Job Field: Sector in Consultancy

  • Organizational Capacity Assessment Consultant for Local Partners

    Organizational Capacity Assessment Consultant for Local Partners

    POSITION SUMMARY:

    HIAS Kenya seeks to hire a consultant to conduct an Organizational Capacity Assessment (OCA) for four Local Partners in Nairobi, Mombasa, and Turkana under the Localisation Pilot project. The consultant will be required to work collaboratively with the local partners to develop the assessment tool, facilitate partners’ self-assessment and the joint development of capacity development plans.

    BACKGROUND

    HIAS is a member of the International Council of Voluntary Agencies (ICVA), a signatory to the Grand Bargain agreement that makes specific commitments to localisation to ensure that ensure local and national actors are better engaged in the planning, delivery and accountability of humanitarian action.

    In furtherance of these commitments, HIAS has embarked on the implementation of localisation in Kenya. HIAS conceives of localisation within the context of this project as a process where the capacities and comparative advantages that HIAS as an international non-governmental organization and local organizations bring to humanitarian response is leveraged in a synergistic and mutually supportive manner to strengthen the delivery of humanitarian assistance.

    The Localization Pilot project being implemented by HIAS Kenya aims to strengthen humanitarian assistance among refugees through localization initiatives.

    HIAS aims to achieve the following.

    Enhanced delivery of humanitarian assistance by local organizations through equitable partnership practices and access to sub-award from HIAS.
    Enhanced technical and operational capacity of local organizations through structured capacity strengthening activities.
    Enhanced visibility of local organizations through joint advocacy and coordination activities.

    The outcome of the capacity assessments will support the following project activities.

    Identification of local organizations’ capacity gaps, organizational strengths, and weaknesses through the OCA.
    Development of organizational capacity development plans for the local organizations based on findings from the OCA.
    Provision of any other suggestions that might be identified in the assessment.

    OBJECTIVES & DELIVERABLES:

    The overall objective of the consultancy is to conduct an organizational capacity assessment and support action planning for capacity strengthening of the four local organizations under the localisation project in Nairobi, Mombasa and Turkana to identify areas of improvements for enhanced delivery of humanitarian assistance.

    The deliverables of the consultancy are:

    Conducting organizational capacity assessments for four local organizations.
    Supporting the four organizations develop organizational development plans.

    METHODOLOGY AND SCOPE OF WORK

    The organizational capacity assessments should be participatory and consultative. The consultant shall conduct organizational capacity assessments using a defined methodology developed in partnership with the local organizations. The consultant will facilitate the co-development of the assessment tool with the local organizations through workshops with personnel from different departments of the organizations. The consultant will then conduct OCA for the four local organizations. Additionally, the consultant will guide the local organizations develop capacity development plans.

    The expected approach to this engagement is that the assessments and development plans should be conducted in such a way as to facilitate ownership and drive of the implementation plans so that results are sustained. As such, it should be participatory, consultative and incorporate methodologies like Technology of Participation, design thinking and Collective Impact that not only improve the range of information collected but also to improve ownership and drive of the implementation plans.

    In close co-ordination with HIAS and the local organizations, the consultant will implement the following tasks:

    Facilitate the co-designing of the assessment tools:

    Coordinate the designing and adoption of a common assessment tool for the local partners through online workshops.
    Submit the assessment tool to HIAS for review and approval.

    Conduct the organizational capacity assessments:

    Conduct the assessments based on the approved methodology and assessment tools/schedule.

    Develop capacity development plans:

    Facilitate the co-design of capacity development plans for the four local organizations based on the OCA results.
    Submit the final OCA reports including the detailed implementation strategy for validation by the local organizations.

    Facilitate the dissemination of the reports:

    Co-facilitate and present the final reports to the Localisation Pilot project participants.

    EXPECTED OUTPUTS AND DELIVERABLES

    The following will be the expected deliverables and outputs of the engagement:

    Comprehensive work plan for the assessments including a detailed methodology.
    Facilitation of the organization capacity assessment for the four local organizations in the following areas governance and executive leadership; human resource development; financial management; and monitoring, learning, and evaluation.
    Submission of OCA results reports to the four local organizations and guiding them to develop organizational development plans.
    Submission of the final consultancy report to HIAS.

    TIME FRAME

    The overall engagement for this consultancy is for 30 days.

    INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENT

    RESPONSIBILITIES

    HIAS will be responsible for the following:

    Overall coordination of all the consultancy needs and tasks with the Consultant.
    Introduce the consultant to the local organizations.
    Facilitate the acquisition of the camp visit permit from the Department of Refugee Services.
    Organize a validation workshop.
    Technical review of the assessment tool, OCA results reports and capacity development plans.
    Payment of the consultancy fees as agreed upon.

    The consultant will be responsible for the following:

    Developing an action plan for the assignment with clear timelines.
    Facilitating the co-designing and/or adapting of the assessment tools and reviewing existing information.
    Developing of an appropriate methodology for conducting the capacity assessments specifically, one that is participatory.
    Developing an inception report outlining the assessment and strategic planning methodologies.
    Facilitating the partners’ assessments including desk review of relevant documents, facilitating focused group discussions and key informant interviews.
    Facilitating the co-development of organizational capacity development plans.

    CONSULTANT’S COMPETENCIES, EXPERIENCE AND SKILL REQUIREMENTS

    Individuals with Master’s degree in Public Administration/ Business Administration/ Project Management/ Social Studies, or any other related courses.
    Prior experience in developing and/or adapting organizational capacity assessment tools.
    Experience in conducting organizational capacity assessments, preferably in the development and/or humanitarian sector.
    Proven experience in organizational development and provision of technical assistance to grassroots organizations.
    Experience in developing organizational capacity development plans, preferably in the development and/or humanitarian sector.
    Experience in working in Humanitarian sector and with refugees in urban and/or camp setting, preferably in Kenya and/or the East African Region is an added advantage.

    QUALIFICATIONS & REQUIREMENTS:

    Qualified and interested parties are asked to submit the following:

    CV and a letter of interest for the assignment.
    A detailed technical proposal, with budget, clearly demonstrating a thorough understanding of the Terms of Reference and including but not limited to the following;

    Consultant/Company Profile.
    Demonstrated previous experience in similar assignments and qualifications outlined in this ToRs. Please attach a previous OCA report where applicable.
    Team composition and level of effort of each proposed team member and include CVs of each team member.
    A financial proposal.

    Qualified candidates to share their applications by 26th August 2023.

    Apply via :

    hias.hrmdirect.com

  • Sustainable Cooling Investment Mobilization Consultant

    Sustainable Cooling Investment Mobilization Consultant

    Main Duties and Tasks of the Role

    The primary duties and tasks of the role include, but are not limited to:  

    Deliverable 1: Development National Investment Plans for Sustainable Cooling in Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana (Target for Completion: March 30, 2024). 

    Lead the identification of financing mechanisms available that can be enhanced to accelerate cooling transition. 
    Lead the development of national investment plans for sustainable cooling in Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana by identifying high-impact cooling investment projects, conducting cost-benefit and economic analysis, assessing their financing needs, and proposing options for public and private sector finance.  
    Lead the development of project finance mobilization for selected high-impact cooling investments by developing investment proposals that target relevant financing mechanisms and investors, such as climate and energy funding mechanisms, philanthropic capital, and private finance.  
    Support the development of relationships and partnerships with international and domestic sources of finance, including climate finance institutions, multilateral development banks, domestic development finance institutions, and relevant domestic and international energy investors.  
    Coordinate and liaise with stakeholders, partners, and consultants at the country level to ensure high-quality and locally informed outputs.  

    Deliverable 2: Increased Awareness of Sustainable Cooling Financing Opportunities in Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana (Target for Completion: March 30, 2024). 

