“developing measurable outcomes” presenter – ed allen,ph.d

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“Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D.

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Page 1: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

“Developing Measurable Outcomes”

Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D.

Page 2: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

This Session’s OutcomesOutcomes Are The Heart

Terminology & Definitions & Characteristics

Examples and Resources

A Word About Benchmarking

Share Questions/Experiences

Page 3: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

OUTCOMES ARE THE HEARTThis is the heart of the funding proposal because it is where you indicate precisely what you intend to accomplish

through your project and what you will accept as proof of

your project’s impact.

Page 4: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

RFP FOR OVERALL FOCUS NEEDS ASSESSMENT FOR SPECIFIC FOCUS OUTCOMES FOR ADDRESSING NEEDS ACTIVITIES FOR ACHIEVING OUTCOMES EVALUATION FOR MEASURING OUTCOMES

OUTCOMES RELATE DIRECTLY TO ALL OTHER GRANT COMPONENTS

Page 5: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

TERMINOLOGY & DEFINITIONS& CHARACTERISTICS

GOAL

OUTCOME/OBJECTIVE

PERFORMANCE MEASURE/INDICATOR

Page 6: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

Defined: Broad statements of ultimate aims of the

project. Where you want to be when the project is

finished.

Page 7: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D
Page 8: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

OBJECTIVESDefined: Precise statements of what the project intends to accomplish and what will be accepted as proof of accomplishment. (may be called “outcomes”)• Specific & measurable (give numbers when possible)• Specified time frame• Specified target population• Tied directly to the NEEDS section• Aligned with BUDGET section• Aligned with EVALUATION section

Page 9: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

Two Types of ObjectivesProcess-Based: State the actions/programs

to be implemented (“to provide,” “to develop,” “to implement”)

Performance Based: State quantifiable results and program impact (“to increase,” “to decrease”)

Page 10: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D
Page 11: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

PERFORMANCE MEASURES/INDICATORS

DEFINED: Specific, measurable information collected to track accomplishment of the project’s outcomes.Where in the Proposal: Objectives, Evaluation, and/or Separate Section Altogether.QUALITATIVE (interview, observe, focus group)QUANTITATIVE (survey, testing, questionnaire)

Page 12: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

EXAMPLES OF OUTCOMES(See Handout)

Page 13: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

Strengthening Nonprofits: A Capacity Builder’s Resource Library. www.strengtheningnonprofits.org

Benchmarking for Nonprofits – How to Measure, Manage, and Improve Performance. By Jason Saul

Page 14: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

OUTCOMES ARE NOT JUST FOR GRANTS

Nonprofit performance is much broader than program results. Take the example of PipeVine, a nonprofit that handled online transaction processing for donations to charities. Its program (donation processing services) performed well. However, Pipevine’s deficient accounting and fiscal management put the organization and its customers at risk, ultimately forcing it to shut its doors. This led some observers to refer to PipeVine as the “Enron of nonprofits.” The bottom line: program performance does not tell the whole story of an organization.

Source: Benchmarking for Nonprofits. Jason Saul. P.5.

Page 15: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

BENCHMARKINGA SYSTEMATIC, CONTINUOUS PROCESS OF MEASURING AND COMPARING AN ORGANIZATION’S BUSINESS PROCESSES AGAINST LEADERS IN ANY INDUSTRY TO GAIN INSIGHTS THAT WILL HELP THE ORGANIZATION TAKE ACTION TO IMPROVE ITS PERFORMANCE.

-- Source: International Benchmarking Clearinghouse --

Page 16: “Developing Measurable Outcomes” Presenter – Ed Allen,Ph.D

YOUR QUESTIONS

YOUR EXPERIENCES