Benjamin Kumpf | IE School of Global and Public Affairs

Benjamin Kumpf

About me

My name is Benjamin Kumpf. I’m from Germany and I strive to be a changemaker and a driver of meaningful innovation wherever I live and work. I currently serve as head of the OECD Innovation for Development Facility, where I work with a dedicated team to improve policies and ultimately lives and systems around the globe. I’m a longtime social activist and I’ve been working with international organizations like UNDP and German and British development cooperation; aiding agricultural and innovation research in India, Jordan, Nepal and Rwanda; supporting social justice movement groups in my local community—and making time for my hobbies, especially my most recent one: surfing.

shapeBenjamin Kumpf

“A big part of innovation is learning. If you don’t understand something, find a way to work it out using the resources you have around you.”

Benjamin Kumpf

From the field to the classroom: innovation for positive social change

His commitment to others and to communities around the world makes Professor Benjamin Kumpf an innovator and a thinker from whom any student would be lucky to learn. “I see it as contributing to meaningful social change processes,” Benjamin says when asked about what drives him to work in this field.“I find it inspiring to be a small part in advancing meaningful social change throughout the world—including in my community back in Germany.”

With a background in grassroots level work in his home country, he has dedicated his career to improving the world with he strives to contribute to positive changes in. For over a decade, Benjamin has been specializing in innovation for development. It all began with innovation projects in support of small-scale farmers in Southern India, promoting new agricultural practices upstream and downstream.

The projects that Benjamin develops in his area give him the opportunity to ask critical questions about conventional wisdom and, in doing so, uncover how to advance work that is politically informed and systemic. Operating in an environment that uses emerging technologies and cutting-edge practices to improve development and social processes is a source of great inspiration and daily motivation for him.

Benjamin’s connections to the innovation community are vast. Over the years, he has leveraged his experience and passion for innovation management, organizational culture change and decision-making power to write and publish with organizations such as the UNDP, UNICEF, UNHCR, OECD, Devex, Thomson Reuters and, most recently, the Harvard Business Review.

Benjamin Kumpf | IE School of Global and Public Affairs
Benjamin Kumpf | IE School of Global and Public Affairs
Benjamin Kumpf | IE School of Global and Public Affairs

A lifelong learner, Benjamin has always prioritized education and continuous learning, driven by the belief that innovation will always require new ideas and approaches—particularly from people who are directly affected by development challenges. Holding master’s degrees in political science and in psychology from Heidelberg University and a post-graduate certification from NYU, Benjamin currently serves as Head of Innovation for Development at the OECD Development Co-operation Directorate and works as an educator at Columbia University, in New York, and at IE University, in Madrid.

At IE School of Global and Public Affairs, Benjamin teaches the Innovation for Development Workshop, a course that provides an overview of the vast innovation landscape in international development cooperation and presents practical approaches and tips on using innovation as a foundation to create better outcomes. The program is designed to answer the tough questions in the macro, meso and micro levels of international development: How can we strengthen innovation ecosystems and their different components? What inclusive growth strategies for industrial innovation policies will help the world develop quicker? How can we support innovators and entrepreneurs on the grassroots level to address challenges that affect them and their communities?

Benjamin is an educator who truly believes in the value and importance of what he teaches. As he works with inquisitive and creative students from around the world, he reminds them “to question authority and to question conventional wisdom, starting with your own.” It’s the best way to start finding new solutions for the problems we face in our businesses, our communities and our world.

“A big part of innovation is learning. If you don’t understand something, find a way to work it out using the resources you have around you.”