What Is Design and Implementation?
What Is Design and Implementation?
What Is Design and Implementation?
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Why Intervene
All interventions should flow from a project's goals and objectives, and for value chain projects the goal is increased competitiveness that benefits MSEs and the
poor. The aim of a project intervention should therefore be to result in one or more of the following:
An increased number of actors building broader and deeper commercially grounded networks: Will the intervention encourage existing value chain
actors and new entrants to establish effective relationships in the value chain, supporting markets and/or enabling environment?
Example: By assisting commercial agricultural input firms to test and roll out more appropriate business models for targeting the smallholder market a USAID
project in Zambia[1] was able to get 12 input firms to establish over 1,200 new relationships with rural smallholder communities resulting in smallholder
investments of over $1 million in their farms in 2008.
Increased competition based on upgrading and innovation: Will the intervention increase the number of value chain or support market actors that are
constantly upgrading?
Example: A project in India[2] helped several supermarket chains to move beyond a price-only strategy for local sourcing of fresh produce. The new focus on product
quality drove farm-level upgrading and encouraged investments in the production of specialty produce.
Improved credibility of and confidence in market mechanisms through transparent and reasonable benefit flows: Will the intervention increase the
transparency and appropriateness of benefit flows to all contributing actors in the value chain and supporting markets?
Example: As grafting and pruning services began to generate demand among smallholder avocado growers in Kenya[3], the industry realized that a self-accreditation
program was necessary to set apart trained service providers who used only certified and labeled quality scions from more unscrupulous and untrained "quack"
service providers. Accreditation guaranteed a set of minimum standards for service delivery, such as the commitment to provide an additional free grafting should
the first service fail, thus ensuring that smallholder farmers benefited from the services they received.
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Improved key end market factors that will increase competitiveness--in terms of product, operations and branding: Will the intervention improve
the specific value chain products, operations and/or branding strategies required to increase the capacity of the industry to differentiate itself from its
competitors?
Example: USAID interventions in the dairy sector in Pakistan[4] ensured coordination among different segments of the industry so as to increase overall
competitiveness. Farm-level upgrading that raised milk yields was timed to coincide with the establishment of a quality-controlled supply channel (cold chain) to
facilitate a win-win relationship for the private sector firms and dairy farmers.
Learn more about Design and Implementation
Footnotes
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http://microlinks.kdid.org/library/trust-and-information-flow-value-chai...
USAID/India Growth-Oriented Microenterprise Development Program (GMED)
http://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/PNADY248.pdf
http://microlinks.kdid.org/library/successful-practices-value-chain-deve...
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