CASE REFLECTION

WHERE FUNDING MET REALITY

  • The situation: A strong bid and significant funding existed, but there was no delivery structure on the ground.

  • What I did: Built a community-led vehicle, secured the market license, and reduced barriers to trading.

  • What changed: Markets strengthened and expanded; producers gained a practical route to customers.

  • What remained: The license stayed secure; capability and leadership continued after my departure.

The Market Place could have been the centre of local trade, but the licence was held by someone with no interest in developing it. I was told this was insurmountable. The licence was issued by the local landowner’s Estate Manager — commercially minded and not especially interested in community development.

Through relationships built carefully and respectfully, I secured a meeting with the Estate Manager. I proposed a revised licence arrangement: community-led management of the Market Place on all days except Saturday. It would avoid conflict with the existing holder and offer economic benefit to the estate’s wider interests.

I chose not to form a partnership of job titles drawn from existing organisations. That approach would likely have been slowed by history and local rivalries.

Instead, we built a small group of action-oriented individuals committed to delivery rather than position. That allowed pace and kept attention on the work.

WHERE FUNDING MET REALITY

MAKING CONNECTION PRACTICAL