    In collaboration with SEforALL’s Energy Efficiency team and in partnership with Mission Efficiency partners, support the project identification process to bring sustainable cooling projects to the Mission Efficiency Marketplace for de-risking and matchmaking with investors.  
    Support SEforALL Energy Transition Offices in Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana to increase awareness of sustainable cooling challenges and investment opportunities.  
    Support communications and knowledge sharing dialogues on sustainable cooling in Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana. 
    Support SEforALL outreach efforts and public facing events on sustainable cooling in Nigeria, Kenya and Ghana
    Identify and support the delivery of South-South training opportunities across Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana and other leading Global South countries, including the delivery of presentations and other training materials in webinars, meetings, and training events.

    Specific Competencies for the Role

    The desired skills and attributes for candidates include, but are not limited to:  

    A Master’s Degree in a relevant subject area (e.g., Economics, Business, Engineering, Public Policy).  
    At least 7 years of experience working in the sustainable energy or sustainable cooling sector in Sub-Saharan Africa with demonstrated experience supporting the implementation of projects in Nigeria, Kenya, and/or Ghana.  
    Excellent understanding and in-depth knowledge of key issues related to sustainable cooling, energy efficiency and energy access, including supportive business models and investment modalities. 
    Demonstrated experience developing investment proposals to finance sustainable energy projects in Sub-Saharan Africa. 
    Knowledge of international climate and energy finance, including familiarity with key financiers and institutions such as the Green Climate Fund, Global Environment Facility, and the Climate Investment Funds.  
    Excellent writing and analytical skills, with demonstrated experience developing public-facing written products on sustainable energy topics. 
    Ability to multitask, attention to detail and a disposition towards diplomatic and action-oriented interactions.  
    Experience supporting governments or development agencies.  
    Ability to effectively communicate with policy makers and stakeholders using data and synthesized narratives to provide the rationale for action.  
    Experience in demanding, pressurized, international environments is an asset. 
    Excellent reading, speaking and writing skill in English language, similar skills in additional language would be desirable but not mandatory. 

    General Competences for the Role

    Innovation and Adaptability: Has expert skills and commitment to search for and produce innovative and creative approaches to activities. Inspires others to develop new solutions that have a development impact and advocates for changes and application of new methods to enhance results. Is flexible to evolving circumstances, as well as helps others in doing so.  
    Resilience and Emotional Intelligence: Has expert knowledge in the concepts of resilience and emotional intelligence. Is able to remain calm in challenging situations, to cope with setbacks, is responsive to the emotions of others and maintains a high level of performance. 
    Analytical and Strategic Thinking: Has an expert level of analytical and strategic thinking skills. Gathers and processes demanding information, develops innovative solutions and contributes by representing topics/approaches in internal and cross-functional working groups/teams. 
    Collaboration and Partnership: Demonstrates expert initiative and abilities to collaborate and form partnerships in own area of responsibility, across teams and externally. Builds and maintains effective relationships at all levels inside and outside the organisation. Displays team-oriented attitude contributing to creating a positive team spirit. 
    Lead and Empower: Demonstrates initiative and role model behaviour in leading and empowering others. Takes responsibility for own work activities and personal actions and carries out the commitments agreed upon. 
    Political and Diplomatic: Has an expert level of political and diplomatic understanding. 
    Communicating Information: Has expert skills in communicating information and uses the skills effectively in own scope of work and in others’ work. Ability to develop contacts, foster collaboration with internal as well as external stakeholders, deliver presentations, advocate for viewpoints and participate actively in internal as well as external debates and negotiations. Ability to craft messages and communiques, and copy edit work to produce flawless written communications is required. 
    Research and Analytics: Has expert skills in research and analytics, including drafting ability and extensive knowledge of word processing and application of software package as databases and Power Point Presentations. Demonstrated excellent numerical and analytical skills that can be applied to gather data and generate knowledge relevant to decision-making functions. Capability and easiness to work with numbers, calculate, and analyze data as well as the ability to summarize and present key-findings. Promotes the use of data within the team and to contribute to wider decision making. 
    Teamwork: Works within the team as well as with colleagues across work units. Supports colleagues, establishes a team culture, encourages others to participate in teamwork and share responsibility for decision-making and results. Places team agenda before personal agenda. Supports and acts in accordance with final group decision, even when such decisions may not entirely reflect own position; shares credit for team accomplishments and accepts joint responsibility for team shortcomings. Demonstrated ability to work with teams representing a wide variety of staffing levels that also cut across agencies and partners, and work without direct authority to deliver timely and high-quality products. Strong team player capabilities. 
    Project Management: Has expert skills in project management. Plans and organises their own work using project management tools in support of achieving the team’s objectives. 
    Client Orientation: Has expert skills in client orientation and achieving excellency in work delivery.

    Apply via :

    seforall.bamboohr.com

  • Outplacement Coaching Consultancy 


            

            
            Leadership Training Consultancy

    Outplacement Coaching Consultancy Leadership Training Consultancy

    SCOPE OF WORK FOR STAFF COACHING PROGRAM

    Program: Alliance for Inclusive and Nutritious Food Processing.
    Reports to: Regional Training and Gender Advisor
    Position Location & Travel Potential: Open

    TECHNOSERVE BACKGROUND

    TechnoServe works with enterprising people in the developing world to build competitive farms, businesses, and industries. We are a nonprofit organization that develops business solutions to poverty by linking people to information, capital, and markets. With more than five decades of proven results, we believe in the power of private enterprise to transform lives.

    PROGRAM DESCRIPTION

    TechnoServe is implementing the USAID-funded Alliance for Inclusive and Nutritious Food
    Processing (AINFP) regional program in collaboration with Partners in Food Solutions (PFS). The program leverages the power of the private sector to create better nutritional outcomes for base-of-the-pyramid consumers and more profitable market opportunities for local farmers. This is achieved by supporting local food processing businesses in Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia through remote technical assistance and training from world-leading food processing businesses under PFS to increase the availability of safe, affordable, and nutritious food.
    AINFP seeks a consultant to support its team in coaching all its staff across the five countries.

    Objective

    This consultancy aims to deliver a coaching program for all AINFP staff. The coaching will support the program staff with outplacement skills and capacity. The key objective of the outplacement service is to help AINFP staff members to position themselves for the job market through career journey mapping, skills assessment, and personal branding to enhance their job search skills and gain greater confidence to seek job alternatives and/or other opportunities as well as psycho-social support. The program approach will be online to include all target staff who live and work in different geographic locations and engage leaders in application-oriented learning experiences.

    Deliverables
    The consultant is expected to collaborate closely with the Regional Training and Gender Advisor to:

    Conduct a Coaching assessment for all AINFP staff (39 in total)
    Design a three-month coaching program, including assessments such as psychometric testing.
    End of the program report

    Qualifications and Expectations

    Certified coach ACC /PCC/ MCC with over five years of experience in leadership and performance management coaching.
    Experience in leadership development and virtual facilitation.
    Have at least seven years of professional, relevant experience.
    Demonstrated experience in adult learning.
    Excellent knowledge of English and Kiswahili; strong ability to work in cross-cultural situations and communicate effectively with speakers of other languages.
    Demonstrated excellent communication and collaboration skills

    Application procedure
    Qualified applicants should share their Technical Proposal (including an understanding of the scope of work, essential deliverables/milestones, a timeline, past performance, and CVs of key personnel); three references from similar assignments; and a financial proposal with the estimated number of days per deliverable and a daily rate quoted in Kenya shilling. The financial proposal excludes logistical costs for the training (including flights, venues, material printing costs, etc.) and other administrative expenses.

    L.O.E Breakdown

    Out-placement virtual coaching program (20 days over three months)

    Individualized virtual coaching sessions
    Career Assessments & Psychometric testing

    Please submit your proposal for this consultancy to buy+KE+P0022824@tns.org by August 28, 2023.

    go to method of application »

    Use the link(s) below to apply on company website.  

