How Bangladesh is using empathy to foster innovation
By promoting empathy, civil servants are encouraged to engage with practical problems and are empowered to look for solutions.

Innovation in public service delivery is not rocket science, but it requires understanding citizens’ struggles. By promoting empathy, civil servants are encouraged to engage with the practical problems and empowered to look for solutions. With encouragement from top bureaucrats, over 600 such pilots are now running across healthcare and education, crops and fisheries, land and human rights.
From the Prime Minister’s Office, a2i works with all ministries, districts and local government institutions in not only triggering and nurturing vital innovations, but also facilitating their scale-up throughout the country through the Service Innovation Fund.
Both the Digital Centres and the Teachers’ Portal are examples of successful local level innovations which have been rolled out on a national level. Successful pilots are celebrated at Innovation Summits to recognise success and award innovators to motivate others to join in.
Though developing or using empathy is widely recognised to be good practice for civil service reform internationally (UK’s Nesta and Behavioral Insights Team were notably among the earliest and strongest proponents), this unique methodology has been developed by a2i from nearly a decade of trial-and-error and learning in Bangladesh.
a2i has now started championing South-South cooperation, sharing its learning, models and methodologies with other developing countries in the region. a2i Maldives was launched in September 2015, and Bhutan signed an MoU with a2i in July 2016.
To borrow from the famous African proverb, “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” Given the scale and urgent nature of public service challenges globally, we have to find a way to go far and fast, together.
Anir Chowdhury is the Prime Minister’s advisor on innovation. He will be speaking at Innovation Labs World on 26 September in Singapore as part of an interactive panel session titled 'The New Global Innovators'. Register today to learn about government innovation all over the world.
This article was reproduced with permission. It was originally published here.