Leap of Reason
Leap of Reason
Leap of Reason
LEAP OF REASON
MANAGING TO OUTCOMES
I N A N E R A O F S CA R C I T Y
Mario Morino
A V E N T U R E P H I L A N T H R O P Y PA R T N E R S P U B L I C AT I O N
Passionate and provocative, this work should prove deeply relevant for
any leadergovernment, business, or nonprotwhose organization provides service to others. Marios central ideathat nonprots can vastly improve their impact by more rigorously identifying and then measuring the outcomes they seekputs him at the head of a wave of thinking that is beginning to transform the social sector.
delivers an emphatic message in this valuable monograph: A highly disciplined managerial approach is absolutely essential if nonprots are to produce the demonstrable and sustainable impact that all desire.
Leap of Reason is an important guide for the social sector. Its a quick read,
Jane Wales, Founding President, Global Philanthropy Forum;
Vice President, The Aspen Institute
but it gets us thinking in profound ways about how to collect and use information to gain the results we seek.
This monograph is a must-read for nonprot leaders. It will help you stay
Geoffrey Canada, Founder, President and CEO, Harlem Childrens Zone
singularly focused on your core mission and help you be effective at making a difference in peoples lives.
leapofreason.org
This volumethe product of decades of hard-won insights from philanthropist Mario Morino and more than a dozen social-sector experts and practitionersoffers practical advice for all social-sector executives and board members who are hungry to achieve more for those they serve. If youre a leader in search of reliable information to help you make tough decisions . . . if you care deeply about how e ective your organization is in achieving its mission . . . if you are ready for a leap of reason that will allow your organization to become even better at doing what it does . . . then this monograph will get your organization started on the path of greater rigor and impact. The need for the successful management approaches highlighted in this volume will only increase in the decade ahead. As growing federal and state budget pressures force impossibleeven Solomonicchoices, nonprots will increasingly have to show results. Public and private funders will migrate away from organizations with stirring stories alone, toward well-managed organizations that can demonstrate meaningful, lasting impact. This approachable volume will help spark reection within your organization about how best to turn your collective passion into even more change in the lives of those who rely on you.
Mario Morino
With essays by Carol Thompson Cole; Lynn Taliento, Jonathan Law, and Laura Callanan; Isaac Castillo; David E. K. Hunter; Tynesia Boyea Robinson; Kristin Anderson Moore, Karen Walker, and David Murphey; Patricia Brantley; and Ethan D. Schafer
V e n t u r e I n
P h i l a n t h r o p y w i t h M
c
P a r t n e r s & C o mp a n y
P a r t n e r s h ip
K i n s e y
2011 by Venture Philanthropy Partners The publisher encourages and grants permission for the distribution and reproduction of copies of this work for non-commercial purposes. Such copies, in whatever form, must be unmodified, in their entirety, including copyright notice and full attribution. Any adaptation, derivative work, or any other modification requires prior written approval by the publisher. ISBN: 978-0-9834920-0-9 Library of Congress number: 2011926055 For additional copies of this book, please visit leapofreason.org Venture Philanthropy Partners 1201 15th Street, NW, Suite 420 Washington, DC 20005 vppartners.org
Dedication To those leaders who made Venture Philanthropy Partners first decade a broadly shared success: our generous investor families and institutions; our exemplary nonprofit partners; our wise board and advisors; our devoted team; and the many friends who provided invaluable insights along the way. Your leaps of faith and reason have enabled disciplined investments in remarkable nonprofit leaders and have created outsize impact on the lives of children and families.
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Contents
ix xiii xvii
Introduction
1 Were Lost But Making Good Time 2 Innovation From the Periphery 3 Culture Is the Key 4 Incremental Change Is Not Enough 5 A Quantum Leap of Reason
1 13 23 37 47 63 77
Ideas Into Action: A Framework to Get You Started Compendium of Top Readings for Mission Effectiveness Essays by Experts and Practitioners Who Are Walking the Talk
First, Do No Harm ... Then Do More Good
by Isaac Castillo
95 99 105 111
Managing to Outcomes: Mission Possible Performance Management The Neglected Step in Becoming an Evidence-Based Program
by Kristin Anderson Moore, Ph.D., Karen Walker, Ph.D., and David Murphey, Ph.D.
117
127 135
Contributors
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Authors Note
Extremely wise mentors, advisors, and friends, as well as a serendipitous stream of remarkable learning opportunities spanning more than five decades, built the foundation for this monograph and the message it seeks to convey. I began my career in technology doing grunt work for a great General Motors team that computerized inventory control and manufacturing-cost accounting. Stints at Eaton Manufacturing, the U.S. Navy, and U.S. Time Sharing followed, providing me with rich learning opportunities and great teachers. The practical wisdom and experience I gained served as vital building blocks for the foundational knowledge I have been so fortunate to aggregate. My deepest thanks to the many colleagues and friends of this era who helped shape my early years in the field. A fortuitous meeting with William L. Witzel in 1972 was a seminal moment that led to many positive developments in my life, including this monographs publication almost four decades later. Bill Witzelaffectionately known as Uncle Billand I cofounded Morino Associates, Inc., in 1973. The firms success was based on a performance-management system that enabled Global 500 enterprises to manage and deploy their information technology resourcesvast complexes of hardware, software, telecom, systems, and human capital. While our competitors focused on the technical intricacies of measurement, we, in large part thanks to Bill, focused
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Authors Note
on how executives could use this information to manage and to be more effective. I like to think we provided the context, judgment, and systems to translate these highly technical metrics into usable information. Uncle Bill, an unparalleled master in information and management discipline, is also responsible for my ingrained habit of asking why? before diving into the details of what or how. The tried-and-true principles he modeled in word and deed were invaluable during my corporate days. They have also provided a priceless context for my work in learning how nonprofits can use outcomes, metrics, and information to be better at what they do. Steve Denning and his team at General Atlantic, LLC, took a big leap of faith (with the benefit of hindsight, I suppose it could be called a leap of reason) in 1983 when they invested in Morino Associates. In the years that followed, they forever changed my definitions of strategic and discerning. General Atlantics approach of providing growth capital and strategic assistance in a culture of excellence to leaders and their organizations distinguishes them among venture capital and private equity firms. Their example profoundly shaped almost every aspect of my work and is at the very core of the Venture Philanthropy Partners (VPP) investment model. I am blessed that Steve remains an invaluable advisor and friend. My transition from private- to social-sector thinking was influenced by so many wonderful minds that naming them individually would require hundreds of pages. But six people I am proud to call friends had the biggest influence on my thinking about outcomes, as well as the danger of unintended outcomes, in the social sector: Michael Bailin, Charito Kruvant, Gary Mulhair, Billy Shore, Ed Skloot, and Bob Templin. They shared their in-depth knowledge and keen insights to help me learn, course-correct when I strayed, and push my thinking. Im equally indebted to every stakeholder, past and present, at VPP. Carol Thompson Cole (VPPs exemplary leader), Steve Seleznow, and Les Silverman deserve special credit for their unwavering commitment to clarity of purpose and making a meaningful,
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measurable difference in peoples lives. VPP has been on a learning journey through its investments in highly promising nonprofits that improve the lives of children and youth from low-income families. With each passing year, the organization has developed a clearer understanding of the importance of focusing on outcomes for greater impact and the challenges of establishing performance-management systems that work. All of us at VPP, especially me, have benefited in myriad ways from our longstanding strategic partnership with McKinsey & Company. Their support of this monograph is simply the latest example. Lynn Taliento in particular has been a stalwart advisor who is never afraid to ask hard questions or provide unvarnished views. Every leader needs someone like her. Along with Carol and Lynn, Jonathan Law, Laura Callanan, Isaac Castillo, David Hunter, Tynesia Boyea Robinson, Kristin Moore, Karen Walker, David Murphey, Patricia Brantley, and Ethan Schafer greatly enriched this monograph with their evidencebased insights and pragmatic examples, which give life to complex, challenging concepts. David Hunter and Kristin Moore deserve special recognition. No conversations about social outcomes, performance-management systems, theories of change, or logic models are complete for me until David and Kris weigh in. In Davids case, I am particularly grateful for the candid feedback and suggestions he so thoughtfully, and sometimes provocatively, provided since the outset of the monographs development. I am grateful to a diverse and talented group of individuals who graciously made time in their incredibly busy schedules to help us sharpen and improve the content of this monograph, including Bob Boisture, Elizabeth Boris, Peter Goldberg, Harry Hatry, Darin McKeever, Fred Miller, Matt Miller, Amy Main Morgenstern, Nancy Osgood, Denielle Sachs, Lou Salza, Gene Steuerle, Nan Stone, Tom Tierney, and Mary Winkler. Lowell Weiss, Cheryl Collins, and Victoria Vrana played invaluable roles in shaping the monographs content and form.
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Lowells abundant editorial talents, critical-thinking skills, and sharp insights, bolstered by his constant encouragement and wonderful sensitivity, made this monograph a reality. His commitment to purpose and quality raised the bar for all of us. Cheryl, my support anchor for almost two decades, is my source of institutional knowledge, serves as my noodge and conscience at Morino Ventures, and brings excellent writing, editing, and research skills to any project. Victoria played an invaluable role as reviewer, strategist, and coordinator. They are consummate professionals, highly respected colleagues, and even more important, close friends. My thanks to Chris Wright, who produced this monographs clean, professional look and feel, and Katya Rice, our copyeditor. The Morino Ventures team provides the platform for our philanthropic work and behind-the-scenes support that is vital and unheralded. Dana, my life partner and spouse, and our three childrenMatthew, Rachele, and Nicolebring great happiness and purpose to my life, and their encouragement and love are cornerstones for anything I am able to achieve. Though my name is on the cover, I am keenly aware that this volume would not have been possible without the work of so many individuals who have stayed the course with me over the years. I am incredibly grateful and privileged to have you in my life.