    Apply via :

  • External Evaluation of the Project Empowered Communities of Mt Elgon Working Together for Nutritious Food, Savings and Resilience Implemented by SOET

    External Evaluation of the Project Empowered Communities of Mt Elgon Working Together for Nutritious Food, Savings and Resilience Implemented by SOET

    The project works through solidarity groups as units of community entry and implementation. By 2022, 961 (M209, F752) members had been mobilized into 48 functional groups. In the course of implementation, the project had empowered targeted community members and had recorded several results:

    Common labor was being practiced by all the 48 SGs on their fields in addition 42 SGs undertaking common labour at three community seedling nursery sites.
    The 48 SGs had been trained on Bio-intensive kitchen gardening and 961 kitchen gardens had been established with diverse crop varieties. A total of 191,400 vegetable seedlings and 50kg of assorted seeds were planted.
    Member of 41 SGs had been trained on food forest establishment and management. A total of 12,180 trees had been planted with 820 food forests with the seven layers having been established
    Three community nurseries had been established and were functional.
    11 SGs had been trained on Fastenaktion approach on saving procedures and credit management.

     

    The solidarity groups have accompaniers referred to as ‘community animators’ while the nurseries are managed by appointed community members called ‘nursery managers’. The animators facilitate training of groups, offer close monitoring and ensure the implementation of the trained approaches. The animators also ensure that the groups are well coordinated; conduct trainings at group level and regularly conduct home visits to group members to ascertain progress of each group and each individual/member and address any emerging challenges. The community animators continuously visit the farms of their respective farmers to offer technical support and report on progress of each group on monthly basis outlining progress made and any challenges observed.  

    The project team constitutes of: Programme Coordinator who is also the CEO of the organization, a Project Officer, Technical Advisor – Agroecology, Project Accountant, Nursery Managers and Community Animators. They meet once monthly for reporting and planning and also exchange on challenges and lessons learnt.

    PROJECT CONTEXT

    The target project areas are characterised by good climatic conditions (soils & weather pattern) suitable for vegetable and fruit production, cash crop growing and livestock production. The area experiences two rain seasons with the main one running from March to July and the short rains September to October recording approximately 1400mm to 1800mm annually. Soils are well drained and characterized by shallow rocks. Despite these, the area has been impacted by effects of climate change due to deforestation and harmful farming practices that have resulted to increased soil erosion. Of late, the area has experienced recurrent hail stones which had been destroying crops.

    Due to high inflation rate and difficult global economic situation, the country has experienced an increase in price of basic commodities and this has affected the well-being of the people targeted by the project as well as negatively affected the operations of the project. An increase in the cost of production means that the people can only produce less food further deepening the food crisis. The major crops grown are maize and beans mostly for home consumption but the surplus is sold. The Mt. Elgon people have been a farming community who continue trading away their produce at reduced prices to brokers and middlemen. According to Bungoma County Integrated Development Plan, poverty level in Mt. Elgon is estimated at 56 percent.

    The socio-cultural aspect of the community is characterized by most men meeting in social clubs and outdoor activities while women mostly engage in domestic activities and economically productive work. They thus are like the heads of their households even though women are also subordinated in most homes and in community decision-making processes. The issue of land ownership and control of resource’s is still capitalised by men which to some extent affects production.

    EVALUATION PURPOSE

    The evaluation should in a very clear manner:

    Assess and document the extent to which the project objectives have been achieved (outcome and impact level), clearly outlining and describing the impacts, both positive and negative (intended and unintended), realized so far per each specific objective.
    Give insight into the key elements of the implementation process which explain why the reported changes occurred and shed light on how such changes were achieved or caused. We expect that an assessment of impact and understanding of key processes will support the generation of Project recommendations that could be considered for the design of future project phases.
    Elaborate strengths and weaknesses of the project, and document best practices and lessons learnt. The evaluation should clearly document and highlight any programming adjustments that might be required to achieve the project desired objectives.

     

    3.USERS OF EVALUATION

    The primary users of the evaluation are:

    SOET: Project team and management
    Fastenaktion: Country Programme Unit, Programme Manager and Head Office Programme Development Team
    Fastenaktion’s Programme Development section
    Right holders especially members of solidarity groups involved in the project to best understand effective strategies for bringing about desired change.

     

    4.SCOPE OF EVALUATION

    This being an external evaluation, it is expected to comply with the international evaluation standards (OECD), provide a space for learning around best practices for supporting target communities. The evaluation will be undertaken in Elgon Ward with a sampling frame of 19 villages.  Fastenaktion is seeking to identify a consultancy team, which will undertake this evaluation within the agreed terms of reference. Selection of the study sites will be agreed upon with the consultancy team. The consultancy team has to prioritize the field research questions in order to maximize on time. The evaluation process will include engagement with direct and indirect beneficiaries as well as other stakeholders.

    5.EVALUATION QUESTIONS

    In line with objectives of the evaluation, the evaluation will be expected to answer the following questions:

     

    6.1 RELEVANCE

    The evaluation should conduct an analysis of the appropriateness of the project design, activities, strategies and approaches in the light of the operational context, the timeliness of the response and its adaptation to the livelihoods security situations. It will involve assessing the extent to which the activities are suited to the priorities of the target groups, target households, and donors as well as the prevailing policy environment. Key questions to be addressed:

    To what extent are the intended project outcomes and actual activities in line with the needs of the target group (women and men)?
    Has the project adapted appropriately to relevant changing needs and context after its onset?
    How are the different aspects of the project implementation relevant in attaining cross cutting themes of gender equality, Leave No One Behind (LNOB), and climate change adaptability?

    6.2 EFFECTIVENESS AND IMPACT

    The focus will be on the extent to which project outcomes and objectives are being achieved. Key questions to be addressed:

    How has the food security and wellbeing of the target group (women and men) changed due to the interventions? What other context factors had an effect on possible changes and to what degree has the project tampered with or reinforced them? (cases of success stories can be highlighted and annexed)
    What is the degree of achievement of the planned results at outcome and impact level of the project?
    Are there any unintended project results (positive or negative)? eg. multiplier effects
    Did the project results reflect contribution to the principle of LNOB? How and to what extent? 

    6.3 EFFICIENCY

    The evaluation will outline the extent to which the interventions have delivered, or are likely to deliver results in an economic and timely way. Key questions to be addressed:

    Are costs (including time and human resources) and benefits in an appropriate relationship?
    Are there organizational and/or management issues that hinder implementation and/or effectiveness of the project?  
    Are there unique or practical ways in which the quality of the project can be improved in a next phase? Which are the proposed approaches and how can they be executed?

    6.4 SUSTAINABILITY AND LESSONS LEARNT

    Within the scope of this assignment, the evaluator(s) should assess the extent to which the project interventions took into consideration longer term needs of the target population and to what extent project results or benefits will be sustainable after project closure. Key elements to be reviewed include environmental, operational and financial sustainability of the project. Key questions to be addressed:

    Which benefits are likely to sustain beyond the life time of the project?
    Did the project incorporate adequate measures and strategies to ensure sustainability of results over time (regarding the partner organisation and the target group)? Which measures and strategies are these and how effective are they in influencing the sustainability prospects of the gained benefits?
    Can this project be expanded in other geographic and programmatic areas in Kenya based on need?

     

    6.6 ACCOUNTABILITY

    How effective was the community feedback mechanisms that was in place and the capacity of the organization to respond to comments received? Is there any evidence that feedback has or is influencing decision making?

     

    6.7 GENDER

    Did the interventions contribute to furthering (or hindering) gender equality within the project area? If so, how and to what extent?  If it did contribute to furthering gender equality, why not?

