Fixing the foundations

A communities strategy for Britain

Community-led High Street Innovators

Testing solutions for community-led high street renewal

North East Flexible Social Finance fund

Providing community businesses in the North East flexible and tailored finance

Getting it right

Introducing and implementing a Community Right to Buy

We are the think-do tank that backs community business from the ground up.

We do this through:

Building
community power

Financing the
future economy

Taking back the
high street

We turn bold ideas into action so communities have the power to change what matters to them. 

We know community business works to build stronger communities and better places to live. We’ve seen people create resilient and prosperous local economies when power is in community hands. We also know the barriers that stand in the way of their success. 

We’re using our experience to bring partners together to do, test and learn what works. We’re shaping the conditions for community business to thrive. 

Discover our approach.

Our thinking

News and events

£2.5bn of levelling up funding stuck in limbo, public demand significant change in approach

£2.5bn of levelling up funding stuck in limbo, public demand significant change in approach

New analysis from think-do tank Power to Change identifies 20% of total levelling up funding that is stuck in limbo. This comes alongside fresh polling by More in Common showing public appetite for significant changes in how regeneration funding is delivered in the short and long term.
Power to Change appoints three new Trustees

Power to Change appoints three new Trustees

New appointments bring experience community engagement, growing regional social economies, the public sector, and inclusive regeneration policy.
Power to Change welcomes new Deputy CEO

Power to Change welcomes new Deputy CEO

Nicola Steuer joins think-do tank Power to Change as Deputy CEO.

community businesses in England, with a total income of just under £1bn

per cent of community businesses operate in the 30% most deprived areas

pence of every £1 spent in a local community business stays in the local community