
In a global aid sector often defined by sprawling operations and bloated overhead, Raj Kumar spotlights a radical outlier: the Novo Nordisk Foundation. With just 25 employees managing $1.3 billion in annual giving, this Danish powerhouse is redefining what effective philanthropy looks like. Powered by profits from the blockbuster drug Ozempic, the foundation is quietly transforming global health and development—not by doing more, but by doing less. In this compelling piece, Kumar explores the elegant efficiency of a model built on trust, partnerships, and long-term systems change:
“One of the world’s most efficient foundations gives away $1.3 billion with just 25 employees. That’s $52 million per employee.
Behind this Danish foundation’s rapid rise is Ozempic – the blockbuster diabetes and weight-loss drug that’s generated unprecedented profits for Novo Nordisk. The Novo Nordisk Foundation, which owns about a quarter of the pharmaceutical giant, has become one of the world’s wealthiest charitable foundations with assets around $167 billion. Yet rather than hiring armies of staff like other major philanthropies, they’ve gone the opposite direction.
In a recent interview, their Chief Scientific Officer for Health Flemming Konradsen revealed their secret to me: They implement nothing.
Zero programs. Zero field offices. Zero direct service delivery.
The model:
➡️ Find what already works
➡️ Partner with governments who own the strategy
➡️ Create sustainable markets, not dependency
➡️ Stay for 15+ years, not 3-year cycles
Example: Their school feeding programs create permanent markets for local farmers while training health workers and scaling AI solutions across continents.
The hard part? Saying no to putting your name on things. Letting partners get the credit. Trusting that influence matters more than control.
For development professionals: This approach creates new opportunities. These ultra-efficient funders skip the usual suspects and source partners who can be trusted with strategy, not just execution. They’re looking for implementers who think like owners.
If you can demonstrate government relationships, long-term thinking, and the ability to build sustainable systems (not just deliver projects), you become invaluable to this new breed of funders.
What could your organization accomplish if it stopped trying to do everything itself?

©Raj Kumar
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