    6.EVALUATION METHODOLOGY

    The evaluator(s) is welcome to suggest an appropriate methodological approach to successfully deliver a quality evaluation.  The evaluation methodology should be consultative and participatory, entailing a combination of desk review, key informant interviews, face to face household surveys, interviews and/or FGDs. While interviews are a key instrument, the evaluators will triangulate a range of data sources to ensure that the evaluation is sound and objective. The evaluator(s) will further elaborate on the method and approach in a manner commensurate with the assignment at hand and reflect this in the inception report, which will subsequently be approved by the programme team in consultation with key stakeholders.

    A final agreement on the evaluation design and methodology will be discussed on the basis of the submitted offer and/or the inception report.

    Some of the key primary data sources include:

    Interviews with key staff such as the Project Coordinator, Project Officer, Project Technical Advisor, Community Animators, Nursery Managers and others as deemed necessary by the evaluation team.
    Interviews with stakeholders including respective county government departments, and community leaders
    Household surveys, interviews and/or FGDs with women and men of the target group, and field observation in project sites within the project locations

    Secondary data will be made available and it is expected that the evaluator(s) will have a comprehensive desk review of project documents. Some of the documents include project proposal and budgets, Log frame, baseline report, annual and quarterly reports, study reports among other as shall be deemed necessary by the evaluation team.

    DELIVERABLES AND REPORING DEADLINES

    The following deliverables are expected to be produced by the evaluation team:

    Inception report (after initial meeting with the partner organization and Fastenaktion)

    The report will include a detailed plan of the evaluation process including a revised evaluation approach, an evaluation matrix stipulating for each evaluation question the data/methods that will be used, as well as the sampling method, data collection plan including methods and timelines, and feedback loops.

     

    Survey tools (with the inception report)

     

    The tools should be developed in cooperation with Fastenaktion and the Partner organization. The field data collection should be informed by the evaluation objectives, evaluation questions and criteria. The survey tools and all raw data, statistical tables and coding lists (as appropriate), as well as transcripts have to be provided to Fastenaktion and the partner organization at the end of the evaluation. Data has to be disaggregated according to location and gender (minimum requirement). The evaluation team can decide to further disaggregate data in a way that improves answering of the evaluation questions.

     

    Draft evaluation report (not more than 30 pages) pages excluding annexes (after the field work) plus a power point presentation

     

    The draft evaluation report is to be presented to the partner organization during a staff meeting to collect feedback. A PowerPoint presentation should be prepared for this purpose.

     

    Final evaluation report including PowerPoint presentation

    The final evaluation report shall incorporate the feedback from the partner organization and any other stakeholder. The PowerPoint presentation shall be adapted to these revisions.

    SUGGESTED OUTLINE OF THE EVALUATION REPORT:

    Cover page with name of the project, logos for partner organisation and donor, name and contact details of evaluator(s), including one representative photos of the project (best option: photo from the evaluation exercise).
    Executive summary (maximum 5 pages). This should be a section that can be used independently from the full report and should therefore cover: background to the programme, brief overview of aims of the evaluation, brief summary of the methodology, key findings per evaluation criteria and on the achievement of indicators, best practices and lessons learnt, conclusions, recommendations, and a summary of management response
    Introduction (1 page)
    Description of evaluation methodology (maximum 2  pages)
     Situation analysis with regards to the outcomes, outputs and partnership strategies (maximum 2 pages)
    Presentation and discussion of the findings (this will be the main part of the document). This section of the report should be clearly structured to show evidence-based answers to the evaluation questions (maximum 15 pages)
    Key findings, best practices and lessons learnt, and conclusions derived from the findings (maximum 5 pages)
    Clear and concise recommendations derived from the findings and conclusions to provide guidance for future programming (maximum 5 pages)
    Annexes: Terms of reference; Data-collection instruments, incl. information on informed consent handling; Project planning matrix / logframe; Travel and work schedule; debriefing power point presentation (final version); Sources (e.g. bibliography, people interviewed); Management response matrix; maps, photos

    DISSEMINATION OF FINDINGS 

    After a validation and stakeholder workshop, the final report will be submitted to Fastenaktion headquarters for final review and endorsement by the Programme Development Unit. This process will declare the report to the donors and the wider public.

    CONFIDENTIALITY OF DATA

    All documents and data collected will be treated as confidential and used solely to facilitate this evaluation. Interviewees and their pictures will not be quoted in the reports without their permission. It is expected that the evaluators will used consent forms as appropriate, and hand over to the project team. The deliverables as well as all material linked to the evaluation (produced by the evaluator(s) or the organization itself)is confidential and remains at all times the property of the contracting party.

    TIMEFRAME AND REQUIREMENTS

     The Evaluation should take 15 days preferably beginning from September 4th 2023.

    DAYS

    TASKS

    RESPONSIBLE

    4 days

    Initial briefings of the Programme
    Desk review of key documents 
    Draft inception report detailing evaluation tools
    Final inception report before the start of the consultancy

    Consultancy team for interview schedule and inception
    Fastenaktion is responsible for sharing all relevant documents and arranging meetings with key staff and stakeholders

     5 days

    Field work
    Data collection

    Consultancy team
    SOET
    Coordination office

    6 days

    Data analysis
    Draft evaluation report which is circulated internally for comments
    Presentation of key findings , feedback on draft evaluation, report, preparation of final report/presentation

    Consultancy team
    SOET, Fastenaktion, coordination office

    EVALUATION TEAM COMPOSITION AND COMPETENCIES

    The suggested team for this assignment includes:

    An agroecology or sustainable agriculture expert (essential)
    MEAL (Monitoring, Evaluation, Accountability and Learning) Expert with experience in qualitative and quantitative research methods and data analysis (essential)
    A gender and inclusion expert with experience in rural livelihoods / development (essential)

    The consultancy team should be mixed in gender.

    INTELLLECTUAL PROPERTY

    All the materials, information and reports, the output of the evaluation exercise shall be the property of Fastenaktion and the consultancy team is bound by Fastenaktion’s confidentiality requirements. All data sets and transcripts must be provided to Fastenaktion Coordination Office and Head Office in electronic copies and on a CD (2). The evaluators will not be allowed, without prior authorization in writing, to present any of the analytical results as his or her own or to make use of the evaluation results for private publication purposes.

    LABOUR LAW AND HUMAN RIGHTS

    The evaluation team commits itself to conclude (and any one contracted by the team) must commit to execute the contract in accordance with the local labour law, respect human rights, and not to allow discrimination based on gender, lifestyles, ethnic origin, religious affiliation or political opinions. The partner organization will not tolerate sexual or other abuse. The Fastenaktion Guideline on preventing and combating the abuse of power (2020) will apply to the contract.

     

    14.HOW TO APPLY:

    Submission of Proposals

    Based on the above, Fastenaktion is inviting interested parties to submit expressions of interest entailing technical and financial proposals. Individuals or firms applying shall detail the following:

    Consultants’ profile and capability statement describing the technical capacity and experience of the firm or group of individuals;
    Names and resume of individuals or team members proposed and their roles in the achievement of the assignment. This should also entail the proposed team structure for the evaluation;
    3 professional referees (preferably previous clients) and sample reports of similar assignments taken in the recent past;
    Understanding of the Terms of Reference (TORs);
    Detailed evaluation design with implementation plan and timeframe; and
    A detailed budget, which should be presented in Kenya Shillings and must include all taxes and other anticipated expenses,
    Quality Control and Quality Assessment for the Evaluation

    All field visits costs including transport in the field, meals and accommodation during field work will be catered by the contracting agent.

