For many Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) across Africa, Asia, Latin America and other parts of the Global Majority, funding conversations often begin and end with grants. While grants remain essential, the reality is that they are no longer sufficient to address the scale and complexity of today’s social, environmental and economic challenges.
At the same time, governments are facing growing fiscal pressures. International aid budgets are shrinking. Competition for philanthropic resources is becoming more intense. Yet the demand for locally led solutions has never been greater.
This changing landscape requires CSOs to rethink how they finance their work.
One of the most promising opportunities is blended finance.
Although the term may sound technical, the principle is quite simple. Blended finance combines grants or concessional funding with commercial investment to finance projects that deliver both social impact and financial returns. It uses public or philanthropic resources to reduce risk and encourage private investors to support initiatives they might otherwise consider too risky.
For CSOs in the Global Majority, blended finance is not simply another funding source. It represents an opportunity to move from surviving project to project towards building stronger, more sustainable institutions.
Why blended finance matters now
The world faces an enormous financing gap in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Estimates suggest that more than US$4 trillion is needed annually to close this gap.
Governments and donors cannot meet this challenge alone.
Private capital must become part of the solution. However, investors often struggle to identify opportunities that combine financial sustainability with meaningful social impact, particularly in developing countries where markets may appear uncertain.
This is precisely where CSOs have a unique advantage.
While investors understand finance, CSOs understand communities.
They know the local context, understand social dynamics, have built relationships with communities and often possess decades of experience delivering change where others cannot.
Rather than seeing themselves only as recipients of funding, CSOs should begin positioning themselves as trusted partners that reduce investment risk while increasing development impact.
What investors are really looking for
Many CSOs assume investors only care about financial returns.
This is only partly true.
Blended finance investors are equally interested in whether an organisation can deliver sustainable impact while managing resources responsibly.
Several qualities make an organisation attractive.
Strong local legitimacy
Local trust is one of the greatest assets a CSO can offer.
Communities trust organisations that have consistently worked alongside them. Governments recognise them. Local leaders respect them.
This social capital cannot easily be purchased by external investors.
Increasingly, investors recognise that projects succeed because of trusted local relationships rather than simply good technical designs.
A clear problem with a practical solution
Investors want clarity.
Can you clearly explain:
- What problem are you solving?
- Why does it matter?
- Who benefits?
- What evidence supports your approach?
- How will success be measured?
A strong Theory of Change remains one of the most powerful tools a CSO can have.
It demonstrates not only what activities will be delivered but also how those activities will create lasting change.
Strong governance
Blended finance involves multiple funding partners.
This requires confidence in governance.
Investors will examine:
- leadership quality
- financial management
- procurement systems
- safeguarding
- risk management
- accountability structures
- board effectiveness
Strong governance gives confidence that investments will be managed responsibly.
Financial discipline
Many excellent organisations lose funding opportunities because their financial systems are weak.
Investors need confidence that organisations can:
- produce reliable financial statements
- manage budgets accurately
- monitor expenditure
- forecast cash flow
- report transparently
Good finance systems are no longer simply administrative requirements.
They are strategic assets.
Measuring impact
Modern investors increasingly ask:
“What difference will this investment make?”
This means organisations need robust monitoring, evaluation and learning systems that demonstrate outcomes rather than simply activities.
Evidence matters.
Stories matter.
Data matters.
Successful organisations combine all three.
Which blended finance models work best for the Global Majority?
Not every financial instrument fits every organisation.
Some approaches are particularly well suited to the realities of the Global Majority.
1. Technical Assistance Facilities
This is often the best starting point.
Technical Assistance grants help organisations become investment ready.
They may finance:
- feasibility studies
- business planning
- financial modelling
- market research
- legal advice
- investment readiness assessments
Many successful blended finance projects begin with Technical Assistance.
2. Guarantees
Risk remains one of the biggest barriers preventing investment in developing countries.
Guarantees reduce this risk.
Development agencies agree to absorb part of potential losses if projects fail.
This gives commercial investors greater confidence to invest.
Guarantees can unlock financing that would otherwise never become available.
3. Results-based financing
Instead of paying for activities, funders pay for results.
For example:
- children completing school
- women accessing healthcare
- farmers increasing productivity
- communities gaining access to clean water
This approach rewards performance while encouraging innovation.
4. Social Impact Bonds and Development Impact Bonds
These instruments bring together governments, philanthropies and private investors.
Investors provide upfront financing.
If agreed social outcomes are achieved, governments or donors repay investors with an agreed return.
While still relatively new across Africa, these models are growing and have significant potential.
5. SME investment partnerships
Many CSOs support farmers, women’s groups, youth enterprises and community businesses.
Rather than financing only the CSO itself, blended finance can support these local enterprises through affordable loans, patient capital or investment funds.
The CSO becomes an intermediary that strengthens local businesses while creating wider community impact.
6. Blended country platforms
These are becoming increasingly important.
Rather than funding isolated projects, governments, donors, development banks and private investors jointly finance national priorities.
These platforms create opportunities for local organisations to participate in much larger investments linked to agriculture, health, education, climate adaptation and renewable energy.
How can CSOs become investment ready?
Investment readiness rarely happens by accident.
It requires deliberate preparation.
Think beyond projects
Many CSOs design projects.
Investors finance business models.
Organisations need to demonstrate how interventions can become sustainable over time rather than ending when grants expire.
Build partnerships
Blended finance is rarely delivered by one organisation.
Successful projects usually involve partnerships between:
- governments
- development banks
- foundations
- commercial investors
- local financial institutions
- research organisations
- civil society
CSOs should actively cultivate these relationships before funding opportunities arise.
Speak the language of both impact and finance
Traditional fundraising often focuses on needs.
Investment conversations focus on opportunities.
Rather than saying:
“We need funding.”
Consider saying:
“Here is an investment opportunity that delivers measurable social outcomes while reducing long-term costs and creating sustainable value.”
The language matters.
Develop diversified income
Organisations that rely entirely on grants often appear financially vulnerable.
Investors prefer organisations with multiple income streams such as:
- consultancy services
- training programmes
- membership fees
- social enterprises
- earned income
- philanthropy
- grants
- investment capital
Financial diversity demonstrates resilience.
The Global Majority has its own advantages
Perhaps the greatest mistake is assuming that organisations from the Global Majority must simply imitate Northern models.
They should not.
The Global Majority already possesses strengths that investors increasingly value.
These include:
- deep community trust
- local knowledge
- indigenous innovation
- strong informal networks
- community philanthropy
- faith-based giving traditions
- youth leadership
- entrepreneurial resilience
These are competitive advantages.
The challenge is not creating them.
The challenge is presenting them in ways that investors understand and value.
A final reflection
Blended finance should never replace grants.
Many essential public services and rights-based programmes will always require grant funding.
However, blended finance offers an important additional pathway for organisations seeking to scale their impact and strengthen their long-term sustainability.
For CSOs in the Global Majority, success will depend less on becoming financial experts and more on becoming credible partners.
Those organisations that combine community legitimacy, strong governance, measurable impact and sustainable business thinking will be best positioned to attract this growing pool of capital.
The future belongs to organisations that can confidently sit at both tables, the community meeting and the investment committee.
The Global Majority does not lack solutions.
It needs financing models that recognise, trust and invest in those solutions.