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Foreword
by Carol Thompson Cole
Mario Morino, co-founder of Venture Philanthropy Partners, is many things to many people. Visionary entrepreneur. All-hours emailer. Demanding manager. Passionate advocate. Caring friend. I see him, first and foremost, as a voracious learner. Heres a classic example: When Mario retired from the software industry in 1992, he embarked on an eighteen-month listening and learning journey. He crisscrossed the country to visit with nearly seven hundred people in all walks of lifefrom nuns and schoolteachers to CEOs and senators. He had no set agenda for these meetings. His only goal was to glean insights on how he could most usefully and effectively apply his resources to helping children and families living in low-income communities like the one in southeast Cleveland where he grew up. We at Venture Philanthropy Partners (VPP) are proud to publish this monograph with our longstanding strategic partner McKinsey & Company because it represents not only the learning Mario has done since that journey but also a host of highly relevant insights from his decades of work helping Global 500 companies manage their information technology resources for improved outcomes. I encouraged Mario to write this monograph when I saw what a chord he struck in a series of four columns he wrote last year for VPPNews on the somewhat dry topic of assessment of social outcomes. I knew that his perspectives would have value for our
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Foreword
investors and the nonprofit leaders we are privileged to support. But I had no idea that Marios blunt, unminced words would tap into a deep well of frustration throughout the nonprofit sector with just about every aspect of the dialogue on social outcomes. His clarion call resonated with nonprofit leaders who havent been able to find a shred of support from funders for collecting and using information to manage to outcomes. It resonated equally with funders who have had it with nonprofits that have no means whatsoever for determining whether theyre doing what they say they do. It should come as no surprise that VPPs investment partnerships and expertise in this field have provided a rich vein of insights for this monograph. It should also come as no surprise that we invited leaders directly and indirectly connected to VPPIsaac Castillo from the Latin American Youth Center, Tynesia Boyea Robinson from Year Up, Pat Brantley from Friendship Public Charter School, Kris Moore and colleagues from Child Trends, David Hunter from Hunter Consulting, and Ethan Schafer from the Lawrence Schoolto enrich this monograph with lessons they learned on the front lines. VPP has always made it a point to support those leaders who are both brave, committed visionaries and also introspective learners. Over time, through missteps and victories (big and small in both cases), we at VPP have gotten better at understanding how we can do more to help these leaders make the difficult cultural transition from simply having a genuine interest in improvement to truly infusing outcomes thinking into the way they manage their organizations. Because if weve learned anything, its that it does take more to support this difficult change. In our first portfolio of investments (2001 to 2009), we devoted a full 10 percent of our direct investments and countless hours of our senior leaderships time to helping our investment partners alter their culture and develop the human and IT systems necessary for managing to outcomes. And yet that big commitment was neither big enough nor early enough in our relationships.
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Foreword
With the help of a comprehensive outside analysis of our firstportfolio investments, we saw that five out of our twelve investment partners achieved the kind of transformative, systemic culture change we were hoping to spark. In our current fund, we aspire to produce an even higher ratio. Were putting increasing emphasis on investing in leaders who already embrace the value of great information, even if they havent yet had the external support to build systems for collecting and using information. In fact, in our new youthCONNECT initiative, weve asked all applicants to demonstrate a predisposition for using information to guide their operations. Were also providing longerterm funding, with a clear expectation that it will take at least two to three years of intensive work to create a true outcomes-focused culture. And were learning to be more flexible in how we support this work. Weve learned that we cannot impose our support for this type of change process, that we have to give our partners the time and space to do it their way, not our way. Its not going to stick if they dont own the process and the resulting systems. And when it does stickas it has for investment partners like the See Forever Foundation, Latin American Youth Center, Friendship Public Charter School, College Summit, Year Up, KIPP DC, and othersit truly helps nonprofits do a better job of meeting their missions. We consistently hear how much our investment partners value the strategic assistance we provide to help them become more focused and disciplined in managing their organizations, in a way that enables them to get started on the path toward managing to outcomes. In fact, the investment partners who experienced systemic culture change perceived that this support was one of the biggest external drivers of their results. We have far better infrastructure [now], one anonymous investment partner told our external reviewers. Now we can look at how our programs can be strengthened for outcomes. . . . This has become part of our culture. These investment partners report that during this time of very tight budgets, the time-consuming, expensive work of clarifying
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Foreword
and assessing outcomes becomes morenot lessvaluable to them. When resources are scarce, funders are more likely to ask for measurable results. But far more important, the nonprofit leaders themselves are eager for clarity on where to place their bets and how they can create the biggest impact for children and families. We at VPP and McKinsey hope that after reading these essays you will come to share the view that managing to outcomes is far from a luxury. As Mario and our expert contributors make clear, we believe managing to outcomes is a necessity for any mission-focused organization that wants to create meaningful, measurable, sustainable change for those it serves. If youre ready for this type of learning and cultural journey, we hope youll use this book as a travel guide. In this slim volume we havent been able to cover everything you need to know, but we think we can give you a reasonable lay of the land, help you get a good start on your itinerary, and spark good conversations for you and your travel companionsyour staff, your board, and other key stakeholders. And to help us on our learning journey, we of course welcome your feedback. Bon voyage.
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Introduction
by Lynn Taliento, Jonathan Law, and Laura Callanan McKinsey & Company
Several years ago, Friendship Public Charter School, which manages ten schools in Baltimore and the Nations Capital, developed some tools and processes for collecting data on students, teachers, and the schools as a whole. They built time into the academic calendar for reviewing the data and understanding their implications. And perhaps most important, the schools leaders shared a deep commitment to using the data and the assessments to improve student outcomes. With all of this in placethe data, the tools, the commitment Friendship appeared to be a model nonprofit when it came to performance management. Yet Friendships leaders realized they needed to improve. Because Friendship is accountable to many different stakeholders, they tracked an excess of metrics, overwhelming many staff members. The data they collected were not always explicitly linked to the outcomes they sought. Review processes for teachers and administrative staff were ad hoc rather than systematic. In short, Friendship had the foundations for performance management but lacked a coherent strategy for bringing it all together. As you will read in more detail in the essays by Mario Morino (p.1) and Friendship COO Patricia Brantley (p.117), Friendship took the difficult steps necessary to build on its early experiences and create a world-class performance-management system. We were fortunate to partner with Friendship on this journey, and we were able
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to see firsthandas we have with many other clientsthe power that results from managing smartly against the right outcomes. Today, Friendship is, by any measure, a high-performing organization. Its use of the performance-management system enables Friendship to make its already great teachers even better, helps principals do their jobs better, and provides board members with the information they need for more-effective oversight. All of which has had a discernible effect on Friendships bottom linehelping students succeed. It would be great if the story of Friendship were the norm; unfortunately, its an outlier. Not many nonprofits manage to outcomes, and among those that do, few do it well. For that reason, Leap of Reason is an important contribution, and McKinsey is proud to partner with Venture Philanthropy Partners (VPP) to bring this volume to thousands of leaders who are predisposed to manage rigorously and effectively but can use a little encouragement and support. The need for assessment and performance management seems obvious. So why doesnt every nonprofit define its goals, measure how its doing, and manage accordingly? Not for lack of commitment to causes and communities. Not for lack of smarts. What seems to be missing is a combination of resolve to take on the hard work that change entails and, even more important, the appropriate resources to do so effectively. But as you will see throughout Leap of Reason, when leaders summon the resolve and resources, the results are worth the hard work.
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1. Hear the constituent voice. In order to get a complete picture of how and to what extent programs are delivering social impact, nonprofits must learn what the relevant constituentsthe individuals and communities served by the programhave to say. Involving constituents in the design and implementation of an organizations ongoing assessment efforts, and in the interpretation of the results, helps ensure that a nonprofit is measuring whats relevant and valuable for them. And once the results are in, its important to share the results with all stakeholders, as Patricia Brantley describes in her essay. 2. Assess to learn and do. Successful nonprofit organizations make learning the primary goal of their assessment. They begin by collecting as much information as they can about the target problem and the possible solutions. This way, they come to understand how their programs work and how they can work better. They also integrate assessment goals and results into all of their program decisions. In other words, assessment plans and program strategies are built hand in hand. Assessment is not just an academic review or an isolated exercise; it serves as a guide for the nonprofits actions. 3. Apply rigor within reason. Understanding the true efficacy of a nonprofit also means periodically undertaking a more holistic program evaluation. Such evaluations complement the ongoing effort to manage to outcomes by verifying that regular results are in fact meaningful. When these evaluations are conducted, rigor is a desirable goal, but the most rigorous assessment approaches are not always feasible or appropriate. For example, randomized controlled trials are excellent when demonstrating the efficacy of a program prior to scaling. They are often less applicable, though, for new programs early in their life cycle. Funders are notorious for requiring overly rigorous assessments. The result is a misallocation of resources and unnecessary headaches for the nonprofit. Weve observed that the right level of rigor is the
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result of an open dialogue between nonprofits and their funders. By getting clarity on a programs strategic and assessment objectives, they can determine the level of rigor thats required. 4. Be practicaltheres no need to do everything. Once nonprofits buy into the need to manage to outcomes, they sometimes fall into the trap of trying to measure everything. Developing a thoughtful, comprehensive assessment plan that is based on the right questions and crafted with funder participation avoids unnecessary burdens and expense. Moreover, many assessment tools already exist in the social sector. Successful nonprofits can tap into this trove and leverage such tools to great effect. 5. Create a learning culture. Robust assessment capabilities alone do not drive impact for nonprofits. From our experience, these capabilities must exist within a learning culture to derive the most value from assessment. Such a culture values honest appraisal, open dissent, and constructive feedback. It promotes intelligent risk-taking in pursuit of both insight and impact. It considers the relevant context of an assessment and makes difficult decisions based on evidenceeven if that means ending a program.
Introduction
organization. These changes, though, will just as certainly have a positive impact for the nonprofit in the long run as it becomes more effective in achieving its mission. When done right, performance management is good value for the money. McKinsey has quantified the value of rigorous performance management in the private sector. Using data from our proprietary Organizational Performance Profile survey, involving more than 115,000 individuals in 231 organizations, we looked at whether strong organizational performanceincluding performance managementtranslates into financial results. The findings were clear: A company that measures in the top rather than the bottom quartile of organizational performance is more than twice as likely to attain above-average margins for its industry. And then we went further, seeking to understand which specific attributes of organizational effectiveness were correlated with financial success. Once again, the findings were compelling. Robust performance management had the highest correlation with superior financial performance. Indeed, performance management beat out other important organizational attributes like innovation, capability, and environment. Companies with top-quartile performance in practices such as the consistent use of targets and metrics were 2.7 times as likely to financially outperform the median than those in the bottom quartile. Such data have convinced us that performance management is a no-brainer. It drives overwhelmingly positive results. If the promise of such value for the money is not enough of a motivator, how else can nonprofits be convinced to adopt managing to outcomes? For starters, a sector-wide embrace of the learning mindset would help nonprofits and their funders make decisions in a positive, forward-thinking manner. For example, instead of simply de-funding an underperforming program based on a superficial understanding of results, a learning-centered approach would seek to understand the causes for failure and build upon that knowledge in future initiatives.
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More radical steps could also compel nonprofits to embrace change. For instance, imagine an independent organization being created to certify whether nonprofits are adequately conducting assessments. Such a body would not be developing or conducting the actual assessment for nonprofits; this responsibility would remain with the organizations themselves. Instead, the certification agency would simply ensure that nonprofits are assessing themselves and publish its findings. For example, the body could determine whether the nonprofit has defined its outcomes and metrics that align with these outcomes, whether these outcomes and metrics are consistent with best practices in the relevant field, and whether the organization has at least basic systems for tracking these metrics over time. We raise this idea not necessarily to advocate for it but to push the thinking as to what might be possible.