    Interested candidates should submit their application to the following email address: info@act4change.co.ke with “EXTERNAL EVALUATION, SOET 2023” as the subject of the e-mail. Deadline for submission is August 18th 2023
     Kindly don’t forget to submit samples of your previous work (reference calls shall be made to validate your work)

    Apply via :

    info@act4change.co.ke

  • External Evaluation of the Project Community Social-economic Empowerment through Agro Ecology Project- Kimaeti Farmers Association

    External Evaluation of the Project Community Social-economic Empowerment through Agro Ecology Project- Kimaeti Farmers Association

    The project works through solidarity groups as units of community entry and implementation. The project targeted to build the capacity of 1325 members (947 female and 378 men) organised into 73 solidarity groups. The solidarity groups have accompaniers referred to as ‘community animators’ while the nurseries are managed by appointed community members called ‘nursery managers’. The animators facilitate training of groups, offer close monitoring and ensure the implementation of the trained approaches. The animators also ensure that the groups are well coordinated; conduct trainings at group level and regularly conduct home visits to group members to ascertain progress of each group and each individual/member and address any emerging challenges. The community animators continuously visit the farms of their respective farmers to offer technical support and report on progress of each group on monthly basis outlining progress made and any challenges observed.  

    The project team constitutes of: An Administrator, Project Officer, Technical Advisor – Agroecology, Nursery Managers and Community Animators. They meet once monthly for reporting and planning and also exchange on challenges and lessons learnt

    PROJECT CONTEXT

    The project areas is a low land that receives its rainfall in two main seasons of the year i.e. long rains between March- June while the short rain seasons in August-October in the year. Most farms within the area have sandy soils except for the wetlands/riparian areas that have some clay soils. The Kocholia location has a large land mass that is also covered with rocks and shallow horizons leaving very small parcels of lands for farming.

    The main economic activities in the area are farming though some are involved in small businesses. It is from the farming practices of either crops or rearing of livestock’s i.e. cattle and poultry that they are able to meet their basic daily needs.

    The communities residing within the project working areas are majorly the Teso and Bukusu tribes although the other tribes are also available though not dominant. In regards to gender roles, men are considered as the head of the households with their major responsibility being to provide for the family and participate in critical family decision touching on family investments as well access, control and ownership of family productive resources such as land. In most families women are allowed access to the productive resources such as land in terms of tilling and farming practices but very few own them though they have window of making decision in regards to the kind of meals to be prepared, cloths to be bought for children, households items such as utensils, furniture and what/when to be planted on the farm which is majorly participatory between men and women. Most of community related conflicts in the area are handled by the established council of elders both from Teso and Bukusu sub-tribes

    EVALUATION PURPOSE

    The evaluation should in a very clear manner:

    Assess and document the extent to which the project objectives have been achieved (outcome and impact level), clearly outlining and describing the impacts, both positive and negative (intended and unintended), realized so far per each specific objective.
    Give insight into the key elements of the implementation process which explain why the reported changes occurred and shed light on how such changes were achieved or caused. We expect that an assessment of impact and understanding of key processes will support the generation of Project recommendations that could be considered for the design of future project phases.
    Elaborate strengths and weaknesses of the project, and document nest practices and lessons learnt. The evaluation should clearly document and highlight any programming adjustments that might be required to achieve the project desired objectives.

    USERS OF EVALUATION

    The primary users of the evaluation are:

    KIMAETI: Project team and management
    Fastenaktion: Country Programme Unit, Programme Manager and Head Office Programme Development Team
    Fastenaktion’s Programme Development section
    Right holders especially members of solidarity groups involved in the project to best understand effective strategies for bringing about desired change.

    SCOPE OF EVALUATION

    This being an external evaluation, it is expected to comply with the international evaluation standards (OECD), provide a space for learning around best practices for supporting target communities. The evaluation will be undertaken in Kocholia and Kimaeti locations.  Fastenaktion is seeking to identify a consultancy team, which will undertake this evaluation within the agreed terms of reference. Selection of the study sites will be agreed upon with the consultancy team. The consultancy team has to prioritize the field research questions in order to maximize on time. The evaluation process will include engagement with direct and indirect beneficiaries as well as other stakeholders.

    EVALUATION QUESTIONS

    In line with objectives of the evaluation, the evaluation will be expected to answer the following questions:

    6.1 RELEVANCE

    The evaluation should conduct an analysis of the appropriateness of the project design, activities, strategies and approaches in the light of the operational context, the timeliness of the response and its adaptation to the livelihoods security situations. It will involve assessing the extent to which the activities are suited to the priorities of the target groups, target households, and donors as well as the prevailing policy environment. Key questions to be addressed:

    To what extent are the intended project outcomes and actual activities in line with the needs of the target group (women and men)?
    Has the project adapted appropriately to relevant changing needs and context after its onset?
    How are the different aspects of the project implementation relevant in attaining cross cutting themes of gender equality, Leave No One Behind (LNOB), and climate change adaptability?

    6.2 EFFECTIVENESS AND IMPACT

    The focus will be on the extent to which project outcomes and objectives are being achieved. Key questions to be addressed:

    How has the food security and wellbeing of the target group (women and men) changed due to the interventions? What other context factors had an effect on possible changes and to what degree has the project tampered with or reinforced them? (cases of success stories can be highlighted and annexed)
    What is the degree of achievement of the planned results at outcome and impact level of the project?
    Are there any unintended project results (positive or negative)? eg. multiplier effects
    Did the project results reflect contribution to the principle of LNOB? How and to what extent? 

    6.3 EFFICIENCY

    The evaluation will outline the extent to which the interventions have delivered, or are likely to deliver results in an economic and timely way. Key questions to be addressed:

    Are costs (including time and human resources) and benefits in an appropriate relationship?
    Are there organizational and/or management issues that hinder implementation and/or effectiveness of the project?  
    Are there unique or practical ways in which the quality of the project can be improved in a next phase? Which are the proposed approaches and how can they be executed?

    6.4 SUSTAINABILITY AND LESSONS LEARNT

    Within the scope of this assignment, the evaluator(s) should assess the extent to which the project interventions took into consideration longer term needs of the target population and to what extent project results or benefits will be sustainable after project closure. Key elements to be reviewed include environmental, operational and financial sustainability of the project. Key questions to be addressed:

    Which benefits are likely to sustain beyond the life time of the project?
    Did the project incorporate adequate measures and strategies to ensure sustainability of results over time (regarding the partner organisation and the target group)? Which measures and strategies are these and how effective are they in influencing the sustainability prospects of the gained benefits?
    Can this project be expanded in other geographic and programmatic areas in Kenya based on need?

     

    6.6 ACCOUNTABILITY

    How effective was the community feedback mechanisms that was in place and the capacity of the organization to respond to comments received? Is there any evidence that feedback has or is influencing decision making?

    6.7 GENDER

    Did the interventions contribute to furthering (or hindering) gender equality within the project area? If so, how and to what extent?  If it did contribute to furthering gender equality, why not?

    EVALUATION METHODOLOGY

    The evaluator(s) is welcome to suggest an appropriate methodological approach to successfully deliver a quality evaluation.  The evaluation methodology should be consultative and participatory, entailing a combination of desk review, key informant interviews, face to face household surveys, interviews and/or FGDs. While interviews are a key instrument, the evaluators will triangulate a range of data sources to ensure that the evaluation is sound and objective. The evaluator(s) will further elaborate on the method and approach in a manner commensurate with the assignment at hand and reflect this in the inception report, which will subsequently be approved by the programme team in consultation with key stakeholders.

    A final agreement on the evaluation design and methodology will be discussed on the basis of the submitted offer and/or the inception report.

    Some of the key primary data sources include:

    Interviews with key staff such as the Project Coordinator, Project Officer, Project Technical Advisor, Community Animators, Nursery Managers and others as deemed necessary by the evaluation team.
    Interviews with stakeholders including respective county government departments, and community leaders
    Household surveys, interviews and/or FGDs with women and men of the target group, and field observation in project sites within the project locations

    Secondary data will be made available and it is expected that the evaluator(s) will have a comprehensive desk review of project documents. Some of the documents include project proposal and budgets, Log frame, baseline report, annual and quarterly reports, study reports among other as shall be deemed necessary by the evaluation team.

