At the World Sustainable Development Summit 2026, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham received the SGP Best Innovator Award under the Global Environment Facility Small Grants Programme.
The tide is low.
A group of women stand ankle-deep in brackish water, testing salinity levels with simple tools. A young researcher notes observations. A faculty mentor listens more than she speaks.
No lab coats. No keynote slides. Just community, curiosity, and co-creation.
This is not a pilot project parachuted into a village. It is a living laboratory.
At the World Sustainable Development Summit, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham was conferred the SGP Best Innovator Award under the Global Environment Facility Small Grants Programme.
The honour did not celebrate a single breakthrough device. It recognised a model. A philosophy. A system where women lead marine climate resilience from the ground up.
For CX and EX leaders facing siloed teams, AI gaps, and journey fragmentation, this story is more than climate news. It is a strategy case study in human-centred transformation.
Let’s unpack why.
Short answer: It embeds researchers in communities to co-design solutions, ensuring ownership, trust, and sustained outcomes.
At Amrita, sustainability is not studied from a distance. Through its Live-in-Labs programme, students and faculty live in villages for weeks. They observe. They ask. And, they co-create.
Dr Bhavani Rao R, Dean of the School of Social and Behavioural Sciences, describes it as research that listens before it speaks.
That single phrase carries strategic weight.
CX leaders often launch transformation programmes from headquarters. They design journeys in boardrooms. They deploy AI tools without frontline immersion.
Amrita reverses the flow. Insight precedes intervention.
Short answer: SGP Best Innovator Award validates a grassroots-first, women-led climate model that scales through ownership, not funding cycles.
The award was conferred under the GEF Small Grants Programme, a partner initiative involving the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, The Energy and Resources Institute, and United Nations Development Programme.
The event was attended by policymakers, including Ms Tanvi Garg, Joint Secretary and GEF Operational Focal Point.
Isabelle Tschan, Deputy Resident Representative of UNDP India, underscored a powerful principle: long-term change happens when communities lead decisions.
For CX teams, replace “communities” with “customers” or “employees.”
The lesson holds.
Short answer: It blends academic research, field execution, and iterative feedback into one integrated system.
Speakers described Amrita as part university, part implementing partner. It researches. It deploys. And, it refines.
This hybrid design eliminates a common failure point: fragmentation between insight and execution.
In enterprise CX, we often see:
Amrita compresses that loop.
| Layer | Traditional Model | Amrita Model | CX Equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Insight | Survey-driven | Immersive observation | Journey ethnography |
| Design | Expert-led | Co-created | Co-design workshops |
| Execution | External agency | Embedded teams | Cross-functional pods |
| Scale | Funding-based | Community ownership | Value-based adoption |
The shift is from intervention to inclusion.
Short answer: It demonstrates that empowerment accelerates resilience and continuity.
Amrita’s skilling model positions women at the frontline of marine ecosystem restoration and sustainable aquaculture. Women’s collectives lead initiatives. They sustain them.
Ownership drives continuity.
In CX terms:
When women lead coastal climate initiatives, projects survive beyond funding. When employees co-own CX programmes, initiatives survive beyond executive turnover.
Short answer: Immersion eliminates blind spots that dashboards cannot detect.
Dashboards show metrics. Immersion shows context.
Live-in-Labs reveals daily struggles. It uncovers invisible friction points. It captures emotional undercurrents.
CXQuest has long emphasised that journey fragmentation begins with distance from reality.
Consider this contrast:
Both matter. Only one builds empathy.
Amrita integrates data and lived experience. That is advanced maturity.
Let’s translate Amrita’s model into a practical CX transformation framework.
1. Immerse Before You Instrument
Spend time with customers or employees before deploying tools.
2. Co-Design, Don’t Prescribe
Invite frontline voices into solution design.
3. Pilot in Context, Not in Isolation
Test solutions where friction exists.
4. Measure Ownership, Not Just Output
Track adoption, advocacy, and continuity.
5. Institutionalise Feedback Loops
Refine models through real-world input.
This mirrors how Amrita tests marine restoration approaches, refines sustainable aquaculture practices, and adapts through community learning.
Short answer: Yes. Impact is now measured by sustained ownership, not numeric reach.
For decades, development measured beneficiaries reached. Today, it measures whether communities continue work independently.
In CX, vanity metrics still dominate:
But sustainable transformation asks:
Depth beats volume.
Drawing from both climate programmes and enterprise transformation:
1. Solutionism Without Listening
Deploying AI before mapping emotional journeys.
2. Siloed Execution
Separating insight from operations.
3. Funding-Dependent Impact
Relying on executive sponsorship without cultural embedding.
4. Short-Term KPIs
Optimising quarterly metrics over long-term trust.
Amrita’s recognition highlights continuity. That continuity stems from participation.
Short answer: By demonstrating experience, expertise, authority, and trustworthiness through field validation.
Amrita’s model integrates:
It bridges grassroots wisdom and policy discourse.
CX leaders can mirror this by:
Authority grows when insight meets evidence.
These insights apply whether restoring coral ecosystems or redesigning omnichannel journeys.
Embed rotating cross-functional teams into frontline environments quarterly. Institutionalise field immersion as leadership practice.
Yes. Use AI for pattern detection. Use immersion for meaning-making. Combine predictive analytics with contextual empathy.
Track behavioural indicators: repeat participation, peer advocacy, process adherence without reminders.
Higher adoption, reduced rework, stronger trust metrics, and longer solution lifecycle.
Diverse leadership strengthens decision quality and ensures continuity within community networks.
This structure mirrors how users search and how AI snippets surface content.
The SGP Best Innovator Award recognises more than a university.
It recognises a mindset.
In a world chasing automation, speed, and optimisation, the most powerful innovation may still be this:
Step outside the campus.
Step outside the dashboard.
Listen before you lead.
The post SGP Best Innovator Award: Amrita University’s Women-Led Marine Climate Model Wins Global Honour appeared first on CX Quest.


