Digital Transformation Project Manager- Digital Fortification Quality Traceability (DFQT+) System Project Digital Transformation Project Manager – – SYS-1307 63 views0 applications


The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) is seeking a Digital Transformation Manager to provide functional, technical, and managerial leadership to the DFQT+ project. This role will balance business, technology, design, and market priorities and ensure delivery of project objectives with the allotted timeline and budget. Their work will aim to ensure increased adoption and demonstrate the financial commitment of key stakeholders to sustain operations of the DFQT+ system.

This role will be offered on a 15(month) fixed term contract, subject to availability of funding and will be based in either one of our offices in Kenya, Nigeria or Bangladesh.

Key Responsibilities include

  • Define project scope, activities and objectives in line with the GAIN business plans, programme frameworks, and organizational strategic priorities.
  • Update and expand upon existing Go to Market (GTM) strategy, including positioning, target segments, channels, launch planning, and growth priorities, and oversee its implementation.
  • Develop and execute sustainability plan for DFQT+, including identifying and testing value propositions for key stakeholders, testing their willingness to pay, and managing product costs consistent with projected government and private sector financial contributions.
  • Work closely with the Product Owner to ensure that stakeholder requirements are reflected in DFQT+ and that deployment is consistent with the GTM strategy and sustainability plan.
  • Coordinate across internal teams (product, communications, knowledge management, in-country teams) and the consortium to drive implementation.
  • Translate product readiness into launch plans and partner enablement activities.
  • Lead a high performing project team consisting of people across the organisation, bringing together the skills, experience and competencies required for successful project delivery.

About you

The ideal candidate should have extensive experience in digital transformation or digital development projects in low- and middle-income countries. Excellent project management capabilities, including managing digital development/Information and Communications Technologies for Development (ICT4D) activities is required. The position holder should have experience working in international development with multi-country support experience.

You should possess strong stakeholder engagement experience with ability to build consensus across audiences such as government, private sector and other partners.

About our Offer

The starting annual gross salary on offer for this role per location is as listed below.

Kenya: KES 4,808,508 -KES 5,497,476

Nigeria: NGN 17,200,128 – NGN 19,666,488

Bangladesh: BDT 2,467,308 – BDT 2,821,272

GAIN has a fair and competitive salary structure that allows for annual progression subject to good performance. In addition, GAIN offers a total of 37 days holiday per year (including annual leave, public holidays and additional office closure days), an attractive pension scheme and competitive insurance cover including health, travel and life assurance. We are committed to the health of our staff, especially in these challenging times, and have developed a programme of wellbeing that includes flexible and hybrid working, additional leave allowances, wellbeing days, mindfulness coaching and access to independent and confidential counselling.

GAIN also has a strong commitment to professional development. We will support you to grow in your career through both formal and informal training, and are committed to providing opportunities through internal recruitment, secondments, and promotion. All of this is delivered in a supportive and collaborative environment.

About GAIN

The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) is a Swiss-based foundation launched at the United Nations in 2002 to tackle the human suffering caused by malnutrition. Working with governments, businesses and civil society, we aim to transform food systems so that they deliver healthier diets for all people, especially the most vulnerable.

Headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, GAIN has offices in countries with high levels of malnutrition: Bangladesh, Benin, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria, Pakistan, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda. To support work in those countries, we have representative offices in the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

At GAIN, we believe that everyone in the world should have access to nutritious, safe, and affordable food. Today, one in three people – drawn from nearly every country on the planet – are unable to consume enough nutritious food. We work to develop and deliver solutions to this daily challenge.

GAIN in partnership with a consortium of eight organizations and together with local stakeholders, developed the Digital Fortification Quality Traceability (DFQT+) system, a cross-sector traceability that enables mills/refineries and authorities to generate, govern, share, and utilize safely accurate and traceable data on food fortification quality within factories and markets, including customs. The product was pilot tested in Bangladesh and Nigeria. The focus of the next phase of work will be on adoption in these two countries.

