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Doughnut Design for Business - Core Tool
DEAL’s guide to redesigning businesses through Doughnut Economics - Core workshop
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Tool overview
This is a workshop tool that allows companies to understand and engage with Doughnut Economics. It is a journey into transforming the deep design of business (e.g. their ownership and governance) to ensure the business can pursue the strategies, practices and business models needed to help humanity into the Doughnut. The tool is based on two core questions:
- Which transformative ideas will your business need to pursue to help humanity into the Doughnut?
- How could a redesign of your business unlock these transformative ideas?
Below is the tool. You can also view the tool here as Google Slides or download it as a PDF at bottom of this page.
The enterprise design focus
Any business hoping to engage with Doughnut Economics can only do so through a focus on enterprise design, which is the central focus of this tool. This is explored through five design layers: a company’s Purpose, Networks, Governance, Ownership, and Finance. Below is a short video to introduce this concept, which facilitators running workshops with this tool may also choose to use within their workshop.
These design layers powerfully shape the strategic decisions and operational impacts of businesses, and ultimately determine whether or not businesses can transform to become part of a regenerative and distributive future. By diving into the five layers of deep design, this tool reveals both design blockages that prevent transformative action, and design innovations that can unlock its possibility. Over 300 businesses participated in the creation of this tool, through 22 pilot workshops co-hosted by Doughnut Economics Action Lab. It has since been further refined following feedback from dozens of registered facilitators who are using this tool to run workshops with businesses around the world.
Who it is for
It is primarily for people working with business leaders and entrepreneurs who can use the tool to facilitate workshops. These include:
- Consultants & coaches
- Business networks
- Investors & banks
- Start-up incubators
- Business Schools, NGO’s, certifiers, lawyers, advisors & others who work directly with businesses
Business leaders can also use this tool, especially executives, owners and board members. They are free to use this for internal reflection. Or they can find facilitators who are registered to use the tool with their clients on DEAL's Organisations in Action page here.
Which facilitators are suitable
Above all, this tool is for people who want to use Doughnut Economics to transform business. These are people who have:
- Interest in turning Doughnut Economics from a radical idea into transformative action in the world of business
- Ambition and curiosity to propose new ways to design businesses
- Agency to influence the design of businesses, from the outside or from within the business
Facilitating will also require time to prepare and gain some familiarity with the businesses participating (e.g. their industry, legal form, governance, reporting of impacts).
Importantly, the facilitator should be skilled in guiding businesses through the journey of exploration and comfortable with complexity, with encountering defensiveness or frustration from some participants, such as: limitations around what they can change, and their desire to be provided practical advice.
If you are a consultant or other organisation wanting to engage your business clients or members on Doughnut Economics, you will first need to register with DEAL as an Organisation in Action.
What the tool includes
- A set of materials to run workshops on Doughnut Economics for businesses. This includes slides, activity canvases, examples, guidance and pre-recorded training webinars for new facilitators.
- Materials for a longer 5 hour version (core tool) and a shorter 2 hour version (taster tool) of the workshop.
- Translations of the materials for the Doughnut Design for Business Core tool, available in French, German, Portuguese and Spanish.
- Separate tools for those shaping public policy and business education to guide their approach of using Doughnut Economics to engage with businesses.
- A community of practice of people and organisations engaging with business through Doughnut Economics, which includes regular DEAL-led webinars and an emergent peer-to-peer support network of practitioners.
What is unique about this tool
The Doughnut Design for Business tool is:
- the only way for businesses to engage with Doughnut Economics
- deeply transformative, context-specific and but can be applied to any business
- a pragmatic tool that hopes to foster diverse and context-specific designs that help businesses to overcome real barriers that block ambitious action
- accessible and works intuitively - without prescribing specific designs or models
- free for use by businesses for internal reflection, and for professional use by registered values-aligned organisations who work with business clients and are willing to contribute to the emergent community of practice
Duration, format & materials
The duration for this core tool workshop is suggested as 4-5 hours. It can be broken up into two or more sessions, and can also be extended to give additional time for the activities and related discussions. There is also a shorter taster version (for a ~2 hour workshop).
The workshop can be held in-person or online. Activity canvases are available in Annex A as both printable pdfs (for in-person) and on Miro (for online workshops). See Annex A towards the end of the slides.
Some workshops will bring together multiple companies, while others will bring together a group from within a single business. All activities across this tool can also be conducted in pairs or by an individual applying it to their own business. Some key considerations and options are offered at the end of the tool.
Adaptation options
For businesses to engage with Doughnut Economics means they explore their own deep design. Around this core focus, there are ways facilitators can adapt their workshops. For instance, Annex E provides ways to incorporate additional activities and concepts, consider ways participants can prepare for and follow-up on the workshop. Critically, it also provides alternative slides for running workshops with start-ups.