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pressure will certainly translate into spillover effects for the broader social sector. These tailwinds suggest that assessment and managing to outcomes will become more widespread in the near future. Eventually, this discipline will become the norm. For all the rational fear of the inevitable challenges ahead, Marios monograph and the accompanying essays in this volume should provide comfort that managing to outcomes is eminently doable. Leap of Reason also demonstrates that managing to outcomes is eminently desirable. And not just for funders. For social sector leaders, the great benefit of managing to outcomes is that it gives them powerful new tools for learning over time, making better-informed decisions, and becoming more effective at what they are so passionate about doing. The greatest dividends of all of course accrue to the communities, the families, and the individuals with whom we work. They benefit from stronger schools, smarter clinics, and safer communitiesall because of nonprofits commitment to becoming better.
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When you find a unique opportunity to make a real difference, you focus on it and constantly reassess results. This is discipline.
Peter F. Drucker
Greatness is not a function of circumstance. Greatness, it turns out, is largely a matter of conscious choice, and discipline.
Jim Collins
C hapter 1
For the entire sixteen years Ive been working full-time in the social sector, a problem has been gnawing at me, sometimes literally keeping me up at night. Heres the problem in a nutshell: We dont manage to outcomes, thus greatly diminishing our collective impact. Despite all the right intentions, the vast majority of nonprofits do not have the benefit of good information and tools to determine where theyre headed, chart a logical course, and course-correct when theyre off. Theyre navigating with little more than intuition and anecdotes. Only a fortunate few have a reliable way to know whether theyre doing meaningful, measurable good for those they serve. I know manage to outcomes may sound to some like fuzzy jargonand frankly, I wish I had a better term. But I assure you, this problem is more than just a sleep-stealing concern of pointy-headed funders like me. Its a huge problemand a huge potential opportunityfor the nonprofits themselves, for the families they aspire to benefit, and for society as a whole. The problem is not new, but it is growing in urgency.
Leap of Reason
The cold reality is that in our present era of unsustainable debts and deficits, our nation simply will not be able to justify huge subsidies for social-sector activities and entities without more assurance that theyre on track to realize results. Public fundersand eventually private funders as wellwill migrate away from organizations with stirring stories alone, toward well-managed organizations that can also demonstrate meaningful, lasting impact. To add more urgency, its entirely possible that the bar may go even higher than that. Eventually public and private funders will see the value in favoring not just individual organizations that can demonstrate their impact but organizations working together in disciplined ways toward collective impact. As John Kania and Mark Kramer show in a thought-provoking article in the Stanford Innovation Review (Winter 2011), organizations working to achieve common outcomes within a broad, coordinated networknot just in their own silos are much better equipped to solve big societal problems. This monograph is intended for leaders who are willing to embrace the challenge of rigor head on, individually and collectively. Its for those who know in their bones that they want and need better information in order to fulfill the mission that compelled them to dedicate their lives to serving others. Of course not every insight here will apply to every organization. No one would expect, for example, that small organizations with budgets under $1 million a year would invest hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars in building fancy performance-management systems to monitor results in real time. But even the smallest organizations can find ideas here to help them manage in a way that allows them to know whether theyre making a difference or not. I believe thats a reasonable minimum requirement for anyone who aspires to do good, applies for charitable status from the IRS, and asks others to commit their money or time.
Leap of Reason
than the typical capacity-building grant. They need funders who are willing to make multi-year investments in helping nonprofit leaders strengthen their management muscle and rigor. Another reason nonprofits fail to manage to outcomes is that they fear that funders will use any information nonprofits collect against them, instead of using it to help nonprofits grow and improve. For example, educators often worry that school districts use student test scores and other educational data to restrict funding and fire teachers rather than to guide efforts to improve teacher and program quality for better student outcomes. Granted, some nonprofit leaders have overcome these and other hurdles, and they have made truly meaningful progress toward improving outcomes by collecting, analyzing, and using information. Select hospitals like the Cleveland Clinic and the Mayo Clinic, for example, have made great strides in creating a culture of information-based introspection that allows them to use and apply the information they need on an ongoing basis. The same can be said for innovative human-service and education nonprofits such as NurseFamily Partnership, Youth Villages, Harlem Childrens Zone, Friendship Public Charter School, and the Latin American Youth Center, all of which are seeing positive early indicators of greater impact. And, fortunately, there are pioneers in the foundation world, such as the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation, that have lent their financial and strategic support to help their grantees manage to outcomes. Its also true that a good number of nonprofits have come to appreciate the value of experimental and quasi-experimental evaluations, often conducted by third parties, to assess the effectiveness of specific programs. But even among these nonprofits, few have come to understand the importance of continuous, rigorous collection and use of information for guiding the management of their organization. This ongoing, management-oriented data collection and analysis is what managing to outcomes requires. It is a way for leaders and nonprofits to learn and grow. It is essential for achieving lasting impact.
Because of the impediments, far too few nonprofits even bother trying to manage to outcomes. Among those who do try, far too many are missing the forest for the trees. They focus more heavily on the mechanics of measurement than on understanding what the data reveal. As a result, they are squandering precious time and financial resources. Even worse, Ive witnessed some misguided effortsoften foisted on nonprofits by fundersthat have produced unintended negative consequences that go beyond the waste of money. In these cases, funders have turned assessment into an exercise focused on cold numbersthe equivalent of Robert McNamaras simplistic and terribly misleading Vietnam body countsrather than using it to help nonprofit leaders achieve lasting impact for those they serve. These efforts are worse than no effort at all! The Hudson Institutes eloquent and insightful William Schambra shares my concern about ill-considered, often harmful demands from funders. If nonprofits could speak truth to powerful foundations, he imagines they would say, Lets decide jointly on a simple, coherent, user-friendly system to which we can both pay attention, which will prevail over bureaucratic [requirements] . . . and which will feed into a serious body of knowledge. But until then, stop pretending that the problem is our lack of acceptable performance, rather than your lack of serious purpose.
To What End?
The simple question that has served me best throughout my business and nonprofit careers is To what end? I try to return to these three little words constantly during the life of any project or initiative, especially when I fear Im drifting away from my original purpose or Im starting to confuse ends and means. I fear that when it comes to outcomes assessment, we have failed to keep our eyes fixed on the ends we are trying to advance. In the wise words of David Hunter, managing partner of Hunter Consulting and a former director of assessment for the Edna
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Leap of Reason
McConnell Clark Foundation, The mess you describe indeed is enormous and very destructive. . . . Few people involved in this work have thought deeply about managing toward outcomes. Most put the cart before the horsefocusing on how to measure rather than on why measure and what to measure. Every ounce of our effort on assessing social outcomes should be with one end in mind: helping nonprofits deliver greater benefits to those they serve. Unfortunately, greater benefits are not the focus today. Measurement has become an end in itself.
}} If greater benefits were the end, we would be working to
help nonprofits clarify the results (outcomes) they are trying to achieve.
}} If greater benefits were the end, we would do much more to
help nonprofits collect and use the information that could best help them navigate toward those outcomes.
}} If greater benefits were the end, we would properly differentiate
between operational performance and organizational effectiveness. What good is it to focus on an organizations overhead costs or fund development levels if we dont have a clue as to how effective the organization is at creating benefits for those it serves?
}} If greater benefits were the end, we would own up to how
much encouragement and support nonprofits need in order to define and assess what they do and how well they do it. Weve approached this challenge as if its about numbers when its really about having the right culture, a theme I will return to in detail in Chapter 3. Shifting the culture requires large and persistent investments of time, talent, and money.
Leap of Reason
these days [the only things were sampling] are reading and math test scores, because they are easy to acquire and report. Another friend and colleague, head of a high school for boys, shared similar concerns. He believes that a singular focus on standardized tests encourages schools to educate students as if they were widgets on a manufacturing conveyor belt rather than individuals with their own strengths, interests, and needs. (For insights on how schools can get beyond simplistic assessments, please see Ethan D. Schafers essay on p. 127.)
Basic Definitions
Theory of Changehow we effect change
The overarching set of formal relationships presumed to exist for a defined population, the intended outcomes that are the focus of the organizations work, and the logic model for producing the intended outcomes. A theory of change should be meaningful to stakeholders, plausible in that it conforms to common sense, doable with available resources, and measurable.
Outputswhat we count
The volume of a programs actions, such as products created or delivered, number of people served, and activities and services carried out.
Leap of Reason
My friends and I benefited from a wide range of holistic services delivered by caring adultsfrom family to teachers to coaches and neighborswho simply wouldnt let us fail. Of course we didnt know it at the time, but we were the focus of a reasonably well-coordinated network of providers that collectively produced an impact greater than the sum of good individual parts. And yet when VPP investment partners talked about community building, that sounded too intangible, not readily measurable and, candidly, difficult to sell to our own stakeholders. I regret not having been more open in my thinking back then. Instead of pushing back on what we were hearing, my colleagues and I should have done more to understand soft achievements that may in fact be every bit as real and important as hard outcomes. I aspire to do a better job of making them part and parcel of future efforts to assess outcomes and performance, even if that means using qualitative and/or subjective indicators. The point is this: When public or private funders establish performance metrics and tie rewards or consequences to organizations capacity to meet them, organizations and people will migrate to the behaviors that will allow them to meet their defined targets. If the metrics are appropriate and closely tied to mission, the organization can benefit. But if the metrics are simplistic and unmoored from mission, organizations will go racing in the wrong direction. To paraphrase Yogi Berra, theyll get lost, but theyll be making good time.
Backseat Driving
Ultimately, the benefits of an outcomes orientation must accrue to the nonprofit. Sadly, today most of the discussions of outcomes are being driven by funders demanding more information on results and not paying attention to what nonprofit leaders need in order to produce results. We funders, in the name of measurement and accountability, are foisting unfunded, often simplistic, self-serving mandates on our granteesrather than helping them define, create, and use the
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information they need to be disciplined managers. In the words of Tris Lumley, head of strategy for the London-based New Philanthropy Capital, Great organizations . . . are built around great data. Data that [allow] them to understand the needs they address, what activities are likely to best address these needs, what actually happens as a result of these activities, and how to allocate resources and tweak what they do for even greater impact. Too often, funders set the agenda with their own requirements [and] cripple the organizations theyre trying to help. I strongly urge funders to see that assessment is most valuable if it is driven by the nonprofit itself. Attempts to define outcomes seldom produce positive results when they are imposed on organizations from the outside. The nonprofit needs to own the process and be the primary beneficiary of it. And when we funders come to the table to encourage nonprofits to develop an outcomes orientation, we must be reasonable in what we expect. We cant expect a three-person nonprofit serving homeless girls to implement a robust information system. We can, however, encourage the nonprofit to define the outcomes it seeks to achieve for the girls it serves and to develop a clear picture of how its activities will help achieve these outcomes. And yes, even this type of tiny nonprofit can collect basic data to inform its work. No matter how small the organization, we must not run away from outcomes and their measurement altogetherthat is, do nothing to assess whether we are delivering on our promises to the families who turn to us for services. As David Hunter says, It is a really, really bad thing for nonprofits to promise to help people improve their lives and prospects . . . and then, when the matter is looked at closely, it turns out that they arent doing that at all!