     

    6.DELIVERABLES AND REPORING DEADLINES

    The following deliverables are expected to be produced by the evaluation team:

     

    Inception report (after initial meeting with the partner organization and Fastenaktion)

    The report will include a detailed plan of the evaluation process including a revised evaluation approach, an evaluation matrix stipulating for each evaluation question the data/methods that will be used, as well as the sampling method, data collection plan including methods and timelines, and feedback loops.

    Survey tools (with the inception report)

    The tools should be developed in cooperation with Fastenaktion and the Partner organization. The field data collection should be informed by the evaluation objectives, evaluation questions and criteria. The survey tools and all raw data, statistical tables and coding lists (as appropriate), as well as transcripts have to be provided to Fastenaktion and the partner organization at the end of the evaluation. Data has to be disaggregated according to location and gender (minimum requirement). The evaluation team can decide to further disaggregate data in a way that improves answering of the evaluation questions.

    Draft evaluation report (not more than 30 pages) pages excluding annexes (after the field work) plus a power point presentation

    The draft evaluation report is to be presented to the partner organization during a staff meeting to collect feedback. A PowerPoint presentation should be prepared for this purpose.

    Final evaluation report including PowerPoint presentation

    The final evaluation report shall incorporate the feedback from the partner organization and any other stakeholder. The PowerPoint presentation shall be adapted to these revisions.

    SUGGESTED OUTLINE OF THE EVALUATION REPORT:

    Cover page with name of the project, logos for partner organisation and donor, name and contact details of evaluator(s), including one representative photos of the project (best option: photo from the evaluation exercise).
    Executive summary (maximum 5 pages). This should be a section that can be used independently from the full report and should therefore cover: background to the programme, brief overview of aims of the evaluation, brief summary of the methodology, key findings per evaluation criteria and on the achievement of indicators, best practices and lessons learnt, conclusions, recommendations, and a summary of management response
    Introduction (1 page)
    Description of evaluation methodology (maximum 2  pages)
     Situation analysis with regards to the outcomes, outputs and partnership strategies (maximum 2 pages)
    Presentation and discussion of the findings (this will be the main part of the document). This section of the report should be clearly structured to show evidence-based answers to the evaluation questions (maximum 15 pages)
    Key findings, best practices and lessons learnt, and conclusions derived from the findings (maximum 5 pages)
    Clear and concise recommendations derived from the findings and conclusions to provide guidance for future programming (maximum 5 pages)
    Annexes: Terms of reference; Data-collection instruments, incl. information on informed consent handling; Project planning matrix / logframe; Travel and work schedule; debriefing power point presentation (final version); Sources (e.g. bibliography, people interviewed); Management response matrix; maps, photos

    DISSEMINATION OF FINDINGS 

    After a validation and stakeholder workshop, the final report will be submitted to Fastenaktion headquarters for final review and endorsement by the Programme Development Unit. This process will declare the report to the donors and the wider public.

    CONFIDENTIALITY OF DATA

    All documents and data collected will be treated as confidential and used solely to facilitate this evaluation. Interviewees and their pictures will not be quoted in the reports without their permission. It is expected that the evaluators will used consent forms as appropriate, and hand over to the project team. The deliverables as well as all material linked to the evaluation (produced by the evaluator(s) or the organization itself)is confidential and remains at all times the property of the contracting party.

    TIMEFRAME AND REQUIREMENTS

     The Evaluation should take 15 days preferably beginning from September 4th 2023.

    DAYS

    TASKS

    RESPONSIBLE

    4 days

    Initial briefings of the Programme
    Desk review of key documents 
    Draft inception report detailing evaluation tools
    Final inception report before the start of the consultancy

    Consultancy team for interview schedule and inception
    Fastenaktion is responsible for sharing all relevant documents and arranging meetings with key staff and stakeholders

     5 days

    Field work
    Data collection

    Consultancy team
    KIMAETI Farmers
    Coordination office

    6 days

    Data analysis
    Draft evaluation report which is circulated internally for comments
    Presentation of key findings , feedback on draft evaluation, report, preparation of final report/presentation

    Consultancy team
    KIMAETI Farmers, Fastenaktion, coordination office

    EVALUATION TEAM COMPOSITION AND COMPETENCIES

    The suggested team for this assignment includes:

    An agroecology or sustainable agriculture expert (essential)
    MEAL (Monitoring, Evaluation, Accountability and Learning) Expert with experience in qualitative and quantitative research methods and data analysis (essential)
    A gender and inclusion expert with experience in rural livelihoods / development (essential)

    The consultancy team should be mixed in gender.

    INTELLLECTUAL PROPERTY

    All the materials, information and reports, the output of the evaluation exercise shall be the property of Fastenaktion and the consultancy team is bound by Fastenaktion’s confidentiality requirements. All data sets and transcripts must be provided to Fastenaktion Coordination Office and Head Office in electronic copies and on a CD (2). The evaluators will not be allowed, without prior authorization in writing, to present any of the analytical results as his or her own or to make use of the evaluation results for private publication purposes.

    LABOUR LAW AND HUMAN RIGHTS

    The evaluation team commits itself to conclude (and any one contracted by the team) must commit to execute the contract in accordance with the local labour law, respect human rights, and not to allow discrimination based on gender, lifestyles, ethnic origin, religious affiliation or political opinions. The partner organization will not tolerate sexual or other abuse. The Fastenaktion Guideline on preventing and combating the abuse of power (2020) will apply to the contract.

    Apply via :

  • Consultancy for Baseline Study for Project Increasing the Resilience of Farming Systems with Agroecology, with a Focus on Gender at

    Consultancy for Baseline Study for Project Increasing the Resilience of Farming Systems with Agroecology, with a Focus on Gender at

    Introduction

    Biovision Africa Trust (BvAT) wishes to recruit a consultant to undertake assessment of the status of output and outcome indicators on the above project and provide recommendations to inform evaluations, accountability and learning in the 3 counties (Kakamega, Busia and Bungoma) in Western Kenya where the project will be implemented

    About Biovision Africa Trust (BvAT)

    BvAT is a not-for-profit organization established in Kenya in 2009. It is situated on the main campus of the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (icipe) in Kasarani, Nairobi. The organization’s goal is to alleviate poverty and improve the livelihoods of smallholder farmers in Kenya and other African countries, through dissemination of information and knowledge and building capacity of famers for uptake of appropriate technology, to improve human, animal, plant, and environmental health.
    BvAT runs a Farmer Communication Programme in East Africa supported by Biovision Foundation of Switzerland and IKEA through ENVIU East Africa, the African Union Ecological Organic Agriculture (EOA) initiative supported by the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) and Swedish Society for Nature Conservation (SSNC) and BvAT in collaboration with PELUM Uganda coordinates the Knowledge Hub for Eastern Africa (KHEA) under the global Knowledge Centre for Organic Agriculture in Africa (KCOA) covering the five regions of Africa – West, East, North, Central and Southern Africa. Consequently, BvAT has strengthened its position as a leading organisation championing the development of the agroecology in Kenya and the African continent.
    BvAT’s theory of change is that when farmers are supported to embrace sustainable agroecological practices through dissemination of information and training, agroecology is mainstreamed into public policy, and linkages among the value chain actors fostered; then farmers productivity will improve, food and nutrition security for both rural and urban communities improved; and environmental sustainability of agricultural production systems enhanced.

