Venture Philanthropy in New Zealand: High-Engagement Funding for Social Impact

Venture philanthropy applies principles from venture capital to the social sector — providing not just capital but hands-on support, strategic assistance, and patient, multi-year investment to help social organisations grow their impact. In New Zealand, venture philanthropy is a growing approach, reshaping how some funders invest in social change.

What makes venture philanthropy different

Traditional grantmaking is largely transactional: a funder provides money, the grantee delivers a project, reports are submitted. Venture philanthropy is relational and developmental — the funder becomes a genuine partner in building the organisation's capacity and scale.

Key characteristics:

Tailored financial support: not just grants but a mix of instruments — grants, loans, quasi-equity, payment-by-results contracts — chosen for what best fits the organisation's stage and model.

Non-financial support: strategic advice, governance support, networking, access to expertise, mentoring, and operational assistance that often exceeds the value of the financial investment.

Multi-year engagement: venture philanthropy investments are typically 3-7 years — long enough to support genuine organisational development rather than just project delivery.

Organisational focus: venture philanthropy invests in building strong organisations, not just funding programmes. A strong organisation with excellent leadership and systems can scale; a well-run programme without organisational capability cannot.

Exit strategy: venture philanthropists plan for a future where the funded organisation no longer needs philanthropic support — through earned income, mainstream government funding, or replication/spin-out.

Impact focus: clear, measurable impact outcomes are central to venture philanthropy — not just programme outputs but genuine social change.

The venture philanthropy model in practice

A venture philanthropy engagement typically looks like:

  1. Deal sourcing: identifying organisations with potential — strong leadership, credible model, track record, and potential for scale

  2. Assessment: deep organisational due diligence — not just financial but strategic, leadership, and impact assessment

  3. Investment decision: tailored financial and non-financial support package, negotiated with the organisation

  4. Active engagement: regular strategic support alongside financial investment — board representation, strategic workshops, access to expertise

  5. Portfolio management: active monitoring of organisational health and impact, with support for adaptation and problem-solving

  6. Exit planning: working toward organisational sustainability — developing revenue models, building governance, creating replication pathways

Venture philanthropy in New Zealand

The New Zealand social sector has been slower to adopt venture philanthropy than the UK or Australia, but momentum is growing:

The Edmund Hillary Fellowship (EHF)

While not strictly venture philanthropy, the EHF provides high-engagement support to social entrepreneurs — bringing high-potential leaders to New Zealand with fellowships, networks, and operational support.

Hikurangi Foundation

Hikurangi Foundation has operated a venture philanthropy-style model for Māori social enterprises — providing patient capital and strategic support alongside grants.

Impact Enterprise Australia (trans-Tasman)

Several Australian venture philanthropy funds operate across the Tasman, and some New Zealand social enterprises have accessed Australian venture philanthropy investment.

Social enterprise support ecosystems

Social Enterprise Auckland (SEA), Ākina Foundation, and similar intermediaries provide some venture philanthropy-style support — strategic assistance, networks, and non-financial capacity building — even when they don't provide direct financial investment.

Who is suited to venture philanthropy investment?

Venture philanthropy is not for every organisation or every funder. It best suits:

For investee organisations:
- Strong, capable leadership committed to growth
- Credible theory of change with evidence of impact
- Ambition to scale or replicate
- Willingness to engage deeply with funders as partners
- Organisational readiness for intensive support and scrutiny

For funders:
- Patient, long-term capital commitment
- Capacity to provide genuine non-financial value
- Expertise relevant to the organisations funded
- Tolerance for complexity and uncertainty
- Willingness to invest in organisational development

Venture philanthropy versus impact investing

Venture philanthropy and impact investing are related but distinct:

  • Venture philanthropy uses grant capital (non-returnable) with high engagement and non-financial support
  • Impact investing uses investment capital expecting financial return alongside social impact

Many organisations operate in both spaces — using venture philanthropy for early-stage social ventures and impact investment for more mature organisations with revenue-generating models. The combination — philanthropic capital for development, investment capital for scale — is sometimes called "blended finance."

Challenges for venture philanthropy in New Zealand

Small market: New Zealand's social sector is small. The organisations with sufficient scale for venture philanthropy investment are few. Deal flow is limited.

Skills gap: venture philanthropy requires funders with business-building expertise alongside philanthropic values. This combination is rare in the New Zealand market.

Sector culture: New Zealand's nonprofit sector has a culture of independence from funders. The deep engagement of venture philanthropy — including board representation — can feel intrusive to organisations not accustomed to it.

Patient capital scarcity: venture philanthropy requires patient, multi-year capital. Most New Zealand funders (gaming trusts, community foundations) operate on annual grant cycles inconsistent with venture philanthropy approaches.

The potential of venture philanthropy for New Zealand

Despite these challenges, venture philanthropy offers real potential for New Zealand's social sector:
- Building a smaller number of high-performing organisations with genuine scale
- Developing leadership capability in the sector
- Creating sustainable revenue models that reduce philanthropic dependency
- Demonstrating impact in ways that attract mainstream investment

As New Zealand foundations and trusts diversify their approaches — alongside traditional grants — venture philanthropy is an important option for funders seeking transformative, rather than transactional, impact.


Tahua's grants management platform supports high-engagement funders running venture philanthropy programmes — with investee relationship management, capacity assessment tools, milestone tracking, and the portfolio analytics that help venture philanthropists monitor organisational development alongside impact outcomes.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →