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Evidence-Based Philanthropy: A Guide for Effective Giving

Discover the essence of evidence-based philanthropy and how to maximize your impact through informed giving decisions. Caroline Fiennes, an expert in the field, shares insights on interventions, charities, and ways to give. Learn how to assess the quality of data, prioritize impact, and align funding strategies with real needs. Dive into the world of evidence-based philanthropy and make a difference with your donations.

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Evidence-Based Philanthropy: A Guide for Effective Giving

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  1. Evidence-Based Philanthropy: What would you do next? Caroline Fiennes www.giving-evidence.com caroline.fiennes@giving-evidence.com Twitter: @carolinefiennes

  2. Current and former clients ... and many anonymous donors

  3. Press Coverage

  4. Delivering chlorine to households • Cleaning the water source (e.g., the well) • Adding chlorine at the water source

  5. From J-PAL (www.povertyactionlab.org)

  6. Opportunity cost! From J-PAL (www.povertyactionlab.org)

  7. “The real purpose of the scientific method is to make sure nature hasn’t misled you into thinking you know something you actually don’t know.” - Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

  8. Interventions Charities i.e., organisations Ways of giving i.e., how to do philanthropy

  9. Interventions Charities i.e., organisations Ways of giving i.e., how to do philanthropy “The real purpose of the scientific method is to make sure nature hasn’t misled you into thinking you know something you actually don’t know.” Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance • “Two mantras: • If you want to have evidence-based policy, get some evidence, and • Whatever behaviour you want to encourage, make it easy.” • Richard Thaler, co-author, Nudge; President American Economic Association

  10. Interventions Charities i.e., organisations Ways of giving i.e., how to do philanthropy

  11. Outline evidence system

  12. 7% ! Source: Making an Impact: Impact Measurement Across Charities and Social Enterprises in the UK, NPC, October 2012

  13. PHF’s designation of quality of charities’ data in their reports to PHF In reports from charities, we found “some, though relatively few, instances of outcomes being reported with little or no evidence to back this up” Good OK Poor

  14. “When I first started in this, I kept talking about evaluation and he [senior person in the charity sector] said to me: ‘don’t worry about that. You can just make it up. Everybody else does. At the very least you should exaggerate a lot. You’ll have to, to get funded’” – operating organisation Source: www.giving-evidence.com/info-infrastructure

  15. Estimates of impact of a reading programme in India Source: IPA Source: Innovations for Poverty Action

  16. Research quality: Weak research allows for strong claims that programmes work

  17. It’s unreliable.

  18. It’s unreliable.It isn’t published.

  19. It’s unreliable.It isn’t published.You can’t find it.It’s unclear.It’s not comparable.It duplicates.

  20. Don’t PRODUCE research… but USE research

  21. a central tenet of good clinical research, much taught by Professor Sir Richard Peto FRS Ask an important question and answer it reliably

  22. Needs values and priorities of grantee organisation and intended beneficiaries Best available evidence about ‘what works’ Donors’ interests, values, passions and expertise How to fund: best available evidence about how to fund in those circumstances • External context: • Public priorities • Relevant activities of other donors and gov’t (where the gaps are) EBP

  23. Interventions • Get some evidence: preferably which isn’t crap • Make it easy: for people to find (indexing), read (paywalls), understand (academic-ese), pre-synthesized • Kill production of crap • Better evidence of what ‘beneficiaries’ want • Charities • i.e., organisations • Get some way of doing analysis of organisations, esp. multi-intervention orgs • Kill off the admin cost myth • Some TripAdvisor thing? • Get some data – e.g., on grant hit-rate, like Shell Fdn: this seems to be really hard • Do some case controls / expts of what makes successful grants Ways of giving i.e., how to do philanthropy

  24. Given all that, what would you do next? Caroline Fiennes Twitter: @carolinefiennes www.giving-evidence.com caroline.fiennes@giving-evidence.com

  25. Evidence-Based Philanthropy: What would you do next? Caroline Fiennes www.giving-evidence.com caroline.fiennes@giving-evidence.com Twitter: @carolinefiennes

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