    About the Project

    The project is implemented in 3 counties of Busia, Kakamega and Bungoma in Western Kenya. The project is nested within BvAT’s Farmer Communication Programme setup which runs farmer resource centres and complemented by The Organic Farmer (TOF) Magazine, The Organic Farmer (TOF) Radio and the one-stop shop knowledge platform Infonet (https://infonet-biovision.org). The project is also tightly linked to the Knowledge Hub for Organic Agriculture in Eastern Africa (KHEA) activities in western Kenya, including but not limited to leveraging on the Continental Digital Knowledge Platform and the Multiplier network in the region.
    Experiences from numerous projects in the region show that intervention success, efficiency and sustainability are highly related to appropriate sustainable models, processes and initiatives that take relevant climate-smart and resilient practices to scale. Hence, the project will innovatively scale up agroecology practices in the farming households and promote engagement in organic farming as a business beyond just subsistence farming. Overall, the project interventions will be aiming at achieving environmental and social economic benefits that will build resilient farming systems and livelihoods.
    The project’s objective is to improve the livelihoods of farmers in western Kenya through the adoption of agroecological practices in agroforestry, indigenous vegetables, and poultry value chains as well as practices of improving soil health and fertility. Four key areas of interventions, activities and results detailed as per the table (see table in the pdf version – link here  Printable version :

     Purpose and Scope of the Study
    The overall objective of the study is to determine the status of output and outcome indicators and provide additional information within the project context which are related to the project to inform evaluations, accountability and learning in the 3 counties, in Western Kenya.

    The specific objectives of this study are, to:

    Assess the current status of farmers, especially women and youth practicing ecological sustainable agriculture (ESA) practices under the four key areas of intervention among the smallholder farmers.
    Derive key project indicators and establish their baseline to constitute the basis of measuring the project performance in relation to expected outputs and outcomes.
    Evaluate the gaps in the current situation in relation to the main elements of the project to develop a business case for enhancing resilience of farming systems while improving farmers’ livelihoods with appropriate future interventions.
    The scope of the assignment is to collect detailed information on the current situation in relation to the four main elements of the project amongst the target beneficiaries within the targeted geographic regions in the 3 counties of interest to develop a business case for agroecology resilience around agroforestry, indigenous poultry and vegetables enterprises and soil health and fertility management. The study will establish the baseline for the project´s key indicators and constitute the basis to measure the project performance, while the assessment of the resilience of farming systems provides the resilience situation including gaps where the four interventions can be applied. The entire exercise will focus on two specific target groups:

    smallholder farmers especially women and their involvement on agribusinesses in the indigenous poultry and vegetables enterprises and soil health improvement initiatives, and;
    youth involvement in indigenous poultry and vegetables enterprises and soil health improvement initiatives.

    Background Documents
    In addition to relevant documents and reports to be sought from BvAT, various documents
    vital to this study will be provided including but not limited to:

    Project Proposal
    Project Results framework
    BvAT Strategic Plan
    BvAT’s Annual Reports

    Methodology
    The county-specific evaluations will be conducted through a consultancy expected to develop an appropriate approach/methodology to address the scope provided. The study will be conducted using mixed methods and tools including desk reviews, household survey, key informant interviews, focused group discussion. Overall, the methodology will include but not limited to:

    Identification and review of relevant documents on initiatives, programmes, projects etc., implemented in the counties.
    Data collection approaches and tools, appropriate to allow for triangulation of findings.
    Data analysis techniques that are rich and informative to allow for quality decision-making.
     Validation meetings for the results obtained.

    Deliverables
    The expected key outputs are:

    An Inception Report: Elaboration of the evaluation methodology and tools to be applied including a detailed schedule of activities to be undertaken across the selected counties. This should be ready within 1 week after signing the contract.
    Draft Report: A report with findings related to all the objectives and should be ready within 14 days from the day of signing the contract.
    Final Report: The technical report should include the executive summary, background, methodology, key findings, conclusions, lessons and recommendations, and annexes (key farmers interviewed, documents consulted, data collection instruments applied), appendices and dataset (excel or STATA or SPSS upload) with raw data in soft copy

    Timeframe

    The baseline study is expected to start on 24th August 2023 and end by 7th September 2023.

    Budget Considerations
    The budget is expected to cover:

    Field activities for data collection in all the 3 counties.
    Consultancy – Data collection, analysis, and reporting.
    Inception and validation meetings.

    Consultants & Minimum Qualifications
    The study will be conducted by a consultant or team of consultants with the team leader and partners having the following main qualifications:

    At least a master’s degree or equivalent in agriculture, sociology, development studies, economics, or related social sciences.
    At least 5 years of experience in conducting evaluations, or similar assignments in agricultural development programmes and projects.
    Demonstrated ability to assess complex situations, to analyze critical issues succinctly and clearly and draw conclusions and recommendations.
    Proven in-depth understanding and consulting experiences on set-up of complex development programmes.
    Substantive knowledge of participatory M&E processes and experience with multistakeholder/community development interventions.
    Excellent English writing and communication skills.

    Interested candidates should submit the following:If you are interested in the above consultancy and can demonstrate your ability to meet the qualifications required, then submit your expression of interest with the above mentioned documents to info@biovisionafricatrust.org with the subject heading: Consultancy for Baseline Study for Project “Increasing the resilience of farming systems with agroecology, with a focus on gender”.
    The closing date for applications is 17th August 2023, at 11:59pm EAT. Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted for interviews.

    Apply via :

    info@biovisionafricatrust.org

  • Grassroots Meeting Facilitator

    Grassroots Meeting Facilitator

    KEY TASKS, DUTIES, AND RESPONSIBILITIES

    To facilitate a sessions with intergenerational grassroots women to map out opportunities for participation in the Bungoma and Vihiga county governance processes.
    To moderate conversation to identify gender priorities for informing a woman manifesto
    To walk with women in coming up with recommendations on ways towards enhancingtheir participation in the governance of their respective counties.
    To develop, administer entry and exit questionnaires

    SKILLS AND COMPETENCES
    Qualification: The candidate(s) should have a background knowledge and competency in the following fields:

    Gender, Governance & Democracy;
    Constitutional, Legislative and Policy drafting processes 
    Social Sciences or any other related field
    Experience in the learning/academic institutions
    Research/ Documentation
    Experience working with county governments shall be an added advantage.

    Deliverables: 

    A summary report on priority issues and opportunities for the participation of women in county governance processes in Bungoma or Vihiga counties.

    TimelinesExpression of Interest:Kindly send your application to procurement@enafrica.org by 14 th August 2023

    Apply via :

    procurement@enafrica.org

  • Business Development Consultant

    Business Development Consultant

    INTRODUCTION

    Like many countries around the world, Kenya is striving to attain the Sustainable Development Goal of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) by 2030. To align with UHC best practices, the MoH has prioritized both primary healthcare and community health care as critical to achieving UHC. Key steps in strengthening these systems included the development of the Kenya Primary Healthcare Strategic Framework (2019 – 2024) and the Kenya Community Health Policy (2020 – 2030).
    The Community Health Policy provided a roadmap for additional investments in the community health system in Kenya. The current community health system consists of human resources in the form of Community Health Assistants/Officers (CHAs/CHOs) and Community Health Volunteers (CHVs).
    VillageReach is working in collaboration with Lwala Community Alliance to strengthen and integrate the supply chain that supports Community Health Workers as part of the Kenya Ministry of Health’s (MoH) Community Health Strategy. VillageReach and Lwala will work together to initiative collaboration across multiple MoH departments and stakeholders across National and county levels to initiate catalytic changes in the community health supply chain. The main objectives of this project are to:

    Advocate for community health commodities to be integrated in mainstream county supply planning systems
    Support development of a community health supply chain information systems strategy for Migori county
    Support development of a supply chain scale up plan for Lwala Community Alliance

    Consultancy Overview

    For approximately 6 months, a Business Development Consultant is required to work with VillageReach Supply Chain Global Technical Team and the VillageReach Business Development Team to ramp up fundraising for the Supply Chain for Primary Health Care Project in Migori County, Kenya. This consultant will be key to the expansion of the project in Kenya. This consultant will support Supply Chain Global Technical Team leadership in business engagement and fundraising efforts, to build a healthy pipeline of funding opportunities with multilaterals, bilaterals, foundations and corporations. This consultant will also support relationship management with national government and local and locally-based partners that position the organization for success.