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Take-Homes in Tweets
The vast majority of nonprofits have no reliable way to know whether theyre on track to deliver what they promise to those they serve. Managing to outcomes means investing in continuous collection and use of information to guide the organizations decisions and operations. Managing to outcomes requires a significant culture shift within an organization. It is primarily about culture and peoplenot numbers. Some funders have turned assessment into an exercise focused on cold numbers rather than using it to help nonprofits improve. We must focus on why measure and on what to measurenot just on how to measure. The nonprofit needs to drive the outcomes-assessment process and be the primary beneficiary of it. Reasonableness and common sense must guide the investment in assessment.
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C hapter 2
Our sector needs a major reset on the approach to outcomesfrom how we think about them to how we assess them. More than anything else, our sector needs a singular focus on managing to outcomes for greater impact. This means encouraging and supporting nonprofits to do the following:
}} Gain clarity, through thoughtful introspection, on what change
helpful for gauging whether they are on course to achieve that change
}} Collect and use this information to plan, make important deci-
ment, which are more important than any single metric. In my experience, some nonprofit leaders inherently think in terms of outcomes or are at least open to doing so. They bring more
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than intuition and personal agenda; they think deeply about the what, how, and why of their services; they are evidence-based; and they talk naturally and frequently about the change happening in the lives of their clients and beneficiaries. These leaders are genuinely hungry for reliable information to assess their value to those they serve. They want to manage to outcomes. Leaders who have an innate desire for good information thats aligned with their mission are the ones most likely to develop a true performance culture and make a real difference in the lives of those they serve. And before those of you who rebel against the term performance culture get too incensed, let me urge you to step back from the jargon and debates of the times and ask yourself, How could individuals who serve others not want to know how they are doing and be able to share these findings with those they serve? This is what I seek to convey when I use the term performance culture. As I touched on in Chapter 1, using information to manage to outcomes and having a performance culture are dependent on an attitude and mindset that must come from within. Trying to impose this orientation on leaders and organizations is as constructive as trying to foist change on your spouse. As my better half will tell you (with a resigned sigh), it aint gonna happen. If you feel you have the mindset and tenacity to lead the transition to managing to outcomes, please be sure to read the Ideas Into Action section, which starts on p.63. It contains a simple framework and questions to help you spark the right conversations within your organization and its board.
that you visit savingphilanthropy.org, a site where you can see managing to outcomes in action. The site features clips from the one-hour documentary Saving Philanthropy: Resources to Results. The film, produced in conjunction with PBS by the brother-and-sister filmmakers Robby and Kate Robinson, is aligned with the themes of this monograph and coincidentally includes a few comments from me and several other contributors to this monograph, among them David Hunter and Isaac Castillo. It profiles social service organizations that have built outcomes-oriented cultures, and it highlights the role that forward-thinking funders play in the process. Before he was featured in the provocative movie Waiting for Superman, Geoff Canada, founder and CEO of Harlem Childrens Zone (HCZ) and one of my heroes, raised a stir with comments in the New York publication City Limits. When Canada was asked to define success for HCZ, he said, The only benchmark of success is college graduation. Thats the only one: How many kids you got in college, how many kids you got out. Canada could not have been clearer on the ultimate outcome HCZ is focused on achieving. Its not improving reading levels. Its not getting kids to graduate from high school. Its not helping kids get into college. To Canada, these are important interim indicators that HCZ is moving in the right direction, but, ultimately, what matters is ensuring that those young people make it through college because ample evidence shows that making it through college is what leads to lifelong results for the young people HCZ serves. With that great clarity as a starting point, Canada and his team, aided by the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation, Bridgespan, and others, have gotten good at identifying the information they need to collect in order to manage to this outcome. Are all the kids in HCZ graduating from college? Of course not. But HCZ is on a very promising path. Given that Waiting for Superman director Davis Guggenheim essentially held up Canada as a superhero, it is no surprise that HCZ came under greater scrutiny following the release of the
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documentary. For example, in a New York Times article entitled Lauded Harlem Schools Have Their Own Problems, Sharon Otterman reported on criticism in education circles of the high per-pupil costs at HCZ schools (around $16,000 per year plus thousands more in out-of-classroom spending). This criticism misses the pointand is representative of the kind of thinking we need to resist if we want to stay focused on the ultimate ends were trying to achieve. Canadas mission is not merely to raise test scores. It is, in Canadas words, to save a community and its kids all at the same time. And folks, that aint cheap. The University of Pennsylvanias Center for High Impact Philanthropy has it exactly right: Despite high costs of this particular model, the potential savings to society are huge. Considering costs in isolation tells you nothing about return on investment. Another well-known managing-to-outcomes success story is Youth Villages, which helps emotionally troubled children through a wide range of residential- and community-based treatment programs in eleven states. Youth Villages rigorously tracks all the children it serves, during their treatment and often for two years after their discharge. The state . . . shouldnt be buying beds, says CEO Pat Lawler. They should buy outcomes, successful outcomes.
powerful and easy-to-use tools for making smart administrative and patient-focused healthcare decisions. Using this platform, the clinic recently started sharing data with a consortium of 256 hospitals. The system feeds off the data from the clinics repository of electronic medical records and is augmented with an array of other well-thought-out quantitative and qualitative datafrom information on patient experience to data on blood utilization. The system has allowed the clinic to improve patient access; new patients now wait, on average, fewer than seven days to see a provider.It has also allowed the clinic to decrease its use of packed red blood cells by 10 percent, which has produced significant cost savings.These are but twoexamplesof how this information is leading to better care and lower costs. The other two systems were equally impressiveespecially because they were developed by community-based organizations that are nowhere near the sheer size and scope of a world-renowned medical institution like the Cleveland Clinic. One was developed by the Latin American Youth Center (LAYC), a VPP investment partner that provides a broad range of human services to help youth and their families live, work, and study with dignity, hope, and joy. At VPP, we have watched LAYC make significant progress in adopting an outcomes orientation, take material steps toward managing to outcomes, and initiate an evaluation approach that could lead to earning distinction as an evidence-based program. LAYCs work in outcomes measurement and program evaluation has improved dramatically over the past five years. Today, LAYC is seen as a leader in the nonprofit community in the creation and implementation of data-collection systems, the use of data to evolve program design, and the generation of program-outcome information within a multi-service organization. (For more insights on LAYCs outcomes framework and performance-management system, please see Isaac Castillos essay on p.95.) The other system was developed by Friendship Public Charter School, another VPP investment partner. In 1998, Friendship founder
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Donald Hense and I stood in jeans outside a run-down DC elementary school. He pointed across the street and said, Thats where were going to put our first school. Today, to Donalds great credit, Friendship is a thriving network of ten schools and academies, serving eight thousand children. Friendships performance-management system produces dashboards for each student, teacher, classroom, and school, providing timely qualitative and quantitative insights on how students are doing on the skills they need to learn. This information, easily available to all teachers as well as students and their families, allows for much earlier and more effective intervention when kids are having trouble. As word gets out about what Friendship has built, it will set a higher bar for schools around the countryincluding affluent private schoolsand give a new sense of whats possible. Angela Piccoli is a second-year teacher at one of the Friendship schools. This year her classroom included a majority of students who were low performers relative to their grade-level peers. I was petrified to show students their data at the beginning of the school year, as many were barely readers, says Piccoli. I thought it would unsettle the entire class and lead to overwhelming tension and anxiety. Sharing the data with students, however, is a non-negotiable requirement in Friendships model and is expected of all teachers, so Piccoli did. And what happened? My students responded to the data. They helped each other. They knew what they had to do and they kept improving. They have become cheerleaders who encourage each other. Piccolis students maintain their own graphs, which they color in with their results after each assessment. I cried when I saw on my last interims how well the students did, she says. It was the first time that they read the assessment themselves rather than having it read to them. Each of Piccolis students has become a reader. And by taking ownership of their own data, the students have gained confidence in themselves as learners.
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At the beginning of this year, Friendship added non-academic indicatorsindicators related to students well-beingto its performance-management system. According to Friendship COO Patricia Brantley, We saw immediately the interrelationship between struggling teachers and struggling classrooms. Attendance and discipline issues werent spread out evenly among classrooms; there was a clear correlation between student non-academic outcomes and teacher performance. At Friendships first meeting to share data on attendance and truancy disparities between classrooms, one principal remarked, Kids cant just fall through the cracks anymore, because we can see them right when they need us to do so. This is the data that I needed to ensure that every adult is focused on the most important work. As Brantley puts it, We use the data as the common driver of urgency for leadership and urgency for management.(For more insights on Friendships performance-management system, please see Brantleys essay on p. 117.)
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This phenomenon brings back a lot of memories from my career in the software industry, when I had a front-row seat on the process of technology adoption and the systems change it enabled. Today Im seeing a convergence of (a) a rather select group of nonprofit leaders hungry for information to help them do better what they do; (b) fundamental changes in technology, data architecture, and data accessibility; and (c) external financial pressure to demonstrate value for the money. This convergence is eerily familiar to those of us who worked with the likes of Boeing, the U.S. Department of Defense, and Federal Express in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s to implement early versions of performance-management systems. In those days we helped executives peer into the ways that information systems could help them manage their resources and produce improved results (i.e., outcomes). And, gradually, as executives saw the potential with their own eyes and were able to put it into the context of their organizations, their view of what was possible with good information was forever changed. In those business sectors, innovation migrated from the periphery to the core relatively quickly. Investors could see how performance-management systems contributed to companies bottom line, and so they were willing to fund the hard work that went into building these systems. As I will discuss in greater detail in Chapter5, in the social sector we need to make a similar case to funders. We need to prove that investments in managing to outcomes and performance-management systems will allow organizations to produce greater impact.
the mindset of the leaders who put these systems in placea mindset that can prevail even in organizations that cant afford to build sophisticated data systems. Leaders like the ones Ive profiled in this chapter take on the challenge of managing to outcomes not because its important, not because its a trend or a good marketing tool, and not because a funder or investor said they had to. They do it because they believe it to be integral to ensuring material, measurable, and sustainable good for those they serve. In the next chapter I will offer insights on how leaders can help to cultivate this mindset in their organizations through the two most powerful tools at their disposal: people and culture.
