Skip to content

Organization-Wide Learning in Philanthropy

Introduction

Why Organization-Wide Learning Matters for Foundations

The uncomfortable truth for most foundations and nonprofits is that mission alone doesn’t achieve impact. In complex environments and without mechanisms to test assumptions, surface emerging patterns, and adapt direction, strategy quickly becomes outdated. The answer is not more planning, but organization-wide learning.

While many organizations do invest in learning, our upcoming report, it often fails to influence how the institution operates. Too often, findings remain siloed, disconnected from action, and absent from the moments that shape direction. By taking an organization-wide approach, foundations ensure that learning doesn’t inform priorities, it guides them.

Drawing on extensive organizational learning research and case studies from eight prominent foundations, this report introduces a practical model for embedding learning across an entire institution, along with real-world examples of what this looks like in practice.

Why is Organizational Learning Important?

An organization-wide learning agenda weaves learning into the fabric of a foundation’s culture, strategy, and operations, much like the way a strategic plan provides overall direction.

Learning that is embedded across an institution (rather than confined to a single team or moment) becomes infrastructure. This means alignment is strengthened through the creation of structured opportunities for teams to surface tensions, connect across portfolios, and move in a coherent direction. It preserves institutional memory so that knowledge shapes future strategy rather than disappearing through staff transitions. Insights are generated at the moments when decisions about resources, priorities, and direction are actually being made. And it cultivates a culture where curiosity, humility, and reflection are not occasional practices but shared expectations. The result is an organization that doesn’t just collect findings but learns from them, acts on them, and builds the capacity to keep doing so as context and challenges evolve.

How are Leading Foundations Implementing Organizational Learning?

The report features eight case studies from foundations that have implemented various forms of organization-wide learning agendas. These case studies are not intended to showcase “best practices”, but to illustrate a range of possibilities and provide practical examples that others can draw from:

8 Foundation Learning Approaches

BHP Foundation
The David and Lucile Packard Foundation
Democracy Fund
MacArthur Foundation
Overdeck Family Foundation
The Rockefeller Foundation
William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation

What Are the Challenges of Organizational Learning?

There are several persistent challenges in embedding and sustaining these efforts. These challenges often reflect tension between intention and implementation, and create barriers to application, consistency, measurement, and equally distributed knowledge sharing.

  • Insights didn’t always reach decisionmakers or influence major shifts.
  • Maintaining learning efforts over time is a struggle, and momentum could can stall when energy from a leader isn’t sustained.
  • Assessing and documenting impact and value can be challenging.
  • Silos and cultural norms can hinder learning.

The report addresses each of these challenges directly, offering practical tools, operational principles, and real-world examples from eight foundations that have navigated them so organizations have a clear path forward, not just a compelling case for why it matters.

“Articulating the organization-level strategy unlocked organization-level learning and created the container for it.”
— Democracy Fund.

About the Authors

Jared Raynor
Director, Evaluation and Learning

Jared has extensive experience in evaluation, including international development, health programming, and an assortment of hard-to-measure areas like coalitions, policy advocacy, and system change initiatives. Author and contributor to many publications, Jared is a sought-after speaker and leading thinker in a variety of areas, including organizational effectiveness, evaluation and learning, policy and advocacy evaluation, prize philanthropy, and networks and coalitions.

Charles Gasper
Senior Consultant, Evaluation and Learning

Charles is a thought leader on organizational development and community change. He is a sought-after speaker on innovative uses of various publicly accessible tools to support evaluation of community impact. His work has helped funders, nonprofits, businesses, and government agencies improve their impact on the communities they serve.

We are grateful to BHP Foundation, David and Lucille Packard Foundation, Democracy Fund, MacArthur Foundation, Overdeck Family Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation, William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, and Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation for sharing their organization-wide learning approaches.

Stay Updated

Join our email list to stay updated with TCC Group’s practices, tools, and resources.