Indian Social Sector Struggles As Majority Stuck At Mid Data Maturity

This article in BW Businessworld reports on the DMA State of the Sector report findings, which reveal that 70 per cent of Indian Social Purpose Organisations remain trapped in mid-level data maturity. Despite 80 per cent of nonprofits recognising data as vital, a significant “awareness-action gap” exists, with only 28 per cent integrating data across all core functions. The piece highlights critical infrastructure deficits, noting that nearly 35 per cent still rely on hard copies for storage. It concludes that moving beyond donor-driven compliance requires leadership commitment and smarter funding to bridge the prevailing talent and technology gaps.

ISDM CDSSI Report Finds Only 5% of Social Purpose Organisations in India Are ‘Beginners’ in Data Use

This article highlights the DMA State of the Sector report. Findings show that while only 5.3% are “Beginners”, 70% remain in “Emerging” or “Progressing” stages. Despite 66% of organisations valuing data as “extremely important”, a stark capacity gap exists—only 10% possess in-house data science expertise. Further, data use is primarily restricted to program design rather than holistic management. The authors argue for a cultural shift from viewing data as a compliance burden to seeing it as a shared responsibility for scaling social impact.

Only 5% of SPOs in India Are ‘Beginners’ in Data Use, Shows ISDM CDSSI’s State of the Sector Report

This is a press release about the foundational findings of the State of the Sector report by CDSSI. The article details that only 5.3% of India’s Social Purpose Organisations (SPOs) fall into the ‘Beginner’ category, suggesting a widespread, baseline adoption of data across the sector. However, the report also identifies a clear “capability gap,” noting that while 66% of SPOs view data as vital, only 10% possess in-house data science expertise. By highlighting that approximately 70% of organisations are in the “Emerging” or “Progressing” stages, the authors emphasise the need for a cultural shift from using data for donor compliance to using it for collaborative learning and strategic programmatic impact.

India is turning towards data maturity for social change

Trisha Varma and Swetha Prakash write in Hindustan Times about the increasing adoption of data as a strategic lever for social change in India. Drawing on findings from the ISDM CDSSI Data Maturity Assessment (DMA), the authors highlight that while 66% of Social Purpose Organisations (SPOs) recognise the extreme importance of data, the majority remain at “emerging” or “progressing” levels of maturity. The article identifies significant barriers to progress, including low levels of digitalisation and legal uncertainty surrounding the Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDPA). The authors argue that for India to reach its “Viksit Bharat” goals, the social sector must move beyond using data merely for donor compliance and instead embed a holistic data culture into core functions to drive sustainable, large-scale impact.

15th ISTR Conference (International Society for Third sector Research)

Urvi Shriram, Lead, ISDM-CPID and Dr. Ria Sinha, Research Lead, ISDM-CPID presented the paper ‘From Charity to Social Justice-Insights on Rethinking and Reshaping Philanthropy in India’ in the session ‘Attitudes about philanthropy and its role: Strategies and roles’ of the 15th ISTR Conference (International Society for Third sector Research) 12-15th July, 2022.

Panel Discussion I Implications of the shifts in the philanthropy ecosystem on social justice

ISDM-CPID organised an in-person discussion on the Implications of the shifts in the philanthropy ecosystem on social justice to understand how funders and social purpose organisations can effectively work together and meaningfully engage with communities for sustainable social change.

Implications of the shifts in the philanthropy ecosystem on social justice

An in-person and panel interaction With Neelima Khetan, CSR and social Sector advisor, Puja Marwaha, CEO, CRY, Suresh Reddy, CSR lead and Director SRF Foundation and Saransh Vaswani, Director and Co-Founder, Saajha for ISDM students, staff.

Shifting from Charity to Justice: A Recasting of the Role of Philanthropic Organizations in the Indian Context

CPID at ISDM contributed a chapter to the edited volume, which introduces a preliminary, integrative conceptual framework at the intersection of management and social justice, emphasizing that the pursuit of social justice is not a fixed endpoint but an ongoing and evolving journey.

Demystifying the Black Box of OBF in India

This report summarises insights, recommendations and action‑points from a roundtable on Outcome‑Based Financing (OBF) in India. It captures diverse stakeholder perspectives on nonprofits’ perceptions, support needs, challenges and potential strategies to make OBF transparent, accessible and effective for social organisations. It aims to illuminate hidden barriers (“black box”) in OBF adoption and chart practical steps forward.

Building Evaluation Systems and Capacities to Leverage Context- A Way Forward

The document summarises deliberations at the 2025 Evaluation Conclave 2025 (Colombo), co‑hosted by Indian School of Development Management (ISDM) and GRAAM. It explores how evaluation systems in development practice must be grounded in local contexts while remaining methodologically robust, highlighting the need for participatory evaluation, stakeholder‑ownership, context‑sensitive methods, and capacity building of evaluators and communities. It calls for institutionalising evaluation as a discipline, strengthening evaluator skills, and aligning evaluation use with policy and community needs, to ensure evaluations are meaningful, inclusive, and relevant to lived realities.
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