{"id":1659,"date":"2018-05-09T07:04:36","date_gmt":"2018-05-09T07:04:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/digitalgreen.org\/principles-of-an-excellent-partnership\/"},"modified":"2024-01-11T06:26:25","modified_gmt":"2024-01-11T06:26:25","slug":"principles-of-an-excellent-partnership","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/digitalgreen.org\/principles-of-an-excellent-partnership\/","title":{"rendered":"Principles of an Excellent Partnership"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n
Nearly 6 years ago in March 2012, I met with Mr Arvind Chaudhary, the then CEO of Jeevika<\/a>\u00a0and Mr Devraj Bahera, the then state project manager to explore if we could introduce Digital Green\u2019s community-based video approach to promote good livelihoods practices in Bihar. Digital Green was then barely a few years old. We had however successfully developed an approach based on two years of field-based research\u00a0at Microsoft Research in using video as a medium to promote good agricultural practices. We had found that if videos were produced by the community, featuring community members with a local intermediary screening these videos in an interactive, human-mediated format, the impact was high.\u00a0Our experience was therefore limited to working with rural social networks through NGO partners. We did not have much experience of working with Self Help Groups nor with a large government program such as National Rural Livelihoods Mission<\/a>. We were nervous and were not very sure if our approach tested primarily for agriculture sector would be successful in a multi-domain area like livelihoods.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n We began with some hesitation a pilot in one block of Muzaffarpur district and today we work in all the 38 districts of the state, have directly reached over 650,000 SHG women, produced over 550 videos on subjects ranging from agricultural practices to poultry, livestock, nutrition, health, sanitation, rural credit and SHG strengthening; have developed a cadre of over 50 frontline workers and community members to produce videos and trained over 5,500 community members to facilitate screening of videos using pico projectors in a highly interactive format.\u00a0We were also able to scale this approach across 5 states<\/a> through NGO and government partners to 1,200 villages and 60,000 farmers.<\/p>\n In Bihar, an in-house cadre of master trainers and master resource persons has been developed within Jeevika to provide training and assure the quality of operations. Our data management platform COCO<\/a> \u2013 connect online, connect offline, that can be used both in offline and online modes, has proved useful to improve project activities as well as serve as a tool for performance management of the front-line staff. Increasingly, this approach is being institutionalized and mainstreamed within Jeevika so that it can be sustained beyond Digital Green\u2019s current partnership. Looking back nearly 65% of the viewers have adopted the promoted practices.<\/p>\n We believe that our efforts along with other interventions in introducing appropriate digital tools into agriculture value chain have\u00a0injected an entrepreneurial mindset in the rural women which can be harnessed to develop enterprise models. It is so energizing to see rural women making videos or disseminating them, holding discussions on the pros and cons of various practices. Apart from promoting good practices, this approach has resulted in empowering them in a variety of ways. I have been personally struck by their self-confidence every time I have watched a video dissemination in a village or interacted with them.<\/p>\n