Questions to Understand a Cross-sector Collaboration

 These questions reflect our thinking at the time of publication — They are occasionally updated based on conversations with practitioners, scholars, and other supporters of cross-sector collaboration. You can download a PDF of the questions here.

Cross-sector collaboration can be complex and sometimes opaque, bringing together multiple stakeholders with differing institutional logics, motivations, and practices, who are often navigating ambiguous decision-making processes with varying formality. These questions are intended to help those interested or involved in a particular cross-sector collaboration better understand the complexities and nuances of the program or initiative. Because there are many approaches to partnership, not every question here will be useful for every cross-sector collaboration.

 

Considering the answers to these questions can be helpful for a range of users, including:

  • Individuals or organizations who are developing a case study about a specific cross-sector collaboration
  • Individuals or organizations considering becoming involved in a cross-sector collaboration who want to know more about the health of the initiative (e.g., potential funders or partners)
  • Individuals or organizations involved in a cross-sector collaboration who are tasked with communicating key information about the collaboration’s work to external stakeholders (e.g., members of the press)
  • What offices, agencies, organizations, and companies are partnering in this collaboration? What individual(s) will represent each of them within the partnership?

 

  • Have the partners enlisted the assistance of a facilitator, negotiator, manager, or other third party to assist with the design, implementation, or evaluation of the collaboration? If so, who is this individual or organization, how was the individual or organization chosen, and what is their track record of success in previous cross-sector collaborations? Who is providing funding for this assistance?

 

  • Have the organizations and individuals involved worked together previously? If so, were those relationships successful (e.g., were they characterized by trust and goodwill and did they produce desired outcomes)?

 

  • Have the organizations and individuals involved participated in previous cross-sector collaborations, whether with these same partners or with others? If so, were they successful or not?

 

  • How is partners’ current collaborative work similar to or different from their previous work? (e.g., What differences or similarities are there in goals, governance, resources?)

 

  • What process was used to determine whom to include in the partnership?

 

  • Have any critical partners been left out? If so, who are they, why were they left out, and what are the potential downsides of their not being included?

 

  • Has the public been consulted on this partnership’s work in a meaningful way? If so, how (e.g., through public meetings or hearings, formal surveys, public comment periods, ballot measures)? If not, are partners considering a public consultation process of some kind? Was/Is the public consultation process required or voluntary? Has/Will this process focus on engaging members of the public who are most likely to be affected by the collaboration’s work?

 

  • What is the collaboration’s process for acting upon the feedback received through the public consultation process?

 

  • What signs of public support or opposition are observable, if any? What is the reason for this public support or opposition? Does the opposition pose a risk to the work and outcomes of the collaboration? If so, how will the collaboration mitigate that risk?