    Activities

    Working together with the VillageReach Supply Chain team and Kenya country leadership, conduct business development activities, including identifying, cultivating and securing funding opportunities for VillageReach
    Develop and contribute to request for proposals or other funding opportunities for the continued growth and expansion on the program
    Provide guidance and support for country-based business development activities, including engaging in strategic planning with country-based staff.
    Manage implementation of country business development strategy/plan and work closely with Global Director of Programs, Supply Chain Global Technical Team, and Business Development Staff to build engagement strategy for donors and support the cultivation of donors, particularly country donor representatives
    Scope, research and map existing and potential donors and partners, including identifying new priority connections and networks and tracking forecasts of upcoming country funding opportunities
    Assist the Director, Supply Chain GTT and Senior Manager, Business Development in managing portfolio of potential donors and partners
    Keep track of government and donor policy and strategy documents to inform VillageReach BD efforts and ensure alignment
    Work with Business Development Team to create strong position for VillageReach with government leaders and partners and support development of partnership and consortium opportunities Facilitate Business Development Team meetings and manage donor tracker
    Write and/or support colleagues with writing donor correspondence, investment cases, capability statements and concept notes.
    Provide required support for proposal development, which may include assessing Go/No-Go, coordination, research, technical writing,
    Liaise with the Advocacy & Communications colleagues to ensure donor engagement communication material is developed and updated
    Toward the end of the consultancy, provide guidance and make relevant linkages so that the Kenya country leadership can continue to build on the relationships created and existing NBD efforts

    Requirements
    Education & Experience:

    Master’s degree preferred
    Minimum of 5-8 years of relevant professional experience in international development, fundraising, supply chain, or other related fields. Experience in global health is required.
    Demonstrated success in developing winning proposals in organization with annual budget of at least $3M
    Demonstrated success in supporting growth of fundraising program, including increase in donors and improved efficiency
    Experience seeking funding from multilateral and bilateral donors such as USAID, Global Fund
    Experience collaborating with large implementing partners such as UNICEF, World Vision, JSI, Chemonics, etc.

    Other Desired Qualifications:

    Compliance with VillageReach’s COVID-19 vaccination policy.
    Established cultural competency in collaborating with racial, cultural and linguistically diverse groups.
    Eligibility to work in Kenya and excellent understanding of country health system
    Demonstrated understanding of challenges with working in rural, underserved and low-income context; experience living in and/or working in a low-income country a plus.
    Proficient in Microsoft Office Suite (Word, PowerPoint, Outlook, Excel) and comfortable in a fast-paced technical environment.
    Fluency in English with professional proficiency in writing and speaking, Swahili is a bonus
    Ability to design engagements and manage complex stakeholder environments
    Collaboration skills to develop and manage relationships with clients, governments, and key stakeholders
    Strong communications skills are required, both verbal and written, to present convincingly to potential funders and other partners

    Apply via :

    jobs.workable.com

  • AI Consultant

    AI Consultant

    Scope of Work:

    The AI consultant will be responsible for the following tasks:

    Process Assessment:

    Conduct a thorough assessment of our existing processes across various departments and functions.
    Identify and document each process’s key tasks, workflows, and pain points.
    Analyze process dependencies and interactions between different departments.
    Determine AI automation’s suitability and potential impact on each process.

      AI Technology Evaluation:

     Evaluate the available AI technologies and tools applicable to the identified processes.
    Assess the feasibility, scalability, and compatibility of these technologies with our existing systems and infrastructure.
     Consider factors such as data requirements, training time, and potential risks associated with each technology.

    Recommendations and Roadmap:

    Prepare a detailed report outlining the processes recommended for automation using AI.
    Provide a comprehensive roadmap for implementing the recommended AI solutions, including timelines, milestones, and resource requirements.
    Clearly articulate the anticipated benefits, risks, and challenges associated with each recommended automation initiative.
    Suggest strategies for change management and employee training to ensure a smooth transition.

    Collaboration and Communication:

    Collaborate closely with the internal teams to gather insights, requirements, and feedback throughout the project.
    Conduct regular progress meetings and presentations to update the management and stakeholders on findings and recommendations.
    Provide support and guidance during the implementation phase, if required.

    Proposal Submission:

    Interested AI consultants are requested to submit a comprehensive proposal that includes the following:

     Overview:

    A brief introduction to the consultant, highlighting relevant experience and expertise in AI process automation.
    Understanding of our company’s industry, operations, and challenges.

    Methodology:

    Detailed outline of the consultant’s approach to conducting the process review and automation assessment.
    Description of the tools, techniques, and frameworks that will be utilized during the engagement.

    Team Composition:

    Profiles of key team members who will be involved in the project, emphasizing their qualifications and previous relevant experience.

    Project Timeline:

    Proposed timeline with key milestones and deliverables.
    The estimated effort required for each phase of the project.

    Budget:

    A financial proposal detailing the cost structure, including fees and any additional expenses.
    Any terms and conditions related to payment, deliverables, and project cancellation.

    Evaluation Criteria:

    The proposals received will be evaluated based on the following criteria:

    Expertise and Experience:

    Relevance of the consultant’s experience in AI process automation.
    Track record of successful projects and client references.

    Methodology and Approach:

    Clarity and comprehensiveness of the proposed methodology.
    Alignment of the approach with our company’s requirements and objectives.

    Team Composition:

    Expertise and qualifications of the proposed team members.
    Ability to work collaboratively and effectively communicate with our internal stakeholders.

    Cost and Value:

    Reasonableness and competitiveness of the financial proposal.
    Perceived value and potential return on investment of the proposed engagement.

    Apply via :

    burnmanufacturing.applytojob.com

  • Strategy Senior Consultant

    Strategy Senior Consultant

    Your key responsibilities:

    Project Delivery – responsible for structuring engagements, delivering each engagement through the project team, and managing the client on a day-to-day basis
    Business Development – proactively developing pitches and materials to pursue new opportunities; responsible for preparing proposals in response to client requests; supporting internal pursuit-related processes; attending and actively contributing to business development meetings
    Team Development – developing junior resources through on-the-job training; sector meetings; informal discussions; and formal EY-P training modules
    Thought Leadership – contributing to, and authoring, studies, reports, papers, presentations and social media materials to support and strengthen EY-Parthenon’s presence

    Skills and qualifications:

    Bachelor’s degree, a minimum of second-class upper honors and at least 5 years of experience working in strategy consulting and/or transaction advisory
    Strong analytical and problem-solving skills with a practical ability to shape the business agenda and define strategic roadmaps.
    Experience in managing complex business projects, working with multi-disciplinary teams.
    Schooling: minimum overall grade of a B in KCSE and B in both English and Mathematics
    Strong people and leadership skills (including cross-functional collaboration, team management and people development & coaching).
    Solid internal and external business development acumen.
    Entrepreneurial spirit, team player and excellent communicator.

    What we are looking for

    Highly motivated individuals with excellent problem-solving skills and the ability to prioritize shifting workloads in a rapidly changing industry. An effective communicator, you’ll be a confident team player that collaborates with people from various teams while looking to develop your career in a dynamic organization.

    What working at EY offers

    Continuous learning: You’ll develop the mindset and skills to navigate whatever comes next.
    Success as defined by you: We’ll provide the tools and flexibility, so you can make a meaningful impact, your way.
    Transformative leadership: We’ll give you the insights, coaching and confidence to be the leader the world needs.
    Diverse and inclusive culture: You’ll be embraced for who you are and empowered to use your voice to help others find theirs.

    Apply via :

    careers.ey.com