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Take-Homes in Tweets
Funders can make a big impact on the causes they care about if they encourage and support their grantees to do the following: Gain clarity on what change they are trying to create Gain specificity on how they will accomplish that change Determine what information will be most helpful for gauging whether they are on course Collect and use this information as the basis for understanding whats working, planning, decision making, and improving. Leaders with an innate desire for good information are the ones most likely to make a real difference in the lives of those they serve. Leaders who see performance-management systems for the first time feel like sailors navigating by dead reckoning in a world with GPS. The best performance-management systems help users do what they do better and make what they do easier. The technology behind these systems is not nearly as important as the mindset of the leaders who put these systems in place.
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C hapter 3
In my forty-plus years of experience in the for-profit and nonprofit sectors, I have come to see that theres a common denominator among organizations that manage to outcomes successfully: They all have courageous leaders who foster a performance culture. An organizations culture has a huge impact on whether the organization can achieve what it hopes to for those it serves. To me, all organizations should strive not only to foster a healthy culture, where their people understand the mission and feel appreciated for their role in fulfilling it. They should also strive to nurture a performance culture. Once again, I use the term performance culture with some trepidation. I know its radioactive for some, especially those in the education field. But the term as Im using it shouldnt be threatening. I mean simply that the organization should have the mindset to do what it does as well as it possibly can and continually seek to do even better. For example, there are many teachers I know who would not naturally see themselves as representing or contributing to a performance culture per se. And yet they stay after school to tutor or counsel; grade papers late into the night; care immensely about helping students learn and grow; and even show up to cheer their students on at games, plays, and other events. These teachers may not see what they
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do as being driven by a performance mentality, but their actions in serving their students speak louder than words.
on the bus, including the person driving it. It might require bringing different people on the bus. Most often it requires a combination of the two. The truth is that were not good at this type of change in our sector. We often sacrifice the quality of our programs and services in order to protect those who arent doing their jobs well. Why? For one thing, we generally lack effective ways to assess the performance of staff so that we can help them improve or move on. More important, executives just dont want to deal with the confrontation thats sometimes required when we know a staff members performance isnt good enough. We avoid providing the honest, constructive feedback people need to improve. When steps for improvement dont work, we are loath to make changes, especially terminations, lest we rock the boat. Too many of us allow appeasement and accommodation to override doing our best for those we serve. Its a delicate balance when youre dealing with someones career (and livelihood). Candidly, there are times Ive made the go/ no-go call too quickly. Ive seen people develop to become solid performers, even leaders in their organizations, after I thought they werent going to make it. Fortunately, others saw something in them that warranted going the extra step. Such decisions are never to be taken lightly, and theres no checklist of steps. It comes back to the quality of judgment of those making the decisions. Intuition and instincts are an important part of the equation. In the early years of VPP, I took the team to visit the offices of General Atlantic, LLC, a preeminent global growth-equity firm that invests to build great companies. In a discussion with one of the best executives Ive had the pleasure of knowing, one member of the VPP team asked, Whats the most important thing you do to help the firms in which you invest? He said simply, Make sure the firm has a great CEO, and then make sure he or she has or gets a great number two. Its all about the people.
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I cant begin to relate how true this has been in all aspects of my business and nonprofit careers. In 198788, as CEO of Morino Associates, Inc., I recruited a new executive-management team with the background and experience to lead our firm to where we aspired to go. Trust me, it was not a popular action, but it proved central to allowing the firm to achieve what it did in the years that followed. In 1989 we merged with another firm to create LEGENT Corporation. One of the smartest and best actions we took was to recruit three new outside board members who were seasoned executives and had been there, done that. Absolutely priceless! Very soon I came to see that they had more insights in their little fingers about building great organizations than I possessed in my entire body (and I was heavier in those days). Being around them while we worked through the integration of the firms was invaluable professional development for me. After I transitioned to the nonprofit world, recruiting Carol Thompson Cole to VPP in 2003 was a defining action. She both fit into and helped build our culture in positive ways. Carols leadership is the primary factor underlying the broad-based acceptance and success of Venture Philanthropy Partners to date. If we had more time and space, I could offer a dozen additional stories that emphatically illustrate the value of getting the right people with the right judgment at the right time to help an organization succeed. But what is probably even more instructive is to acknowledge that each time I strayed from going after the right leader, I inadvertently set my new hire up for failure and needlessly caused great angst for those around me and our organization. And it always took a toll on those we served.
natures most beautiful creations, says high-tech CEO Jim Roth. Man has not figured out how to create them. What we do know is we can care for them and nurture them to survive and thrive or kill them through neglect and abuse. The same is true of culture. So how, precisely, do we nurture a culture through words and deeds? What can we do to strengthen the connective tissue that binds an organization together and cultivate an orientation toward performance? Here are some of the things that I think are most pertinent:
}} Recruit culture leaders. An effective way to influence culture
is to find people whose personalities, attitudes, values, and competencies exemplify the culture to which you hope to evolve. Sometimes these leaders are sitting right in your midst, waiting for the opening and encouragement to do their thing. At other times you have to recruit from outside the organization. It is often the combination of developing from within and recruiting from outside that fosters a performance culture.
}} Walk the talk. Modelthat is, livethe behavior you want
others to practice. In my corporate life that meant getting out to talk with and listen to our customers. It meant (and still does) little things like answering a phone within a few rings and picking up that piece of trash on the floor. And it meant bigger things, like being sure that the decisions on corporate direction and peoples careers were grounded in the organizations guiding principles. Ive been fortunate to be involved in a three-year transformation of a school, guided by a leader the board recruited in 2007. From its inception, the schools teachers and staff genuinely cared for the students they served. In fact, this caring attitude was the defining characteristic of the school for more than two decades. But as the organization grew from a small school with several grades to nearly four hundred students in grades one through twelve across two campuses, the stakes changed.
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Starting with the leaders unrelenting commitment to the students, intense work ethic, strong values, and abiding belief in the potential of his staff, he led a quest to change the culture. And he did so by first walking the talk himself and then getting the faculty and staff to do the same. For example, he, the faculty, and the administrative staff changed the dress codes for faculty; highlighted the importance of individual responsibility; ended the practice of students sometimes referring to teachers by first names; encouraged curiosity and new ideas; achieved a greater level of transparency; and made excellence in teaching the norm. They effectively modeled behaviors of a learning community for the students to emulate, and its beginning to yield results.
}} Know what you stand for. Take the time to flesh out your core
beliefs and your guiding principles, and then do what it takes to make them more than just slogans on the wall above the water cooler. In my corporate life, I was a fanatic about customer service, and we recruited people we thought were inclined the same way. One day I dropped into the office of a systems developer who wanted to share a new idea. As he sketched his suggestions on a whiteboard, I asked him what our customers would think. He was utterly dismissive of our customers input, and that turned out to be a career-altering error. Being highly responsive to and respectful of our customers was a guiding principle of our firm and a sacred part of our organizational culture. A well-defined and accepted set of guiding principles is important to any organization, but I suspect that it is especially important for those in the nonprofit sector. It may sound corny, but take the timethrough an inclusive processto define the principles that guide what you do as an organization and as individuals. Then ensure that these principles are embraced by and instilled in every member of your team.
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Northeast Ohios Lawrence School, which is the subject of the essay by Ethan Schafer on p. 127, did an outstanding job in this regard. You can see the clarity of the schools vision, mission, and guiding principles on its website (lawrenceschool.org/ about/mission). Theres nothing pro forma about these statements. The leadership teamstaff and boardinvested three months in debating and fleshing them out. Once that comprehensive process was complete, every member of the leadership team took the time to assimilate these definitions and then work to instill them throughout the full faculty, administration, and student body. The definitions are no longer words on paper but principles upheld by everyone in the school.
}} Answer the question To what end? As I noted in Chapter
1, with all the rhetoric around mission, scaling, accountability, and the like, the reality is that we often have to go back to basics and ask, To what end? Defining an organizations true purpose is absolutely essential to cultivating a performance culture. Some years back, I participated with a schools leadership team in a frustrating process that was supposedly about instilling excellence in education. The schools programs were, at best, only average. Many within the ranks knew that the academic programs were middling, and some parents suspected it as well. As is always the case, the students knew it most of all. Yet the schools administrators and board members refused to face reality and failed to examine what they were trying to accomplish for the students they served. To what end? went completely unaddressed. The lack of clarity about purpose continually limited the leaderships ability to put the school on a trajectory toward excellence. In contrast, Ive had the recent opportunity to get to know a Catholic high school and its new leader. From our discussions it is evident that he has a clear vision for what excellence in education looks like for his institutiona vision thats deeply
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rooted in the institutions values. The leader is taking bold steps with his board to ratchet up the dialogue on excellence. He has already moved to introduce the International Baccalaureate (IB) program for the schools educational core and brought in a topnotch educator with extensive IB experience to implement it. Clearly, this school is setting a course to answer To what end? in a way that will provide strong guidance for faculty, students, and families.
}} Ensure that everyones moving toward the same destination.
In my business life we once brought in a speaker to inspire our team and get everyone on the same page. He gave great examples of getting folks involved and buying into mission, the normal song and dance of inspirational speakers. But he wrapped up the session with a pithy statement that is indelibly etched into my memory: Catch the vision or catch the bus! Harsh? For sure, and its unlikely that youll use it at your next all-hands meeting. On point? Very much so. Dont get me wrong.I welcome constructive questioning, and many colleagues, past and present, have war stories about spirited debates that took place within our teams. But once the debate draws to a close and we set a plan of action, everyone is expected to close ranks and align to the overarching goals. Its even OK for the dissenters to continue their line of questioning within the team. But if their actions, overt and covert, work in direct opposition to the goals, thats the time when they need to move on. Several years ago, an organization I know well undertook a transformation to address some problems and materially improve its programs and services. The organization had done a good job while it was small. As it expanded to provide a broader set of services, quality suffered. To rectify this, the organizations leaders decided to revamp what they did to be more evidencebased in their programs.
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Some of the longtime staff members who were fixed in their ways found this new approach hard to accept, even though the changes were showing positive results. After a reasonable length of time had passed, the leaders set out to work with those not yet onboard, making it clear that the organization was committed to this new approach. The leaders laid out their expectations clearly and helped staff members transition to the new approach. This clarity and thoughtful approach resulted in the departure of some staff members, but those who chose to remain caught the vision.
