The Argidius Foundation is a Swiss-based charitable foundation. We are part of Porticus, a global philanthropic organisation which coordinates the philanthropic endeavours of the Brenninkmeijer family business owners.
The world’s emerging economies do not generate enough formal jobs, leaving over a billion people in poverty. Too poor to be unemployed, those of working age typically engage in low-productivity survival livelihoods. For countries to transition from low income to middle income, and in order to genuinely tackle poverty, two of the critical pathways are to increase productivity and transition to waged jobs. Supporting SMEs and start-ups is a key response. Argidius aims to help build the quality and scale of the global SME Development through the three principle areas:
From 2013-2022, significant milestones have been reached in the SME Development space, for example:
For the period 2022-2024, Argidius are prioritising:
We partner with Enterprise Support Organizations that can help SMEs grow and generate employment, and we work jointly with other funders and with learning partners, to find out more about which kinds of support best help entrepreneurs scale their businesses and apply the findings globally.

Learning what works best in terms of impact, cost-effectiveness and sustainability is core to our strategy.
Three principle proxies of success are SME revenue growth, job creation and finance mobilised. Grantees are supported to invest in their monitoring evaluation and learning to drive improvement, and are required to collect these indicators annually for each SME they support for 4 years. This has generated a comparable dataset of over 15,000 enterprises.
Further quantitative data is collected on a project-specific basis, and external evaluations are conducted on the majority of major grants. These are published on the Learning page of the website.
Additionally shared learning initiatives are supported, such as the Global Accelerator Learning Initiative; the Innovation Growth Lab; the SGB Evidence Fund; and Small Firm Diaries. Findings are routinely published on the learning pages of the website.
Together this has enabled the identification of SME Development strategies and interventions that highly effective, and of others which make little to no meaningful difference. The combined evidence points firmly to five key characteristics that make all the difference. Acronymized as SCALE, these have been written up into a report and toolkit for funders, policymakers and practitioners to build program design, implementation and funding off of what has been proven to work.