by Nishant Kumar
Dec 31, 2025
6 min At MSC, we show how well-designed innovation labs enable institutions to test ideas safely, learn fast, and scale their impact. We bridge the agility of startups with public systems to drive lasting change.
“We want to work with startups, but I am terrified our systems will break, or someone will say we wasted public money.” This was the frank admission from a senior government official in a meeting. Such fear is not unfounded. Institutions carry reputations, rules, and people with careers tied to “doing things right.” Startups carry urgency, unproven ideas, and lack a safety net.
Yet, the world demands that institutions and startups come together if we want to solve problems at scale across areas, such as climate, inclusion, and health.
Through the years, many public and private institutions have attempted to bridge the gap between these two worlds. One of the more promising constructs is the innovation lab. A lab is a structured, institutionally anchored space where startups, policymakers, and teams can safely test, learn, and scale innovations without disrupting day-to-day operations. It helps institutions stay future-ready as it systematically phases out outdated processes and embeds new ones, which ensures they evolve continuously – as we have seen in cases like UIDAI (India), City Exchange Program under MoHUA (India), and the governments of Singapore and the UK. Strong models also come from Rwanda’s IremboGov, Colombia’s Public Innovation Team, and Portugal’s LabX—all of which demonstrate measurable impact in digitising services, improving policy design, and scaling public-sector innovation. But poorly designed or poorly run labs can easily become stalled projects—promising on paper yet irrelevant in practice.
This blog draws from MSC’s experience and conviction on how to improve labs. This belief is grounded in our work. MSC has built and run innovation labs inside ministries, state departments, regulators, and financial institutions, not as side projects but as embedded capability engines. :In the last 3 years alone, MSC has built
Below, we have documented what works, what often fails, how MSC builds labs that scale, and why institutions and funders must step up.
Lessons about innovation labs from the Global South
When we discuss innovation labs, we often cite examples, such as MindLab from Denmark or other Western countries. However, valuable lessons have emerged from the Global South, from Peru to Bangladesh, Chile to Botswana, where institutions must innovate as a necessity, and not as an experiment. Across these countries, governments, large private entities, and development agencies have quietly reinvented how they learn, adapt, and scale ideas. Some have succeeded in turning labs into institutional muscle—a repeatable capability to test, learn, measure, and channel innovation back into the institution’s growth cycle. Others have encountered challenges along the way, and their experiences offer equally valuable insights.
What worked are the labs that breathe with the institution
Innovation must move from one-off events to embedded, continuous cycles. As NITI Aayog’s 2023 paper notes, labs should help institutions turn innovation into a sustained habit—not isolated bursts of activity.
Labs that lost the rhythm and connection with institutions and users failed
How MSC’s labs work to bridge current gaps
At MSC, we believe innovation labs should be engines of capability. Here is how we build them, rooted in a customized institutional reality:
MSC labs are more than experiments, they are institutional engines of change designed to scale pilots to system-wide levels, iterate with feedback, align policies, and design for adoption.
Yet, even with the right design, innovation labs bring their own evolving challenges, especially in the public sector, which balance agility with accountability and experimentation with institutional rhythm.
The solution is to keep them dynamic, mandate-driven, and KPI-focused. At MSC, we view each lab as a living system that constantly adapts, learns, and aligns with institutional goals so that innovation remains both practical and lasting.
Why should institutions and funders consider labs?

Innovation labs are not luxury experiments. They are the scaffolding through which large institutions can learn to become adaptive. They can turn friction into rhythm and promote collaboration between institutions and startups.
Let us build these bridges together.
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