DFQT+ aims to revolutionize global food fortification by providing an adaptable traceability solution that empowers all stakeholders to ensure the delivery of more nutritious food to every consumer. The country-driven digital solution fosters real-time data sharing, transparency, trust, efficiency, and accountability across the entire food system value chain, enabling healthier populations. Consistent and actionable data on quality of fortified foods is critical to ensuring programmes can reach their potential public health impact. The DFQT+ system enables stakeholders to track micronutrient quality throughout the entire value chain, starting from the initial components and materials—such as premix and micronutrients—down to the final product, ensuring quality is maintained at every stage.

More Information

  • Job City Kenya, Nigeria
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The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) is an international organization driven by the vision of a world without malnutrition.

Around 3.5 billion people — half the people on the planet today — are malnourished. Each year, malnutrition kills 3.1 million children under the age of five and leaves 159 million stunted, trapping generations in lives of poverty and unfulfilled potential. The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) is focused on finding solutions to end malnutrition within our lifetimes.

OUR METHODOLOGY /

At GAIN, we believe that no one sector alone can solve the complex problem of malnutrition. We work closely with partners including governments, civil society, businesses, UN agencies, and academic institutions to develop programs that deliver large-scale and locally relevant solutions to malnutrition in more than 30 countries.

In recent years we have expanded our approach to reach those on the margins of society, who are often the most excluded, vulnerable and severely malnourished, such as the Dalit community in India who experience oppression because of their caste; adolescent girls; and families affected by emergencies.

ABOUT GAIN /

Each day, 795 million people — one in nine — go hungry. Close to 2 billion people survive on diets that lack the vital vitamins and nutrients needed to grow properly, live healthy lives, and raise a healthy family. About 1.4 billion people worldwide struggle with overweight and obesity. That’s more than the number of people who are hungry worldwide.

In total, around 3.5 billion people — half the people on the planet today — are malnourished.

The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) is an international organization that was launched at the UN in 2002 to tackle the human suffering caused by malnutrition.

GAIN is driven by the vision of a world without malnutrition. We act as a catalyst — building alliances between governments, business and civil society — to find and deliver solutions to the complex problem of malnutrition. Today we are on track to reach over a billion people with improved nutrition – a goal for 2015.

We focus our efforts on children, girls and women because we know that helping them have sustainable, nutritious diets is crucial to ending the cycle of malnutrition and poverty. By building alliances that deliver impact at scale, we believe that we can eliminate malnutrition within our lifetimes.

Data sources:

  • The Lancet’s series on maternal and child undernutrition
  • Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
  • World Health Organization (WHO)
  • UNICEF

OUR IMPACT /

GAIN has helped 892 million people to access affordable, nutritious food — about 350 million of whom are women and children. Our work to fortify staple foods and condiments with essential micronutrients reaches more than 30 countries worldwide. Our work includes helping to improve the quality of foods and diets and educating families of the benefits of breastfeeding and good nutrition. Worldwide, our projects are changing lives and contributing to reducing micronutrient deficiencies through large-scale food fortification. For example, we’ve increased the intake of vitamin A in Indonesia by fortifying edible oils and the intake of iron in China by fortifying soy sauce.

By 2017, we aim to increase the intake of essential micronutrients such as vitamins A, D, iron, folic acid and iodine for 1.3 billion people, including 400 million women and adolescent girls, and 200 million children under five.

In countries with the highest rates of malnutrition, multinutrient supplements or ‘home fortification’ help improve nutrition when mixed into food. In Bangladesh, we launched a new micronutrient powder program in collaboration with international development organization BRAC. Since launch, 80,000 community workers have been trained to promote home fortification, and five million sachets were sold in 2014. Monthly sales have more than tripled during the year and the overall market for micronutrient powders grew by 15 percent, with 45 million sachets produced in 2014 alone.

