Sector Driven Evaluation Strategy

The nonprofit sector needs an evaluation system that addresses questions that really matter. Fundamentally, the sector needs a system that makes it easier, more rewarding, and less stressful for nonprofits and their partners to do meaningful evaluation work.
While there is a lot of great evaluation work that takes place in the nonprofit sector in 91视频, the conversation has tended to focus on the how to and emphasized things like workshops and toolkits as a way to improve. While those are important approaches, we must also look at the question of why and return to the original reasons for and purposes of evaluation.
ONN Podcasts
Episode 1 (April 4, 2016)
Interviewee: Chanel Grenaway,
Music:
顿别蝉肠谤颈辫迟颈辞苍:听In our first evaluation podcast, Andrew and Ben sit down with Chanel Grenaway from the Canadian Women鈥檚 Foundation (CWF). Tune in to hear the story of how evaluation is making a difference for the CWF and their grantees.
Episode 2聽(January 31, 2017)
Interviewee: Marie Zimmerman,聽
惭耻蝉颈肠:听
顿别蝉肠谤颈辫迟颈辞苍:听In our second聽evaluation podcast, Andrew and Ben sit down with Marie Zimmerman聽from聽聽to聽chat evaluation聽and how it benefits the festival and its patrons.
Episode 3聽(May 25, 2017)
Interviewee: Jade Huguenin,
Music:
顿别蝉肠谤颈辫迟颈辞苍:听In our third evaluation podcast, Andrew and Ben chat with Jade Huguenin from the OFIFC about their work, the context of evaluation in indigenous communities, and the importance of a community driven approach.
The Propellus Podcast
– a podcast by Propellus, the Volunteer Centre of Calgary.
Andrew Taylor explains how to make evaluation more useful, including by working with funders and creating a culture of evaluation.
Webinars, Presentations
Webinars
- Rethinking Evaluation: Developing a Strategy for the Sector, By the Sector (2016.01.27)
In this webinar, we want to hear from you! We have a few ideas for how we can start to change the way evaluation in the nonprofit sector works and we want your feedback on what we might include in a strategy (e.g. a vision and set of principles for evaluation, a negotiation guide to use with funders and other stakeholders, ways we can promote an evaluation culture, and how we can use a network approach to better share and collaborate). More specifically, we want to know what you think needs to change at a systems level and how we can change it together.
2016.01.27 Rethinking Evaluation Webinar Slides - Evaluations that Work: What the Nonprofit Sector Can Learn from ONN and Vibrant Communities (2016.06.22)
Evaluations 鈥渨ork鈥 when they lead to insight and action. We all know that the process can be resource-intensive, so it is important for us to maximize the probability of getting it right! In this webinar, two leading learning institutes, the 91视频 Nonprofit Network (ONN) and Tamarack’s Vibrant Communities Canada, will unpack real-life stories from Cities Reducing Poverty members to identify cases where evaluation worked really well. Together we identify how they achieved exceptional success, and top takeaway points for the nonprofit sector. - Five Important Discussion Questions to Make Evaluation Useful (2016.12.07)
Efforts to build evaluation capacity in the nonprofit sector often begin with the assumption that the problem is lack of skill, resources, or interest by nonprofits. However, based on our research we think the problem may have more to do with the fact that the nonprofit evaluation 鈥渟ystem鈥 is not well designed- i.e. the ways evaluation is funded, rewarded, disseminated and used at a societal level. Join this interactive webinar to explore our brand new guide to help you get it right. We鈥檒l present some common evaluation scenarios and walk through how you can put this guide into action to get the most out of an evaluation. We鈥檒l push your critical thinking about the purposes that evaluation work is serving and the reasons why it sometimes fails to deliver on its promise.
2016.12.07 Five Important Discussion Questions Slides
Presentations
Adapted Ignite Presentation from AEA Conference (2016.10.28):
Blog Posts
- – published on AEA365.org (August 2017)
- – published on AEA365.org (December 2016)
- – published on AEA365.org (February 2016)





