Reader's Guide
How to use
this resource.
Six chapters synthesizing the case for collective impact in the Christian nonprofit world. Start anywhere. Each chapter stands alone.
Reader's Guide
Six chapters synthesizing the case for collective impact in the Christian nonprofit world. Start anywhere. Each chapter stands alone.
Reading paths
For leaders who need the core argument fast.
1. Overview — the 5 conditions + stats
2. The Missing Piece — why fragmentation is the problem
3. The Ecosystem — the scale of what's possible
For ministry leaders building partnerships now.
1. Redemptive Partnerships — the continuum model
2. Giving vs. Impact — the Open Table proof
3. Capacity Builders — the collaboration framework
4. Back to Partnerships — practical tips section
For strategists, funders, and backbone builders.
1. Read all six chapters in order
2. Cross-reference the source index below
3. Read the original Kania & Kramer paper
4. Explore the further reading list
Chapter index
The five conditions for collective impact, the numbers, and why the faith-based world needs this most.
Source: Kania & Kramer, "Collective Impact," SSIR (2011)
The partnership continuum from extractive to redemptive. Four ingredients for success. South African case study.
Source: Mike Mannina, "The Art of Redemptive Partnerships," CEF (2021)
Fragmentation and the absence of shared goals. City Gate network. Systems change over new organizations.
Source: Jeff Haanen, Denver Institute for Faith & Work (2017)
Collaborative giving is not collective impact. Open Table's three models. Baylor-validated ROI evidence.
Sources: Mindy Robbins / Mission Mutual, Missio Nexus (2025) + Jon Katov / Open Table, CEF (2023)
The fragmented landscape. Global Collab. The South African 2x2 collaboration framework.
Sources: FDE Landscape Report (2022) + Paschal, Wilkes, du Preez & Geldenhuys, CEF (2023)
450,000 orgs. Seven flourishing factors. Technology as force multiplier. The vision for coordination at scale.
Sources: Christianity Today / Gloo / Harvard Human Flourishing Program / Barna (2025) + Collective Impact Labs
Source index
| Source | Author | Year | Used in |
|---|---|---|---|
| "Collective Impact" | John Kania & Mark Kramer | 2011 | Ch 01 |
| "The Art of Redemptive Partnerships" | Mike Mannina | 2021 | Ch 02 |
| "Collective Impact: The Missing Piece" | Jeff Haanen | 2017 | Ch 03 |
| "Collaborative Giving to Collective Impact" | Mindy Robbins / Mission Mutual | 2025 | Ch 04 |
| "Relational and Social Capital" | Joe Panter & Jon Katov / Open Table | 2023 | Ch 01, Ch 04 |
| "Theocentric Collective Impact" | Joe Panter | 2019 | Ch 01, Ch 04 |
| "Defining a Collaborative Framework" | Paschal, Wilkes, du Preez & Geldenhuys | 2023 | Ch 05 |
| "Faith Driven Capacity Builders" | Faith Driven Entrepreneur | 2022 | Ch 05 |
| "The Faith & Flourishing Ecosystem" | Christianity Today / Gloo / Harvard / Barna | 2025 | Ch 06 |
| "Systems Change" (SSIR) | Jeffrey Walker | 2017 | Ch 03 |
| Collective Impact Labs | John Kim (ED) | 2026 | Ch 06 |
| "Rooted and Linked" | Karen Wilk & Tim Soerens / Parish Collective | 2013 | Ch 01 |
All sources drawn from the Frontier Commons Missions Library (250K+ items, 244 sources).
Further reading
The original paper that defined the framework. 3,000+ citations. Start here if you haven't read it.
Read on SSIR →The practical follow-up: how to actually make collective impact work in practice.
Read on SSIR →Early academic critique questioning whether collective impact actually improves coalition effectiveness.
Read at Northwestern →Bridgespan's research on how faith-inspired organizations create outsized social impact.
Read at Bridgespan →Resources, events, and coaching for people working to advance equity and systems change using collective impact.
Visit the Forum →Recent research on religious assets for sustainable development: credibility, networks, and alternative visions.
Read on SAGE →Glossary
A dedicated entity with staff that coordinates the collective impact initiative. Doesn't run programs itself. Manages the process: convening, tracking, facilitating. The most underappreciated and underfunded layer.
Not every organization measuring different things differently. A common set of metrics that all participants agree to track so they can learn from each other's results.
Jeffrey Walker's term: instead of creating new organizations to solve problems, bring together existing ones around shared goals. Fund "systems entrepreneurs" who connect, not create.
Mike Mannina's highest level of the partnership continuum. Requires full trust, shared assets, eternal goals. Only possible when partners aren't bound by earthly ROI calculations.
Open Table's "investment currency." Your skills, networks, and influence are your social capital. How it flows through relationships is your relational capital. Sustainable, transformational, and mostly untapped.
The South African model: Awareness Building (low impact, low complexity) → Coordination (high impact, low complexity) → Opportunity Mapping (low impact, high complexity) → Joint Ventures (high impact, high complexity).
Harvard / Barna / Gloo's framework for whole-person health: Faith, Relationships, Purpose, Finances, Health, Character, Contentment. The measurement system the faith ecosystem has been missing.
This resource was compiled from the Frontier Commons Missions Library, a searchable corpus of 250,000+ items from 244 sources covering missions, faith-and-work, international students, and social innovation. The collective impact material draws primarily from CEF Whitepapers, Stanford Social Innovation Review, and practitioner reports.