This article explores the organisational processes through which non-profit organisations transform resources into social impact. Focusing on five interrelated mechanisms—service delivery, advocacy, education, framing, and innovation—it argues that these processes collectively define the ways NGOs shape governance, policy, and public discourse. While service provision addresses immediate needs, advocacy and framing pursue longer-term structural change. Education fosters empowerment and civic participation, while innovation allows NGOs to act as laboratories for adaptive solutions. The analysis underscores the hybrid and often paradoxical nature of NGO practice: balancing delivery and transformation, legitimacy and risk, continuity and experimentation. By conceptualising processes as engines of change rather than isolated functions, this article deepens understanding of how non-profits achieve both tangible and systemic influence.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.