}} Ensure a balance between leaders and managers. Leaders are
inherently disruptive, dissatisfied with the status quo, questioning. They move the organization and people out of their comfort zones. They drive change, always looking for ways to improve. An appropriate motto of leaders is The only way you can coast is downhill! A healthy organization needs leaders in key strategic positionsincluding, of course, the top! Managers, by contrast, have to keep the trains running on time. They make sure people do their jobs well, achieve intended results, and have the competencies and resources they need to succeed in their work. An appropriate motto of managers is Stay focused; hold steady on the tiller. There must be balance. If leaders hold too much sway, the organizational culture often ends up being chaotic, even threatening, and the organization becomes at best unreliable. If managers prevail too much, the organizational culture tends to be self-satisfied and tied to maintaining the status quo. The organization will be a poor bet for sustained high performance.
}} Be clear and direct about what you expect. Ive struggled
for a long time to uphold this principle and still dont always do a very good job. Many years ago, my partner in the software business overheard me talking to a person on our development
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team. Never one to miss a chance to help me get better, my partner said, You really raked John over the coals for not doing a good job on the routine you asked him to develop. Did you ever explain to him what good job meant? If not, you have no grounds to criticize him. You never let him know in clear enough terms what you wanted from himand then you expected him to read your mind! If you want associates to do their jobs as well as they can, you have to be clear about what you want them to do. You have to have a process for assessing their performanceone that involves their inputso that they get regular feedback on what they do well and where and how they need to improve. One of the tragedies of most organizations is that the people who work there get almost no meaningful feedback, robbing people of vital insights for how they could be better.
}} Encourage self-improvement and personal growth. Are you
ever puzzled (or dismayed) when people dont ask others for advice or help? When there is an important discussion and people dont ask questions or take notes? When people arent curious enough to explore beyond their assignment? When people dont give input? A few years back I was working with school leaders to help them frame a business plan, and I vividly remember asking one of the principals, What do you think about how we can improve the curriculum? First came a long pause and a look of astonishment. Finally the principal replied, No one ever asked me for my input before. We are simply told what to do. In my view, that was a crystal-clear sign of an unhealthy culture and an organization not likely to achieve its intended outcomes. It is not just important but imperative to encourage personal growth. One nonprofit executive shared what he tells his people: Life is change. Therefore, as individuals or as an
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organization, by definition, either were getting better or were getting worse. In my experience, people who improve, innovate, and adapt are curious souls and self-learners. An organizations culture should encourage people to ask questions, seek advice, do research, improve what they do and how they do it, help each other, push each others thinking, probe, nudge, adapt, look at things from different vantage points. All of these behaviors lead to improvement and innovation for the organization and the individuals who are part of it. Conversely, if you really want to stifle this kind of positive culture, all you have to do is kill the dialogue by saying, This is how we do things; demean or punish people for asking questions or offering advice; fail to acknowledge when they need help or direction; or avoid being clear and forthright. You can be sure youll turn everyone off. Theyll keep their heads down and do only whats required of them. Theyll comply to survive and add nothing more.
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because they wanted to do their work very well; they wanted to experience the exhilaration of excellence. When we made mistakes, our openness allowed us to quickly admit and rectify them. It was inherent in the culture that we would respond this way. It wasnt always sunshine and lollipops, because there was always pressure to perform to high expectationsnot just to the firms expectations but to their peers and their own. But I have received many notes over the years from those who worked with me during that era saying that those years were some of the most enjoyable and rewarding in their careers. And I honestly believe our work had a lasting impact on those we served (our customers) and the field. I dont wish Darth Vaderstyle leadership on any organization. What I do wish is that all leaders would take the time to establish real clarity on the ends they want to achieve, have the courage to line up the right team to fulfill the mission, make clear what they expect of their teams, be disciplined in their execution, and model the behaviors they want the organization to exhibit. When you combine all of these things with a good heart, respect, and genuine caring, you almost inevitably shape an organizational culture in which people take pride in what they do and are eager to excel and play a role in fulfilling the organizations mission. And thats a great formula for creating a real difference in the lives of those you serve.
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Take-Homes in Tweets
An organizations culture has a huge impact on whether the organization can achieve what it hopes to for those it serves. All organizations that manage to outcomes successfully have courageous leaders who foster a performance culture. An organization with a performance culture focuses on doing what it does as well as it can and continually seeks to do even better. We cant simply create by edict the culture we desire. The best we can do is to influence culture through our words and deeds. The best way to influence culture is to recruit and retain top talent whose values and skills match the culture to which you aspire. Take the time to flesh out your guiding principles, and do what it takes to make them more than just slogans on the wall above the water cooler. Ensure that everyone is moving toward the same destination. In other words, help people catch the vision or catch the bus.
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C hapter 4
In the last chapter I shared ideas for how nonprofit leaders can drive culture change within their organizations to support a relentless focus on doing the most good for those they serve. In this chapter I want to look at driving this type of culture change at a sector level. As hard as it is to drive culture change at the organizational level, we have to set our sights even higher. As you will see in my unflinching forecast below, we will need nothing short of quantum, sectorwide change to accomplish our important missions in this new era of brutal austerity.
An Emerging Movement
Starting a century ago with the likes of Rockefeller and Carnegie, leaders have looked for ways to achieve greater impact by increasing the effectiveness of their work in the social sector. The past decade and a half has been particularly fertile for research, development, and dialogue on the topic of effectiveness. Just look at some examples of what has emerged over the past fifteen years:
}} Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett roared onto the phil-
anthropic scene with a willingness to invest massive resources based on data and evidence.
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McConnell Clark Foundation toward evidence-based funding, culminating in the launch of the Growth Capital Aggregation Pilot. This pilot brought together foundations, corporations, and individual philanthropists to commit $120 million in growth capital to support the expansion of three highly effective organizations: Nurse-Family Partnership, Youth Villages, and Citizen Schools.
}} Large, well-established foundations such as Hewlett, Robert
Wood Johnson, Irvine, Annie E. Casey, and Kellogg placed greater focus on nonprofit effectiveness and impact.
}} Many top-notch consultants and advisors that focus on effec-
tiveness and impact got their start, including the Bridgespan Group, the McKinsey Social Sector Office, the Monitor Institute, FSG Social Impact Advisors, the Center for Effective Philanthropy, Grantmakers for Effective Organizations, and Arabella Philanthropic Investment Advisors.
}} VPP, New Profit, the New Schools Ventures Fund, Nonprofit
Finance Fund Capital Partners, REDF, Robin Hood, SeaChange Capital Partners, Strategic Grant Partners, Social Venture Partners, and others ushered in a different way to help nonprofits succeed.
}} New Philanthropy Capital, Impetus Trust, The One Founda-
tion, and the European Venture Philanthropy Association have helped spread the philanthropic-investment approach far beyond Americas shores.
}} Outcomes theory and thinking gained greater intellectual heft
thanks to the efforts of Michael Bailin, Elizabeth Boris, Isaac Castillo, Paul Decker, Harry Hatry, David Hunter, Kristin Moore,
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Robert Penna, Elizabeth Liz Reisner, Lisbeth Lee Schorr, Nadya Shmavonian, Gary Walker, Karen Walker, Hal Williams, and others.
}} Donors Choose, GlobalGiving, GuideStar, Kiva, MyC4, Network
for Good, Social Impact Exchange, VolunteerMatch, and scores of innovative online models have been changing the way people give their treasure and talent, as outlined in an outstanding report by Lucy Bernholz with Ed Skloot and Barry Varela (leapofreason.org/Bernholz).
}} Capital markets for social innovation are no longer a pipe dream, as
anyone can see on vivid display at the annual SoCap conference in the Bay Area and in the work of pioneers like the Acumen Fund.
}} The President created the White House Office of Social Innova-
tion and Civic Participation, and the Corporation for National and Community Service launched the Social Innovation Fund. Id so like to believe that this progress is a sign of a pervasive, disruptive transformation throughout the social sector. Id like to believe that the majority of nonprofits are now poised to materially improve their impact by being more analytical about causal relationships and more rigorous in how they assess their performance. Id like to believe that the majority of funders are poised to make decisions based on evidence and merit rather than loyalty, stories, and relationships. Yet the realityin absolute termsis that the promising developments Ive highlighted here and in Chapter 2 still touch only a small minority of nonprofits, foundations, and donors.
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Peter Drucker. In the group of a dozen amazing participants, I was clearly the weak linkthe one who would have been kicked off the island first if wed been on reality TV. Mr. Drucker, always prescient, saw the outlines of an emerging movement toward greater innovation, effectiveness, and impact in the social sector. Though impressed by the emerging movement this group epitomized, he wasnt convinced that it would amount to wholesale change in the mindset and culture of the social sector. The key was to figure out how to grow this emerging movement into a true force for change. My fervent hope is that Managing to Outcomes could serve as the banner under which many of us with diverse skills, talents, and offerings could come together to meet Druckers challenge and convert a promising movement into a potent force. And let me reiterate that the Managing to Outcomes banner is not about pushing nonprofits to drink the metrics Kool-Aid, implement fancy reporting technologies, or adopt complex measurement methodologies. It is about encouraging nonprofits and funders to cultivate for themselves an outcomes-focused mindset and the passion to be as effective as we possibly can for those we serve! Neither VPP nor I have earned the place or have the chutzpah to lead a charge of this magnitude for the sector. But to help kick things off, I would welcome helping to convene a select group of early adopters, those leading practitioners who have been there and done thatespecially those who overcame and learned from failures. It is my hope that out of this cadre of leaders and doers will emerge a collective leadership that could put our sector on a different and much more rapid trajectory.