Data source

  • GAIN 2012–2013 Annual Report

OUR VISION /

GAIN is driven by the vision of a world without malnutrition. We believe that everyone in the world should have access to an affordable, healthy and nutritious diet. We focus on children, girls and women to break the cycle of malnutrition and poverty.

By building alliances that deliver impact at scale, we believe that we can end malnutrition within our lifetimes.

OUR APPROACH /

We believe that everyone in the world should have access to an affordable, healthy and nutritious diet.

A tailored approach to innovation. We work to understand and deliver specific solutions to the daily challenge of food insecurity faced by poor people. By understanding that there is no ‘one-size-fits-all’ model, we develop alliances and build tailored programs, using a variety of flexible models and approaches.

Scale and ambition. We aim to reach 1 billion people with affordable, nutritious foods by 2015.  We build alliances between governments, local and global businesses, and civil society to deliver sustainable improvements at scale. We are part of a global network of partners working together to create sustainable solutions to malnutrition.

What matters most is impact. We focus on early life stages and maternal health when good nutrition has the most impact. We focus our efforts on children, girls and women because we know that providing access to affordable, sustainable, nutritious diets is crucial to ending the cycle of malnutrition and poverty.

OUR VALUES /

Team work

GAIN draws on the different skills of employees to create cohesive teams to deliver our programs in more than 30 countries. We also work closely with public and private partners.

Innovation

Our staff are creative thinkers who develop and test innovative business models to make markets work in a sustainable way for vunerable groups.

Passion

GAIN is made up of dedicated, enthusiastic professionals committed to our mission of making a difference on a large scale.

Professionalism

GAIN ensures professional and scientific rigor, commitment and leadership in our relations with the people and organizations we work with.

At GAIN, we believe that no one sector alone can solve the complex problem of malnutrition. We work closely with partners including governments, civil society, businesses, UN agencies, and academic institutions to develop programs that deliver large-scale and locally relevant solutions to malnutrition in more than 30 countries.

In recent years we have expanded our approach to reach those on the margins of society, who are often the most excluded, vulnerable and severely malnourished, such as the Dalit community in India who experience oppression because of their caste; adolescent girls; and families affected by emergencies.

ABOUT GAIN /

Each day, 795 million people — one in nine — go hungry. Close to 2 billion people survive on diets that lack the vital vitamins and nutrients needed to grow properly, live healthy lives, and raise a healthy family. About 1.4 billion people worldwide struggle with overweight and obesity. That’s more than the number of people who are hungry worldwide.

In total, around 3.5 billion people — half the people on the planet today — are malnourished.

The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) is an international organization that was launched at the UN in 2002 to tackle the human suffering caused by malnutrition.

GAIN is driven by the vision of a world without malnutrition. We act as a catalyst — building alliances between governments, business and civil society — to find and deliver solutions to the complex problem of malnutrition. Today we are on track to reach over a billion people with improved nutrition – a goal for 2015.

We focus our efforts on children, girls and women because we know that helping them have sustainable, nutritious diets is crucial to ending the cycle of malnutrition and poverty. By building alliances that deliver impact at scale, we believe that we can eliminate malnutrition within our lifetimes.

Data sources:

  • The Lancet’s series on maternal and child undernutrition
  • Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
  • World Health Organization (WHO)
  • UNICEF
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More jobs from Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN)
0 USD Kenya, Nigeria CF 3201 Abc road Consultancy , 40 hours per week Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN)

The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) is seeking a Digital Transformation Manager to provide functional, technical, and managerial leadership to the DFQT+ project. This role will balance business, technology, design, and market priorities and ensure delivery of project objectives with the allotted timeline and budget. Their work will aim to ensure increased adoption and demonstrate the financial commitment of key stakeholders to sustain operations of the DFQT+ system.

This role will be offered on a 15(month) fixed term contract, subject to availability of funding and will be based in either one of our offices in Kenya, Nigeria or Bangladesh.

