Skip to Content

Welcome!

Share and discuss the best content and new marketing ideas, build your professional profile and become a better marketer together.

Sign up

You need to be registered to interact with the community.
This question has been flagged
As a moderator, you can either validate or reject this answer.
Accept Reject
3 Views

[AI generated] I once met a woman named xx while visiting a rural health clinic funded by three different international donors. Each donor had its own logo painted on the walls. Each had its own reporting forms stacked on the nurse’s desk. None had paid her salary on time. XX spent more hours filling out paperwork—written in a language she didn’t speak at home—than treating patients. When I asked what the community needed most, she didn’t say more programs or pilot projects. She said, “Consistency.” The clinic had been launched, closed, rebranded, and relaunched so many times that people stopped trusting it would still exist next year. This story isn’t about one failure—it’s about a system that often prioritizes visibility over viability, donor timelines over local realities, and “success stories” over sustained change. If the aid sector is designed to help, why does it so often burden the very people it claims to serve? And what does it mean if communities survive despite aid, rather than because of it? I’m curious—have you seen moments where aid interventions missed the mark, and what do you think would need to fundamentally change for the sector to actually work?

Avatar
Discard

Your Answer

Please try to give a substantial answer. If you wanted to comment on the question or answer, just use the commenting tool. Please remember that you can always revise your answers - no need to answer the same question twice. Also, please don't forget to vote - it really helps to select the best questions and answers!