as employment, facilities, financial investment, policy campaigning and advocacy, research and volunteering. There are now 40 issues which can be explored using our search and filter functions.

We’ve also seen further opportunities added in some of the most popular issue categories, such as young people, social welfare, health and arts.

Top ten issues (by number of collaboration opportunities, February 2023):

We can also see the geographical distribution of funder collaboration. Just over half of the collaboration opportunities currently listed are UK-wide, and a few are international. The remainder cover every region and devolved nation of the UK, as shown in the ‘heatmap’ below (which updates our previous work on mapping UK funder collaboration).

UK funder collaboration heatmap, showing the number of collaboration opportunities listed on the Funders Collaborative Hub, by devolved country/English region (February 2023). The data shown on the map are also listed in the text of the blog.

See what’s happening in each country or region (ranked by number of collaboration opportunities, February 2023):

I encourage funders to make a habit of checking the Hub early on whenever they are starting to develop a new piece of work.

Jim Cooke
Head of the Funders Collaborative Hub

Engaging with collaboration opportunities

All these collaboration opportunities can be freely explored on our website at any time. I encourage funders to make a habit of checking the Hub early on whenever they are starting to develop a new piece of work. This can quickly highlight whether other funders are already discussing or working together on a related issue. It then becomes easier to decide whether it makes sense to engage with an existing collaboration, or to start something new that builds on previous work or fills an identified gap.

In 2022, our ‘Search the Hub for collaboration opportunities’ page was visited around 1,400 times per month. We also highlighted new and updated opportunities in our monthly newsletter (which you can sign up here to receive) and on Twitter.

In total, there were more than 25,000 page views of individual collaboration opportunities.

The ten most visited collaboration opportunities in 2022 (number of views shown in brackets) were:

Although these popular pages attracted the most interest, engagement was widely spread between the opportunities published on the Hub. Opportunities typically received between 50 and 300 views each.

Collaboration as a means to an end

By analysing the opportunities shared on the Hub, and informed by hundreds of conversations with funders about what they are hoping to achieve together, we identified four main ways that funder collaboration can be a means to an end.

  1. The power of networks – even the most informal connections with peers can enable funders to work in more mutually aware ways, sharing intelligence to help them identify gaps and reduce duplication. These ‘loose ties’ often provide an essential starting point for other forms of partnership, as Lloyds Bank Foundation wrote in October 2022.
  2. Improving efficiency – from a long-running Harmonising Reporting programme in Scotland to Yorkshire Funders’ recently developed Yorkshire Common Application Form, working together to streamline processes can benefit funders, applicants and grantees.
  3. Engaging with non-funders – some funders are using collaborative structures to create more equitable and inclusive ways of engaging with the organisations and communities they want to fund, like LocalMotion, which is driven by a “desire to challenge the typical power structures and hierarchies that become barriers to progress”.
  4. Tackling systemic issues – when funders align their resources, knowledge and networks towards a shared goal, truly transformational change can come within reach. The benefit of this can be seen at work in local cross-sector collaborations like Perth & Kinross’s Strategic Youth Work Partnership.

These benefits of collaboration are explored further in our June 2022 blog, How funders are finding their collaborative advantage.

Our plans for the Hub in 2023

In two-and-a-half years, the Funders Collaborative Hub has evolved from a pandemic-focused pilot into a valued piece of infrastructure for the whole funding sector. In 2023, we aim to build on this progress, working towards the following four objectives.

1. Be the go-to source for information on funder collaboration opportunities

This will include:

  • Keeping our current collaboration opportunities up-to-date and regularly adding new ones
  • Improving our process and guidance for adding collaboration opportunities on our website
  • Sharing more data and analysis about funder collaboration.

We’re currently looking for some funders to help us review how well our website's search and filter tools are working. If you can spare up to an hour to take part in some user research, please get in touch.

2. Enable diverse funders to make new connections that help them take action to advance their work more effectively, equitably and inclusively

This will include:

  • Following up all emerging opportunities shared on the Hub to understand their progress and outcomes
  • Evaluating the Hub's role in enabling funders to make beneficial new connections, and sharing the impact of this through case studies like this one
  • Offering additional engagement to existing collaborations at times when they have a particular need to connect with wider funders, for example by publishing guest blogs from collaboration leaders.

3. Identify and champion collaborative funder practices that are effective, equitable and inclusive, and share tools and resources to enable these 

This will include:

If you have a viewpoint on funder collaboration that you’d be interested in sharing, please get in touch.

4. Plot a clear pathway towards the Hub’s integration as a sustainable part of ACF’s role in the charitable giving ecosystem

As ACF implements a new five-year strategy, we will work with the Hub’s Strategy Group to assess options for how the benefits of the Hub can be maximised for the long-term in a cost-effective way, and plan the transition to a sustainable future delivery model.

Follow our progress

We’ll publish our progress towards these objectives in a new monthly performance dashboard. You can see our first update, for January 2023, here.

Reporting in this way is part of our commitment to openness and accountability. If you have any feedback or questions about the Hub, please contact us.

Connect with other funders

Search the Hub for current collaboration opportunities in your areas of interest.

Explore the Hub