originator of this sentiment.) The crisis Im referring to is the dire fiscal reality for federal, state, and local governments, which will have an impact on almost every nonprofit in America whether or not it receives government funds. Our economy has taken a broadside hit, and most economists and budget watchers agree that we are now in the midst of a profound structural shift. Congress will eventually enact major cuts in the growth rates of Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security. Even more threatening to our sector are likely cuts in the real amount of discretionary spendingnot just growth rates. In a cruel irony, these cuts will not only reduce the supply of funding for many of the services that nonprofits provide; they will also dramatically increase the demand for these services. The magnitude of the combined hitgreatly reduced funding and increased needwill require organizations to literally reinvent themselves. Incremental responses will be insufficient. I agree wholeheartedly with Dr. Carol Twigg, president and CEO of the National Center for Academic Transformation, who concludes, We will have to produce significantly better outcomes at a declining per-unit cost of producing these outcomes, while demand for our services will be increasing. Ive consulted some of the countrys smartest budget experts on these trends. They tell me that, if anything, I havent gone far enough in my depiction of this stark reality. For example, they point to the dire situation at the state and local levels, which will only get worse when the federal government pulls back. As National Council of Nonprofits CEO Tim Delaney reported in the Nonprofit Quarterly, State government revenues fell almost 31 percent in 2009, which is the sharpest decline since [the Census Bureau] started collecting such data in 1951. . . . State and local governments are starving. The frightening budget forecasts at the federal, state, and local levels are just one manifestation of a larger philosophical shift. In the twentieth century, under Democrats and Republicans, government services expanded dramatically. Many of us took for granted that
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when we identified a new program to handle some unmet need, we could say to the government, Now add that to your portfolio. The reality today is that outside of healthcare, the expansion of public funding and government services as a share of our economy is going to come to an end, if it hasnt already. In this new era, public policy debates increasingly will focus on how best to use or repurpose existing resources. To respond to such a daunting game changer, we will all need to raise our games to a much higher level and seize the opportunity in the crisis. As Education Secretary Arne Duncan spelled out in a speech he called The New Normal, the challenge of doing more with less can, and should be, embraced as an opportunity . . . for improving the productivity of our education system . . . if we are smart, innovative, courageous in rethinking the status quo. New York Times columnist David Brooks agrees: This period of austerity will be a blessing if it spurs an effectiveness revolution. And lets not forget that effective programs can reduce the nations budget problems. For example, if serious and expensive problems like dropping out of school are prevented, then productivity and tax receipts will increase. Similarly, if criminal behavior is reduced, then taxpayers will benefit from lower costs for incarceration and rehabilitation. We need to rethink, redesign, and reinvent the why, what, and how of our work in every arena from education to healthcare to public safetyas will the government. We need to reassess where we have the greatest needs so we can apply our limited resources to have the most meaningful impact. We need to be much clearer about our aspirations, more intentional in defining our approaches, more rigorous in gauging our progress, more willing to admit mistakes, more capable of quickly adapting and improvingall with an unrelenting focus and passion for improving lives. Its no longer good enough to make the case that were addressing real needs. We need to prove that were making a real difference.
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Unfortunately, we see examples like D.A.R.E. and Scared Straight in every community. We see mentoring programs where frequent turnover among mentors and failed matches reinforce youngsters sense of their low worth and poor prospects. We see hospitals and clinics that provide grossly substandard care and do not follow the medical mantra of Do no harm. We see foster-care programs that stop supporting kids when they age out of the system at age eighteen or twenty-oneexactly when they need intensive support (50 percent will be homeless within a year). We see programs aimed at getting people off welfare and into jobs that dont provide any job-based coaching and supporteven though its well known that job retention is a huge challenge for people leaving welfare. I certainly dont mean to suggest that these programs typify the nonprofit sector. There are many demonstrably effective nonprofits that are playing vital roles in our communities and helping people improve their lives every daynot to mention countless others that may be making a difference but simply do not have the data to demonstrate their success. But the stark truth is that there are too many nonprofits that are just not doing enough to ensure that theyre making a positive difference. I am truly frustrated by the number of cases I come across in which nonprofits settle for mediocrity or cause potential harm to those who have given their trust. Perhaps I am so passionate about this issue because Ive seen, up close, the real-life costs and consequences of ineffective programs. The academic development of a member of my extended family was set back several years by a school that, despite its worthy intentions, did not have the capabilities to meet this young persons needs. A dear friend died prematurely when a healthcare provider turned out to be a callous radiation butcher. Weeks before her death, she said, I have every ground to sue him, but why? Ill be dead anyway.
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Take-Homes in Tweets
The past decade and a half has been fertile for research, development, and dialogue on the topic of effectiveness. Progress will be incremental, however, unless we grow this effectiveness movement into a true sector-wide force for change. Our countrys grim fiscal situation is both a frightening reality and an opportunity to make a quantum change. There are already too many examples of ineffective programs that cast a bad light on our sector and will not fly in an era of austerity. Imagine all the babies that will get thrown out with the bathwater if our sector cannot offer evidence that our work matters. We must mobilize a sector-wide leap of reason. If not now, when?
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C hapter 5
Back in the 1980s, an authority in the field of change management shared his view that dramatic personal change doesnt happen until what you had stops or is taken away. The death of a loved one, a serious illness or health scare, job loss, divorce, or financial ruineach of these is the sort of turning point he had in mind. The social sector is in for a similar jolt over the next decade. We can respond with infighting, robbing Peter to pay Paul, or continuing our incremental efforts to be better. Or we can respond with greater discipline, unity, and focus on making a quantum change in the effectiveness and impact of our entire sector. In this chapter, I will draw from the insights of key thought partners who believe deeply in the necessity of making a quantum change. Borrowing from their brainpower, I offer the beginnings of a brainstorm on one of the trajectories for sector-wide actions that could allow us to find the opportunity in crisis. The ideas I will offer are not exhaustive. They are at best a collage of ideas to begin the conversation, stimulate more thought, and provoke rich debate. I hope they show that there are concrete, tangible actions catalytic leaders could take to help get this sector over the big hurdles that have blocked widespread adoption of outcomes thinking and practice.
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is that companies have a direct financial incentive to adopt the standards: Many major purchasers require their suppliers to achieve certification so they can ensure that suppliers have management systems in place for delivering what they promise. And theres another carrot for companies to adopt the standards: Research suggests that companies get a strong return on their investment in ISO 9001 certification. On average, those that receive certification do better financially and operationally than peers of similar size without certification. The social sector would greatly benefit from a similar voluntary program of management standards, based on the core principles of managing to outcomes. If the management standards were thoughtfully developed and allowed for differences among nonprofits of different purposes, sizes, and budgets, these standards could proliferate throughout the social sector. Over time, public and private funders would most likely come to require their grantees to achieve certification, just as major corporate purchasers have done with their suppliers. Enlightened funders would provide funding for nonprofits to go through the certification process and to train staff in how to apply these practicesperhaps leveraging volunteers from corporations or government agencies with ISO standards experience. For funders, there would be great value in knowing that prospective grantees adhere to outcomes-based management practices that give them a good chance at producing real impact. The value would be just as high, or perhaps higher, for the nonprofits themselves. Achieving certification would not only help nonprofits to accomplish more; it would also help nonprofits attract higher levels of funding, talent, and overall support.
service-level agreements in place, for example. By the terms of the agreement, we had to meet clearly stated performance criteria in order for us to receive full payment for our services. Its more challenging to enter into this type of agreement in the social sector, owing in part to the lack of systems for collecting and documenting performance metrics. But it can be done. At VPP we enter into agreements with our nonprofit investment partners that lay out mutually agreed-upon goals for organizational development actions, outputs, and outcomes. An after-school tutoring programs goals included (a) goals for strengthening the organization (actions), (b) goals for increasing the number of students receiving tutoring (outputs), and (c) goals for improving students reading proficiency (outcomes). When done right, goals like these become a nonprofits North Star. We review our investment partners progress against these goals on an annual basis. We are not overly rigid in these reviews; we recognize that the best-laid plans often go awry for reasons not within the nonprofits control. But these reviews create common expectations, and they have a significant impact on the goals, structure, and size of our investments in subsequent years. VPP has good company in this type of funding. The Edna McConnell Clark Foundation, Robin Hood, New Profit, New Schools Ventures Fund, REDF, and other private funders tie their investments to performance criteria. In this era of government scarcity, an increasing number of public funders are sure to adopt similar practices. The Urban Institutes Making Results-Based Government Work presents a comprehensive study for introducing performance management into all facets of state government to link monetary rewards/penalties to achievement of the desired outcomes. At the federal level, President Obama has included $100 million in his 2012 budget proposal to test Social Impact Bonds, a concept imported from Great Britain. The plan uses private, profit-motivated investment money to fund public services up-front, says Fast Company contributor Alex Goldmark. The government only pays if the services deliver as promised, and only out
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of government cost savings. No taxpayer money wasted on failed programs in this plan. Performance-based funding can be as fancy as Social Impact Bonds or as basic as a relatively modest grant my family and I made to a school in Ohio several years ago. To develop the grant agreement, I worked with the school administrators to establish clarity on the results the school was after; what they planned to do (their logic model); and what specific criteria we would use to determine mutually whether they were making progress and whether continued funding was warranted. The agreement, just three pages in length, made it easy for both parties to align expectations.
joining forces to build the Outcomes and Effective Practices Portal (OEPP), which will become available on the web in late 2011. Currently in beta testing, OEPP provides nonprofits in the human services field a set of comprehensive resources on program outcomes, effective practices, performance indicators, and tools for gauging performance. Ultimately,OEPP will help leaders answer critical questions like these: (a) What outcomes should I expect from my program? (b) How can I measure these outcomes in a valid but not overly onerous way? (c) What are the key components of my program that I should manage and track on a day-to-day basis to give it the best chance of achieving its intended outcomes?
}} McKinsey & Companys Social Sector Office has an impressive
The site includes tools, best practices, lessons learned, profiles, interviews, landscape analyses, and historical perspectives on outcomes assessment.
}} The Annie E. Casey Foundations National Survey Indicators
Database (tarc.aecf.org/initiatives/mc/mcid/) is designed to help users find survey questions, measures, and instruments that can contribute to meaningful data-collection activities. Over time, these and other initiatives to build and disseminate knowledge will have to broaden to cover the entire landscape of social-sector programs. And they will have to get increasingly sophisticated about providing insights tailored to specific organizations at specific points in their development. After all, managing to outcomes never lends itself to a cookie-cutter, one-size-fits-all solution, as a notable leader in the social sector sagely cautions: We cant treat all nonprofits as if they are the same, simply because they fall within the same IRS category. For instance, does managing to outcomes apply in the same way for a human services organization with a $75 million budget, of which 90 percent or more of its revenue comes from public sector contracts; a high school serving six hundred students with a $6 million budget, of which 80 percent is funded from tuition and 20 percent by charitable giving; and a community arts organization with a budget of $600,000 with more than 70 percent of its funding from private donations? . . . Not only are thethree organizations vastly different in their strategic responsibilities as well as their governing responsibilities; they are also widely different with respect to their operational capacities and staffing needs.
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In addition, I would also hope to see new low-cost, high-value networks and initiatives emerge. For example:
}} An Evidence and Outcomes Research Network. This expert
network would coalesce research expertise from the likes of Child Trends, Hunter Consulting, Public/Private Ventures, and other nonprofits, academic research centers, and research groups from federal labs and agencies. The network would be organized around major areas like disease management, early-childhood development, and workforce development. It would conduct or commission researchwhich would be peer-reviewedto provide a more objective and systematic assessment of what works, how, and how well. (The Coalition for Evidence-Based Policy, which works to inform federal policy, is already showing the value of having a good clearinghouse of information on social programs and interventions that have the strongest evidence of effectiveness.)