Training resources for facilitators
View DEAL's 2-part training webinar on running workshops for businesses with this tool:
- Part 1 of the training webinar video here
- Part 2of the training webinar video here
Facilitators can also use the business case studies that DEAL has published to better understand the concept of enterprise design. Relevant case studies can also be used to enrich the workshops.
Translations
The Doughnut Design for Business core tool, and the accompanying paper are now available in French, German, Portuguese and Spanish via this folder. Note, this is an official DEAL translation of the initial version of the tool as launched in November 2022, and there have been a few minor updates in the English version. The slides contain all the activities in the translated language, but the links to the Miro and PDFs of the activity canvases will take users to the English versions of the canvases. Across the translated versions, if you spot any errors that need correcting, please let DEAL know via our contact page by selecting the Business and Enterprise theme and sharing a message.
Paper
The tool is accompanied by a paper, What Doughnut Economics Means for Business, which contains background context and further detail on the core concepts as well as additional examples of business design. The paper was co-authored by DEAL and Centre for Economic Transformation. To read the paper, click here or see Attachments below.
DEAL's policy for business
To balance openness with protecting the integrity of the concept of Doughnut Economics, DEAL has created a policy applying to businesses (including consultants in their work with business clients). This policy contains seven main principles:
- Focus on the deep design of business
- No ‘company doughnuts’
- Public facing claims only about redesign of business
- Doughnut and business events must be based on the tool
- Additional guidance welcome but, for now, no new tools related to business
- Share back learnings from using the tool
- Propose case studies of businesses
The annex of this tool contains the parts of this policy that are most relevant to those using this tool. This includes the ask that those using the tool to work with businesses register on DEAL's platform as an organisation in action and share back insights about the workshop with the DEAL Community. The tool contains additional guidance on how facilitators can share back.
We also invite businesses to propose case studies about their redesign around the goals of Doughnut Economics. To submit a case study, please connect with us through the DEAL contact form, choosing the category 'Tools and Stories' and theme ‘Business and Enterprise’.
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Hello! I'm Anna-Marie, an organisational ecologist and embodied facilitator. I currently describe my work as being that of an organisational ecologist and embodied facilitator. After authoring the reimagined story of ecological organisations and the accompanying Ecological Organisations Framework in 2023, released under creative commons, a whole new world has opened up that I'm loving exploring: organisations as edge-less, of relationship, deeply relational, and firmly entangled in social systems, ecosystems, and planetary health. To evolve that work, I founded the Patreon-hosted Ecological Organisations Constellation. Here, we gather around the story of ecological organisations and look to mature it, ground it, evolve our understanding of it and relationship with it, and bring those learnings into wider commons. It's becoming a container for practical, lived experimentation, then integrating our discoveries into our individual and shared work. I write about my work and other things in the substack Cellular Rearranging and host and produce the podcast Generative Worlding. I initiated the first season of Facilitation Pods, now continuing as a commons under co-stewardship. In the pods, we are co-crafting an intimate space for self- and shared-enquiry about facilitation and how we change and are changed by the role, a space that's also become a peer supervision investigating our experiences.
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Ken Novak
St. Ambrose University, Davenport, Iowa USA
Ken Novak, Ph.D. is a public speaker, father of eight children, retired military officer, a hospice bereavement support chaplain and adjunct university professor. I do believe the future belongs to the storyteller, and donut economics is rewriting the narrative of our shared humanity. Currently, I am trying a new project with my business ethics students in seeing if they can help "advise" Mr. Tom Vazzo, CEO of Homeboys Inc. and author of The Homeboy Way, in considering how his desire for "Economic Equality Capitalism" (p.146) can be framed within the considerations of donut economics, especially with respect to the social foundation. Mr. Vazzo's "new way forward" includes a radical idea of putting "our best business minds to use in creating companies with huge employment returns as opposed to creating companies with huge financial returns as the priority" (p.149). That's bending the curve of growth toward people, and specific for Vazzo's consideration it means "invest[ing] in people who are just beginning to see life bloom before them." #socialjustice, ,
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Fernanda Tenorio
Vitória, Espírito Santo, Brazil
Bachelor in Social and Environmental Sciences at the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG), with a background in conservation and resource management from the University of Sydney (UniSyd). Master in International Environmental Studies from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU). Currently taking an MBA in ESG and Innovation at PUC-Minas. Diversified experience in the environmental and social sectors of companies, NGOs, governmental institutions and international organisations – State Secretariat for the Environment and Sustainable Development of Minas Gerais, United Nations Development Program (UNDP), Greenpeace, Norwegian Refugee Council, Hostelling International. Confounder of Arandu, a consultancy company focused on the collaborative and sustainable development of organizations. Writer and editor of the magazine Mundo Arandu, an initiative that aism to share knowledge about sustainability, innovation and personal development. Diver, sailor, and passionate about Sustainability and the Degrowth movement.
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