Making due diligence more realistic
Many companies now have formal due-diligence processes in place. In reality, however, these processes have struggled to move beyond documentation.
NGO partnerships can help close that gap. NGOs can explain why certain risks persist despite policies, why mitigation measures fail in specific contexts, and what trade-offs actually look like on the ground. This helps companies move from compliance-driven approaches to more realistic and effective responses.
For NGOs, this is also a point of influence. Instead of being asked to comment on finished systems or audit outcomes, they can help shape how due diligence is designed and applied. That involvement increases the chance that mitigation measures are feasible, culturally appropriate, and focused on root causes rather than symptoms.
When partnerships are built around learning and problem-solving — rather than validation — due diligence becomes more than a paper exercise. It becomes a process that improves decision-making and supports credible mitigation, including in day-to-day sourcing choices.
Addressing problems no one can solve alone
Some risks cannot be addressed by a single company acting independently. Low wages, informal labour, water scarcity, land-use conflict, or weak local enforcement often require coordinated action across suppliers, buyers, governments, and civil society.
In these situations, NGO–company partnerships can create the conditions for collective action. NGOs can help convene actors, build trust among parties with unequal power, and provide legitimacy for joint initiatives. Companies, in turn, can contribute scale, operational reach, and commercial leverage.
For NGOs, this can mean greater impact without carrying responsibility they cannot fulfil alone. For companies, it offers a way to address systemic risks without overpromising or shifting responsibility onto actors with limited capacity.
This is often where partnership work becomes most practical — aligning roles, agreeing priorities, and creating ways of working that survive pressure and scrutiny.
Where partnerships break down
Despite their potential, many NGO–company partnerships struggle.
Common failure points include unclear expectations, mismatched timelines, and partnerships built primarily for reputation rather than substance. NGOs may feel instrumentalised or pressured to endorse initiatives they did not shape. Companies may become frustrated when partnerships surface uncomfortable truths without offering quick solutions.
Another frequent challenge is internal ownership. If partnerships sit outside core business functions — disconnected from procurement, operations, or risk management — insights rarely translate into action. On the NGO side, short-term project funding or rotating corporate contacts can undermine continuity and trust.
Acknowledging these tensions openly is not a weakness; it is often a prerequisite for partnerships that last.