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Writing Result Measures and Program Evaluation . Kathy Keeley Northland Foundation Strengthening Communities April 14, 2011. Agenda. Welcome Review Technology Overview and Definitions Writing Result Measures and Examples Program Evaluation Definitions and Purpose Methods
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Writing Result Measures and Program Evaluation Kathy Keeley Northland Foundation Strengthening Communities April 14, 2011
Agenda • Welcome • Review Technology • Overview and Definitions • Writing Result Measures and Examples • Program Evaluation • Definitions and Purpose • Methods • Using with Results Methods • Webinar Feedback – Please complete SurveyMonkey form The Keeley Group
Technology • Mute & Unmute Phone *5 We ask that everyone leave their phone on mute until question and answer time to avoid outside noises. • Asking Questions Please use the chat to the right of your screen for any questions. We hope to have time to respond. • If Cut Off – what to do If you have technical difficulties we have loaded this PowerPoint on our website that you can follow along with. www.northlandfdn.org/Grants/NonprofitResources.shtml The Keeley Group
Writing Result Measures The Keeley Group
Results /Outcomes • Results are also called Outcomes. • Impact – Benefit to the client. • Beyond the numbers who attend your program or services. • Answers “what is different because of what you do?” NOT “what you do The Keeley Group
Not A Strategy Outcome is: • Healthy Babies • Youth Ready for College • Sense of connection to social issues in our community Strategy is: • Train mothers in illness prevention model • Educational Reform in High Schools • Rewrite all plays to focus on current social issues in the city The Keeley Group
Not Outputs • Not how many people served • What is the benefit to the client because they got help from your organization? The Keeley Group
Why Important? • Mission • Right programs and services • Demonstrate a return on investment • Consistent message for donors The Keeley Group
Definition of Result Measure • Outcome – Benefit from what you do • Indicator – Measure of your impact on the outcome • Target – Number you are trying to achieve Example Public Safety (Outcome) 50% (target)emergency calls will be responded to within 3 minutes (indicator) The Keeley Group
Steps to Create 1. Who is the customer? Decide who you intend to benefit from what you do? 2. How do they benefit? Identify exactly how you want them to benefit because of what you do--Outcomes. Examples: skills, behavior, knowledge, circumstances, attitudes, enjoyment…… 3. Select measurable indicators for each Outcome. Review for ability to communicate your story and ease of data collection 4. Decide 3-5 year targets for each indicator. The Keeley Group
Results Must • Communicate Story – Be compelling • Be affordable to measure • Have a baseline of data The Keeley Group
Examples Healthy Children 80% of children will be immunized before kindergarten. Employed Individuals with Living Wage 50% of program graduates will obtain a job that pays at least $12 an hour. Audience Participation 50% of audience will participate in audience talk back sessions. New Audience Development 25% of audiences will be composed of young professionals Eliminating Homelessness 50% of homeless individuals will obtain permanent housing Outcome Target Indicator The Keeley Group
Results - Outcomes • What to Measure • Feelings – not very effective • Learning - Increased knowledge • Increased skills – new skills to apply • Effectiveness – change in life circumstances The Keeley Group
Examples Improving Parenting Skills • 50% of families receiving case management achieve goals established in plan. Children Reading at/or above • 60% of children improve reading as measured by X The Keeley Group
Program Evaluation The Keeley Group
Program Evaluation • Making Decisions • Funding –Accountable, Cuts, New Funding • Improve Program • Respond customer satisfaction • Measure against Strategic Plan • Board and Management Dashboard The Keeley Group
Before • What do you want to know – really know? • Who is the audience? • What kinds of information is needed? • Strengths and Weaknesses • Outcomes vs. Outputs – what happened • Client experience – customer satisfaction • 4. How will you collect? • 5. Timeline • 6. What can you afford? The Keeley Group
Types of Evaluation • Goals – Client, Program, Funding • Surveys (follow-up) • Interviews • Documentation Review • Outcomes – what has been achieved • Survey • Database Records • Sample Interviews • Process – how program works • Focus Groups • Interviews The Keeley Group
Data Base Resources • http://www.communitytech.net/ • Vista Share http://www.vistashare.com/Corporate/Home/ • Sales Forces – www.saleforce.com • Filemaker Pro • Access • Excel Spreadsheet • Trade Association in Sector • http://www.socialsolutions.com/ The Keeley Group
Resources • Program Managers Guide • Methods Review • PowerPoint Slides • www.northlandfdn.org/Grants/NonprofitResources.shtml The Keeley Group
Wrap-up Please complete the SurveyMonkey webinar feedback form. You will be receiving an email shortly. • Feedback form link:www.surveymonkey.com/s/HB2788G The Keeley Group