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South Africa’s solidarity fund: navigating the shores of uncertainty and crisis

Keratiloe Mogotsi (Wits Business School, Johannesburg, South Africa)
Amanda Bowen (Wits Business School, Johannesburg, South Africa)
Clare Mitchell (Wits Business School, Johannesburg, South Africa)

Publication date: 30 July 2024

Abstract

Learning outcomes

The learning outcomes focus on enabling higher-order learning for students to critically assess Agile project management in philanthropic settings, specifically compare and contrast Agile project management versus traditional project management in the context of a non-profit organisation (The Solidarity Fund) during a crisis; discuss and evaluate the role and contribution of philanthropy during times of crisis; rate the value additions and contributions of Agile approaches in philanthropy; evaluate the phases of Agile (unconventional) project management executed by The Solidarity Fund; and develop a review of the impact of the work done by The Solidarity Fund in terms of the approach that the Fund used. How effective/not effective was it?

Case overview/synopsis

Chaos, crisis and confusion: the three “C”s that succinctly condense the status quo during the COVID-19 pandemic. The roles and contributions of non-profit organisations gained recognition as countries worldwide responded to the crisis to save lives and livelihoods.

In South Africa, there was a sense of urgency and considerable pressure for a multi-stakeholder approach led by the government to save as many South African lives as possible. The conditions, however, were the opposite of traditional project management methodologies that advocate for the management of the triple constraints, namely, cost, time and scope.

How could cost be managed in a project without a set budget and which was reliant on philanthropy? How could time be managed without a set deadline and while tackling an invisible enemy – a virus that changed dynamics on a daily basis and – how could scope be managed in a context where the future was increasingly uncertain?

Complexity academic level

This case study can be useful for students undertaking postgraduate diploma in business, master of business administration (MBA), master of management courses.

Supplementary material

Teaching notes are available for educators only.

Subject code

CSS 11: Strategy.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Disclaimer: This case is written solely for educational purposes and is not intended to represent successful or unsuccessful managerial decision-making. The authors may have disguised names; financial and other recognizable information to protect confidentiality.

Citation

Mogotsi, K., Bowen, A. and Mitchell, C. (2024), "South Africa’s solidarity fund: navigating the shores of uncertainty and crisis", , Vol. 14 No. 3. https://doi.org/10.1108/EEMCS-04-2024-0133

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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