• About
  • Contact Us
  • Festivals of Ideas
  • Learning
  • Next Practice
  • Archives

  • Next Practice

    The Next Practice programme is Innovation Exchange’s most intensive form of innovation brokerage, providing bespoke support to innovators to strengthen both their innovation and the alliance of supporters around it. The programme helps innovators to focus inwards, to develop their ideas, their practice and their work. It also supports innovators to look outwards and connect to service users, funders and other partners to ensure the innovation’s long-term success. Read more in our new Next Practice booklet, Growing innovation from the third sector.

    npp_brochure_cover_small

    The Next Practice programme was launched in November 2008 and will run to March 2010. Innovators in the programme are working on innovations in the areas of support for excluded young people and independent living and range from start-up social enterprises to household name charities. In some cases, innovators are working to prove that a great idea can work in practice. In other cases, organisations are taking an innovation that has succeeded in one place and are looking to grow it or to extend it in new areas.

    Innovation Exchange supports Next Practice programme participants with the offering of a little money and a lot of help. The programme has benefited from NESTA sponsorship, which enabled the Exchange to provide £225k of funding across fifteen projects. In addition to direct grants, the programme offers a mixture of coaching and consultancy support to each project. Innovation Exchange recognises that challenge and support is crucial for innovation, but we also know it can be hard for organisations to prioritise this within an organisation’s own budget. Learn about recent support activities.

    next_practice_cmyk

    The Fifteen Next Practice Projects:

    Enabled by Design
    building an online community to crowdsource the development of assistive technology

    Slivers of Time
    using the web to enable individuals to contract directly with one another to provide social care services

    East London Food Access
    delivering fresh fruit and vegetables to estates with no other access to fresh food

    Brandon Trust and Symbol Family Support Services
    using assistive technology to enable parents with learning difficulties to be safe, loving parents

    Speaking Up
    harnessing the power of co-production and peer-support to provide a sustainable brokerage service to personal budget holders

    Clean Slate Training
    providing work opportunities for people who can be excluded from the labour market

    TimeBank
    providing mentoring to young men recovering from mental illness

    Horsesmouth
    using the web to connect people seeking support and guidance with other people willing to provide it freely based on their own experiences

    Dance United
    using dance-based alternative education to build the self-confidence and self-discipline of young offenders

    Creative North
    Developing mobile phone games to engage young people and help them to learn life skills

    The Prince’s Trust
    Turning mentoring for young offenders from sporadic provision to a universal service across the country

    BeatBullying
    training young people as peer supporters to help tackle bullying in schools

    Aquila Way
    bringing together private landlords and trained volutneers to help vulnerable people to access and retain rented homes

    ESSA and Phoenix Education Trust
    working with NEET young people to support youth leadership and build young people’s confidence

    Riverside Credit Union
    Working in Speke, near Liverpool, to develop a pre-paid card allowing credit union account holders to use ATMs and shop online




    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
    (c) 2010 Innovation Exchange | powered by WordPress