The influence of lean thinking on philanthropic organisations' disaster response processes

Keratiloe Mogotsi, F. Saruchera
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Abstract

PurposeThis paper aims to reveal the philanthropy landscape processes for dealing with disasters and examine the influence of lean thinking in managing philanthropy for disasters. It sought to leverage continuous improvement and maximise disaster response and humanitarian logistics efficiency.Design/methodology/approachA sequential quantitative, qualitative research methods strategy was utilised involving data collection with literary analysis and two sets of online surveys with 212 NGO staff members in Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa and Zimbabwe. In addition, in-depth key informant interviews were conducted with 23 staff members at various management levels from these countries.FindingsThe study found that lean thinking had a positive, statistically valid influence at a 95% confidence level. Community incorporation, government support and collaboration with other philanthropic organisations were critical success factors. When lean thinking tools were applied (any tools), philanthropic organisations experienced waste reduction and value addition, where waste reduction accounted for 67% variation, and value-addition accounted for 58%, respectively. These were the same benefits experienced in other industries, thus, justifying lean thinking's applicability in the non-profit sector. Lean was most helpful about the communication and duplication of efforts challenges humanitarian or philanthropic organisations face when responding to a disaster.Practical implicationsThe study equips leaders and philanthropic organisations with suggestions to manage and respond to disasters in a lean and effective manner. The study helps philanthropy leaders rethink their funding and response models to pursue lean policies catering to humanitarian organisations and the communities they serve.Originality/valueThe study closes significant gaps in the literature and practice by adopting a multi-sectoral lens that borrows from business and manufacturing tools into a non-profit context. It enables documentation of processes and logistical management by philanthropy organisations for continuous improvement and elimination of waste to ensure efficiency in the philanthropic role of alleviating the impact of disasters. The study also affirms the need for philanthropic organisations to incorporate community feedback, use lean tools to collaborate with other responding organisations and work closely with the local authorities to fulfil the government's supportive role: the primary source and executor in disaster response.
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精益思维对慈善组织救灾过程的影响
目的本文旨在揭示应对灾害的慈善景观过程,并考察精益思维在灾害慈善管理中的影响。它试图利用持续改进,最大限度地提高救灾和人道主义后勤效率。设计/方法/方法采用了一种顺序的定量、定性研究方法策略,包括数据收集和文学分析,以及对马拉维、莫桑比克、南非和津巴布韦的212名非政府组织工作人员进行的两组在线调查。此外,对来自这些国家的23名不同管理级别的工作人员进行了深入的关键线人访谈。研究发现,在95%的置信水平下,精益思维具有积极的、统计有效的影响。社区参与、政府支持以及与其他慈善组织的合作是成功的关键因素。当应用精益思维工具(任何工具)时,慈善组织都经历了废物减少和价值增加,其中废物减少分别占67%,价值增加分别占58%。这些都是其他行业所经历的相同好处,因此证明了精益思维在非营利部门的适用性。Lean对人道主义或慈善组织在应对灾难时面临的沟通和重复工作挑战最有帮助。实际意义这项研究为领导者和慈善组织提供了以精简有效的方式管理和应对灾害的建议。这项研究有助于慈善领袖重新思考他们的资金和应对模式,以推行符合人道主义组织及其服务社区的精益政策。独创性/价值该研究通过采用多部门视角,将商业和制造工具引入非营利背景,填补了文献和实践中的重大空白。它使慈善组织能够记录流程和后勤管理,以持续改进和消除浪费,从而确保慈善机构在减轻灾害影响方面的效率。该研究还确认,慈善组织需要纳入社区反馈,使用精益工具与其他响应组织合作,并与地方当局密切合作,以履行政府的支持作用:灾害响应的主要来源和执行者。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
20.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: The Journal of Humanitarian Logistics and Supply Chain Management (JHLSCM) is targeted at academics and practitioners in humanitarian public and private sector organizations working on all aspects of humanitarian logistics and supply chain management. The journal promotes the exchange of knowledge, experience and new ideas between researchers and practitioners and encourages a multi-disciplinary and cross-functional approach to the resolution of problems and exploitations of opportunities within humanitarian supply chains. Contributions are encouraged from diverse disciplines (logistics, operations management, process engineering, health care, geography, management science, information technology, ethics, corporate social responsibility, disaster management, development aid, public policy) but need to have a logistics and/or supply chain focus. JHLSCM publishes state of the art research, utilizing both quantitative and qualitative approaches, in the field of humanitarian and development aid logistics and supply chain management.
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