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Stakeholder Consultations

Jane Logan

By Jane Logan, President of Logan Strategy Inc.
July 4, 2005

Two years ago, I was involved in a three-day multi-stakeholder consultation that gathered veterinarians, slaughterhouse operators, meat processors, farm representatives, regulators, research scientists, and animal welfare activists.

The goal was to develop a code for the humane handling of farm animals. I was in awe of the organizers' risk taking. Progress was slow, but participants got to know one another, understand each other's views and create some first steps together. There were no hidden agendas and there was a genuine desire to ensure farm animals were well treated. I arrived thinking the organizers were wildly ambitious and left with huge respect for transparent and inclusive consultation. The stakes were high and so was the long-term pay-off. It taught me to embrace the challenges of airing diverse opinion, because common understanding is the first step in developing sustainable solutions.

Why consult with stakeholders?

Whether your organization is working on a strategic plan, policy development, or creating a new program, consulting with key stakeholders is an important factor in achieving ultimate success. Here are some benefits of reaching out to stakeholders through surveys, one-on-one meetings and multi-stakeholder consultations. Above all, don't consult with stakeholders just to say you did. If you include them, it must be because you are willing to include their point of view and you intend consultation to result in change or a new direction.

What is a stakeholder?

Stakeholders are groups who have an interest in an organization's work, and to whom the organization has an ethical duty. Association stakeholders include members, employees, related organizations, potential partners, suppliers, the public, regulatory bodies, and the government. Not-for-profits and the voluntary sector may also add clients, community groups, community leaders, volunteers, funders and donors to this list while in the business world, customers and owners are also included as key stakeholders.

Think widely when considering who your stakeholders may be:
Board of directors Members
Clients/customers Issue experts
Community groups Potential new clients or members
Community leaders Owners
Competitors Partners & potential partners
Employees Public
Donors Regulators
Funders Suppliers
Government Related Organizations
Investors  

Who to consult?

Internal stakeholders are likely to be consulted more frequently, but don't ignore external input. Stakeholders on the periphery of your organization may bring important new points of view to planning.

With good ongoing lines of communication, it is neither practical nor necessary to consult with all stakeholders on every issue. Realistically, some may not be interested. Others may have a negative attitude towards your organization such that the difficulties of dealing with them overshadow their potential contributions. Competitors won't be consulted about your strategic plan, but you may seek their input on policy development like an industry response to new legislation. As a rule of thumb, the bigger the change contemplated, the more important broad stakeholder consultation becomes.

When to consult?

Nothing beats regular two-way communication, but focussed consultation with stakeholders is appropriate for gathering data as a prelude to planning and in strategy and objective setting stages.

Three options for stakeholder consultation
Table 1: Comparative benefits of various stakeholder consultations
Benefits Survey One on one meetings Multi-stakeholder consultation
A range of inputs is gathered
  • Increased stakeholder satisfaction with end result
  • Opportunity for real dialogue  
  • Opportunity to build consensus    
  • Opportunity to build ownership in the plan and its goals  
  • Diverging participants learn from one another    
  • Efficient use of time
  •  
  • Inexpensive if travel required
  •    

    Think of stakeholder consultation as insurance

    There are four common reasons for not consulting stakeholders at the outset of major planning or policy development exercises: This kind of thinking is a severe handicap to successful planning and sustainable implementation. It sows the seeds of organizational obsolescence.

    Stakeholder consultation is important insurance for the long-term effectiveness of an organization and enabling it to build sustainable new directions. Results may be quick or they may be slow and steady. The Canadian animal farm welfare stakeholders are still on track and working towards a code. They have neither bogged down in bureaucracy like the European effort, or become too splintered to take further common action like their American counterparts. They are building on the foundation laid during multi-stakeholder consultation, where they forged a common sense of responsibility for the end product.

    This article by Jane Logan was originally published in The Canadian Association. A professional, bilingual facilitator, Jane brings 20 years of experience, including eight as a senior executive in national trade associations, to her work in strategic planning and policy development for nonprofits. For more information, please visit www.loganstrategy.ca. Please credit Logan Strategy Inc. as the source on all copies, reproductions and distributions.


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