September 24, 2025
Bold visions collide with budgets, procedures, and politics.
If we want to deliver on our promises as public and social impact leaders, it’s important to remember that these aren’t signs of weakness - they’re the conditions that make the work matter.
Effective design embraces constraints, reinforces capacity, anticipates failure, and earns legitimacy through transparent impact.
“Constraints aren’t obstacles. They’re the design features that protect equity, accountability, and durability.”
—Matthieu Damer, Engagement Manager, Opus Group
Here are five ways to design programs that last:
Public and nonprofit delivery isn’t the same as the private-sector - goals are plural and contested, and discretion is limited.
Nonprofits are core delivery partners, not peripherals.
Systems break when designs rely on yesterday’s assumptions.
Programs survive only with trust and consent.
“Pilots don’t harden into durable systems unless you encode the learning into rules, standards, and safeguards.”
—Matthieu Damer, Engagement Manager, Opus Group
Use this canvas with your team to map where designs might fail under future shifts. Circle the top 2–3 risks and safeguards to act on.
For example, in Pearson’s workforce recovery, stress-testing revealed how fragmented onboarding and clearance processes could collapse under pressure and why shared pathways were needed as a safeguard.
If you designed your current initiative for the constraints first, what would change in how you deliver?
“We can’t impose our will on a system. We can listen to what the system tells us, and discover how its properties and our values can work together to bring forth something much better than could ever be produced by our will alone.”
—Donella Meadows, Thinking in Systems
This is the essence of adaptive design - working with the system, not around it.