Key Responsibilities include

  • Define project scope, activities and objectives in line with the GAIN business plans, programme frameworks, and organizational strategic priorities.
  • Update and expand upon existing Go to Market (GTM) strategy, including positioning, target segments, channels, launch planning, and growth priorities, and oversee its implementation.
  • Develop and execute sustainability plan for DFQT+, including identifying and testing value propositions for key stakeholders, testing their willingness to pay, and managing product costs consistent with projected government and private sector financial contributions.
  • Work closely with the Product Owner to ensure that stakeholder requirements are reflected in DFQT+ and that deployment is consistent with the GTM strategy and sustainability plan.
  • Coordinate across internal teams (product, communications, knowledge management, in-country teams) and the consortium to drive implementation.
  • Translate product readiness into launch plans and partner enablement activities.
  • Lead a high performing project team consisting of people across the organisation, bringing together the skills, experience and competencies required for successful project delivery.

About you

The ideal candidate should have extensive experience in digital transformation or digital development projects in low- and middle-income countries. Excellent project management capabilities, including managing digital development/Information and Communications Technologies for Development (ICT4D) activities is required. The position holder should have experience working in international development with multi-country support experience.

You should possess strong stakeholder engagement experience with ability to build consensus across audiences such as government, private sector and other partners.

About our Offer

The starting annual gross salary on offer for this role per location is as listed below.Kenya: KES 4,808,508 -KES 5,497,476Nigeria: NGN 17,200,128 - NGN 19,666,488Bangladesh: BDT 2,467,308 - BDT 2,821,272GAIN has a fair and competitive salary structure that allows for annual progression subject to good performance. In addition, GAIN offers a total of 37 days holiday per year (including annual leave, public holidays and additional office closure days), an attractive pension scheme and competitive insurance cover including health, travel and life assurance. We are committed to the health of our staff, especially in these challenging times, and have developed a programme of wellbeing that includes flexible and hybrid working, additional leave allowances, wellbeing days, mindfulness coaching and access to independent and confidential counselling.GAIN also has a strong commitment to professional development. We will support you to grow in your career through both formal and informal training, and are committed to providing opportunities through internal recruitment, secondments, and promotion. All of this is delivered in a supportive and collaborative environment.

About GAIN

The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) is a Swiss-based foundation launched at the United Nations in 2002 to tackle the human suffering caused by malnutrition. Working with governments, businesses and civil society, we aim to transform food systems so that they deliver healthier diets for all people, especially the most vulnerable.

Headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, GAIN has offices in countries with high levels of malnutrition: Bangladesh, Benin, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria, Pakistan, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda. To support work in those countries, we have representative offices in the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

At GAIN, we believe that everyone in the world should have access to nutritious, safe, and affordable food. Today, one in three people - drawn from nearly every country on the planet - are unable to consume enough nutritious food. We work to develop and deliver solutions to this daily challenge.

GAIN in partnership with a consortium of eight organizations and together with local stakeholders, developed the Digital Fortification Quality Traceability (DFQT+) system, a cross-sector traceability that enables mills/refineries and authorities to generate, govern, share, and utilize safely accurate and traceable data on food fortification quality within factories and markets, including customs. The product was pilot tested in Bangladesh and Nigeria. The focus of the next phase of work will be on adoption in these two countries.

DFQT+ aims to revolutionize global food fortification by providing an adaptable traceability solution that empowers all stakeholders to ensure the delivery of more nutritious food to every consumer. The country-driven digital solution fosters real-time data sharing, transparency, trust, efficiency, and accountability across the entire food system value chain, enabling healthier populations. Consistent and actionable data on quality of fortified foods is critical to ensuring programmes can reach their potential public health impact. The DFQT+ system enables stakeholders to track micronutrient quality throughout the entire value chain, starting from the initial components and materials—such as premix and micronutrients—down to the final product, ensuring quality is maintained at every stage.

2026-02-01

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