Lasting Change Starts with a Landscape Analysis

By Mike Wang
|
10 / 22 / 20

Every few months, I get a call from a philanthropist that goes something like this. 

“Hey Mike, we know you specialize in policy and advocacy strategy. Could you write a strategic plan for our foundation?” 

My response is always the same: 

Before we can work together on strategy, we need to understand your landscape in a deeper way. 

Fueled by urgency, philanthropists and change agents sometimes jump to solutions before fully understanding the problems they are working to solve, and the context and communities most impacted by those problems. 

That approach sacrifices sustainability in the name of expediency, and can result in advocacy that is at best a flash-in-the-pan, and at worst, unintentionally harmful to the issues and communities philanthropists aim to serve. 

Whether seeking to achieve a specific policy change or evaluating how to maximize their philanthropic impact, an understanding of the landscape will help forward-thinking funders move forward in a way that allows for real systems change.

A good landscape analysis offers perspective in three key areas. 

Better understand how power and influence work.

A landscape analysis helps you understand how power and influence work in the communities in which you are driving change. Funders taking an ecosystem approach must be grounded in those unique dynamics that shape power and influence in any given community. 

Sometimes those dynamics have a name; in all communities they matter. For example, understanding how a region’s cities and suburbs relate, the relationship between state and local governments, the role of race, and the norms and social mores that characterize philanthropy and politics all matter when trying to move the needle on any given issue. 

Better understand complex problems.

Taking the time to root your work in the local landscape helps you understand complex problems and avoid oversimplification. In philanthropy, there is a tendency to grasp at simple solutions because they feel good. “If we can get books into this school library everything will be OK.” Or “if I just give a MacBook to every kid they’ll have access to online learning.” 

But when we work with funders, we encourage them to embrace complexity. Real solutions to social problems are usually anything but simple, and it takes time and effort to understand those problems at the root level and to in turn, create effective strategies to address them. 

Gain a fresh, unbiased perspective.

Getting an objective, third-party view of your landscape helps uncover difficult truths about your work that you might never find on your own. When we perform a landscape analysis, we dig deep to find truth—no matter how ugly, no matter how deeply buried—and then use that to shape a more effective strategy.

By bringing fresh eyes to the work, we don’t carry the baggage that comes with years of “always doing it this way.” In doing this work for clients, many of whom have spent decades working on their issue and in their community, I have yet to do a landscape analysis that doesn’t uncover some new insight or different perspective on old problems. 

There is no single playbook for change. There is no simple template from which to build a strategy that will work in every city or on every issue. 

Rather, you have to understand a region’s unique dynamics and nuance in order to catalyze change effectively. That kind of deep-dive need only take a few months. But, it’s time well worth spending for the forward-thinking philanthropist committed to real impact. 

Share

More Insights & Resources

As a working mom with four kids under seven, I’ve learned to adjust the expectations I have for motherhood. My...
By Caitlin Hannon
|
03 / 25 / 24
In 2021, at the height of a global pandemic, 98 new billionaires joined the Forbes list in America alone. Collectively,...
By Alex Johnston
|
12 / 14 / 23
This holiday season my wife and I are celebrating our 15th wedding anniversary. Ever the philosopher, my 13-year-old son asked...
By Mike Wang
|
12 / 08 / 23
Over the last eleven years, we’ve had the privilege at Building Impact to partner with incredible donors and other changemakers...
By Building Impact
|
10 / 20 / 23
A few weeks ago I shared some data about the demographics and giving habits of the ultra wealthy on my...
By Alex Johnston
|
12 / 15 / 22
One of the biggest barriers to giving, and giving effectively, is the American taboo around talking about money and wealth....
By Alex Johnston
|
08 / 24 / 22
Recently, a well-respected philanthropist came to me on a mission to find more meaning in her giving. Many like her...
By Mike Wang
|
07 / 20 / 22
I started 2022 with an impossible goal—a goal that felt so unlikely, so totally implausible, that it was laughable in its...
By Caitlin Hannon
|
04 / 24 / 22
In my neighborhood in Philadelphia, the effort to improve a physically dangerous, unattractive thoroughfare has come to illustrate one of...
By Mike Wang
|
03 / 02 / 22
This month, I returned from maternity leave after having my third child in October. With my first two children, I...
By Caitlin Hannon
|
01 / 25 / 22
As 2021 draws to a close, one of the year’s bright spots for me was the AppleTV show, Ted Lasso. At...
By Mike Wang
|
12 / 07 / 21
Here’s what that means and why it can be incredibly fulfilling for you as a donor. One big reason funders...
By Alex Johnston
|
11 / 24 / 21
Before any reports came out detailing the extent of the academic impact of the pandemic on students, education leaders were...
By Caitlin Hannon
|
09 / 16 / 21
As school systems around the country manage the challenge of returning to in-person instruction amidst the surging Delta variant and...
By Mike Wang
|
09 / 01 / 21
Over the past few years, a variety of leaders in philanthropy have been calling for funders to embrace more risk in their...
By Alex Johnston
|
08 / 03 / 21
So you’ve decided you want your philanthropy to be more transformative. Or innovative. Or to better live up to your aspirations...
By Mike Wang
|
06 / 21 / 21
One of the biggest barriers to high impact philanthropy is the fact that the people with the most  financial resources are rarely...
By Alex Johnston
|
05 / 20 / 21
To white people, from another white person –  I’m white, and I grew up in a predominantly white and wealthy...
By Molly Barnes
|
04 / 30 / 21
In America, we tend to believe that enough money can fix any problem. Who hasn’t sat around thinking, “If I...
By Caitlin Hannon
|
04 / 09 / 21
“We just can’t work with them anymore. Their political views are repugnant, even if they were with us before…”  “…But...
By Mike Wang
|
03 / 05 / 21
Search