top of page
Search

What Integration Actually Looks Like

  • Writer: Wendy Bomett
    Wendy Bomett
  • Mar 2
  • 1 min read

At SEI, cross-sectoral thinking is not a slogan. It is the practical lens through which we design every engagement. When we support a health supply chain project, we ask from the outset what digital infrastructure exists to support it, whether the facilities have reliable power, and whether the local teams managing the system have the organizational capacity to sustain it.


If we work on agricultural resilience, we consider the education and digital literacy of the farmers we are working with, and whether the information systems we introduce are genuinely accessible to them.


This does not mean SEI tries to do everything at once. It means we design with the full picture in mind, we identify where the critical interdependencies lie, and we structure our work accordingly. Sometimes that means bringing in the right partners for dimensions outside our direct remit.


Always, it means ensuring that what we build is not undermined by something we chose not to see.

 
 
 

Recent Posts

See All
The Hidden Cost of Siloed Thinking

Consider a scenario that is far more common than it should be. A digital health platform is procured and deployed at a rural health facility. The system is well designed, the training is thorough, and

 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page