}} A Managing-to-Outcomes Support Network. This net-
work would be a professional learning community that would enhance idea exchanges among practitioners, researchers, academics, and consultants. In addition to the informal learning that such networks make possible, they can help create structured services such as webinars, videocasts, and wikis. The managing-to-outcomes support network could use these services to systematically advance understanding of the intricacies of transitioning to a culture of outcomes assessment.
}} Managing-to-Outcomes Boot Camps. These boot camps
would bring together small groups of nonprofit and funder executives for intensive three- to five-day workshops that would help them get started on the path toward managing to outcomes.
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would allow nonprofit leaders and senior staff to work within and learn from nonprofits with a well-established culture and systems for managing to outcomes.
}} Certified Roster of Consultants. A consultant roster would
provide the names of individuals and organizations that are highly qualified to assist leaders who want to take the leap of reason or have already taken the leap and need support and guidance to be even more effective.
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and community colleges. These leaders realized that fixing one point on the educational continuumsuch as better after-school programswouldnt make much difference unless all parts of the continuum improved at the same time, Kania and Kramer report. Their ambitious mission became to coordinate improvements at every stage of a young persons life. In the National Capital Region, youthCONNECT, a new publicprivate partnership led by VPP and supported, in part, by the Social Innovation Fund, has brought together six nonprofits into an outcomes-driven network to help guide young people aged fourteen to twenty-four to a successful adulthood. Taking this concept to scale on a national level is Achieving the Dream: Community Colleges Count, a coalition of 130 community colleges representing 1.6 million students. The coalition is helping community colleges develop a sharper outcomes orientation by focusing all its members on tracking data to measure and improve student persistence and completion, which traditionally have been shockingly low, especially among minority and low-income students. Achieving the Dream teaches colleges how to use data to develop a culture of evidence, and it encourages courageous conversations about what the evidence reveals about student achievement. These and other existing initiatives are the first small steps up a long, steep hill. It is hard enough for a single organization to build a performance culture. It will be far, far harder to build a network of organizations, each committed to building a performance culture and all animated by a shared commitment to outcomes-driven collaboration. But this is a hill we have to climb, for only such collaborations can achieve the social gains that we so urgently need.
performance datanot just operational and financial dataavailable on the nonprofits they profile. I am not one who believes that more information automatically translates into better donor decisions. The truth is that giving is fiercely personal, often driven more by loyalty and emotion than by evidence. Having said this, I do believe that our fiscal crisis will force greater decision-making rigor on governments, with a powerful spillover effect for private funders. In a changing world in which funders increasingly ask to see outcomes and impact information, the nonprofits that voluntarily share it would have a strong comparative advantage. The organizations that were not inclined to provide it would stand out for their lack of an outcomes culture and transparency. Voluntary reporting of outcomes information need not be highly sophisticated to be valuable. For example, nonprofits could provide the following:
}} Brief descriptions of their intended outcomes, their meth-
odology for producing these outcomes, and an explanation of the length of time it might take to see results (given that, realistically speaking, few outcomes can be tied to an annual reporting schedule)
}} The number of individuals they served for whom the outcomes
were achieved as well as the number for which progress toward outcomes was made (moving the sector away from the nearly useless but widely accepted norm of people touched)
}} And, ideally, the estimated average cost to produce the
intended outcomes. An advisory board of distinguished experts could provide stewardship and help establish credibility for this reporting. A facilitated group of peer reviewers could assess the filings, reject those that are
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inadequate, and offer advice to those who pass and those who fail the review. Such an effort could easily be included as part of the socialsector ISO certification I sketched earlier.
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We Like Difficult
It is not clear to me whether the ideas Ive laid out in this chapter have real merit. But I do know this: We must tap the collective brainpower of the social sector to get great ideas on the table now, ahead of the budget axe. Addressing the fiscal challenge will not be easy. But that is no excuse for us to bury our heads in the sand. A few years ago, Melinda Gates spoke before the Council on Foundations and shared a lovely, telling anecdote. She once overheard her youngest daughter, Phoebe, struggling to tie her shoes and saying to herself, This is difficult. But I like difficult. Melinda and her husband like difficult as well. Difficult is how they have chosen to give meaning to their lives. Chuck Feeney is another remarkable philanthropist who likes difficult. After transferring virtually all of his personal and family assets to the Atlantic Foundation, he invested strategically and provided sterling moral leadership to overthrow a century of accepted dogma in favor of a new philosophy called giving while living. Today, giving while living is no longer just a clever slogan or an outlier concept. It has influenced and inspired a whole generation of donors, including Melinda and Bill Gates. I believe managing to outcomesan overarching ethic of rigorously pursuing meaningful, measurable good for those we serve can and must become a viral concept in the social sector. After years of incremental gains, our sector is more than ready for a quantum leap. Its time to dramatically increase our collective impact precisely when were needed the most. I qualified for AARP membership a long time ago, so I dont have forever to wait. And, much more important, neither do the hundreds of millions of people around the globe who need us to take on the difficult, even the impossible, and do it with a commitment to be as effective as we possibly can be.
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Take-Homes in Tweets
The social sector is in for a big jolt. We must respond by making a quantum change in the effectiveness and impact of our entire sector. We must help nonprofits and funders alike understand the value proposition for managing to outcomesthrough data and stories. We could start a prestigious award, perhaps linked to the Drucker legacy, to build awareness of the importance of managing to outcomes. We could establish a voluntary program of management certification, based on the successful ISO 9001 quality standards. We could encourage various kinds of performance-based funding that would explicitly link payments to the achievement of outcomes. We could support the development of common frameworks within social-sector fields to create efficiencies and greater collective impact. We dont need to wait for the full force of the fiscal storm to hit before we open our eyes to the truth of whats on the way. The time to dramatically increase our collective impact is now, when were needed the most.
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To bring home and make actionable the key points in this monograph, I offer below a framework that you can use to evolve to the practice of managing to outcomes. This framework is far from perfect, as VPPs investment partners made clear during a wonderfully open and candid discussion we hosted. But it reflects many years of implementing management systems in the private sector and more than a decade of experience in the nonprofit sector to understand whats working, assess performance, and focus on outcomes. Its also informed by a wealth of views from people smarter than I, who have been kind enough to share their thinking over the years and who provided wonderful feedback in response to early versions of this monograph. As you will see, my starting premise is that it takes a bold spark to ignite outcomes and performance thinking. This spark should emanate from the board as well as the organizations leader, because it is the boards responsibility to ensure that the organization is clear on what change it is focused on creating and also to ensure that the organization is actually delivering on this core purpose. But, of course, reality is rarely neat and orderly. It may be that a visionary executive or managereither one who is new to the organization or one who has been with the organization for yearssteps forward against all the odds and naysayers and takes responsibility for driving toward a greater outcomes focus.
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Triggers
Performance Culture
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Let me say this as clearly as I can to nonprofits and funders alike: The challenge of managing to outcomes has little to do with systems, processes, or technology. The real challenge is that organizations cannot hope to manage to outcomes unless they have in place an engaged board; leadership with conviction; clarity of purpose; and a supportive performance culture.
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Triggers
Strong Board Stewardship
}} Does your board know what the organization does to produce posi-
tive results, how the organization actually delivers its services, and how it is run?
}} Does your board see governance and stewardship as leadership,
where board members and executives work together to ensure the success of the organization, or is the board primarily focused on fundraising?
}} Does your board accept responsibility for overseeing the organi-
zations quality and ensure that what you do benefits those you serve in material, measurable, and sustainable ways?
My Core Assumptions
The board of directors must take every step necessary to ensure that the organization has clarity of purpose, the right leadership in place, and a performance culture. It must also have a deep understanding of those the organization serves and the outcomes it aims to achieve. It must have the wherewithal to codify and assess what it does, course-correct, and improve. When it comes to managing to outcomes, the buck stops with the executive director. But when it comes to ensuring that the executive director manages to the right outcomes, the buck ultimately stops with the board.
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performance by managing to outcomes? Are there others on your senior leadership team who share this commitment?
}} Are the individuals who share a commitment to managing to
outcomes the type who get things done and have the stature within the organization to influence others?
My Core Assumptions
Evolving your organization to manage to outcomes requires, for most nonprofits, a fundamental change in mindset and behavior. This bold change doesnt come from an endless series of planning sessions, outsourcing the task to consultants, or delegating it to be implemented. It is driven by visionary leaders who are willing and able to disrupt the old way of working and who often show the same obsessive tendencies you see in successful private-sector entrepreneurs. These leaders win over early adopters and understand how to introduce change in manageable doses. Ideally, as the lead executive, you are the person who provides this life force.
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Performance Culture
}} Are you confident that the right people are in the right posi-
tions? If not, do you have a plan and the conviction to make necessary changes?
}} Has everyonestaff, managers, executive team, and board
fully bought into the reality that, when all is said and done, nothing matters if your organizations beneficiaries have not gained materially, measurably, and sustainably from your products or services?
}} Do all members of your organization know in reasonably clear
to solicit and amplify their best thinking, provide constructive feedback, and candidly but respectfully critique their weaknesses?
My Core Assumptions
Making the commitment to be an outcomes-focused organization is a quantum step, and leadership has to want to do it. Youll need people on your staff who will embrace the learning process and make this transformation happen. Measurement and systems take honed skills to be done rightthis is not an opinion, but a demonstrated factso youll need to invest in developing your staff. Organizations that develop the internal capacity to engage and educate management and staff on the disciplined use of information get great returns and continue to improve over time. Those that dont develop this capacity wind up with an ineffective operation and, eventually, an atrophied system. A performance culture makes the difference.
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business to do?
}} Can you state clearly whom you are in business to serve? To
what degree do you serve only the group or set of groups you intended, and to what degree do you serve others?
}} Is your mission so clear and grounded that executives,
managers, and front-line staff members know it; apply it as the litmus test for all decisions and actions; and use it to motivate themselves?
}} What are the guiding principles and/or core beliefs that under-
pin your organizations very existence, and are they instilled and demonstrated throughout your organization?
}} Does your board keep you focused on your mission, guiding
My Core Assumptions
Having been both villain and victim when it comes to clarity of purpose, I cannot stress enough the importance of being clear and focused on what you do and expect. Be explicitly clear on purpose, guiding principles, and whom you serve. As my good friend Marc Morgenstern so astutely said, An expectation unarticulated is a disappointment guaranteed. In this case, an intended outcome not articulated and assessed is a disappointment guaranteed!
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your intended beneficiaries through each program and service your organization offers?
}} Can you define, with reasonable specificity, what each of
your programs and services actually does that leads to these outcomes?
}} Can you demonstrate that your programs and services are
informed by insights from those you serve as well as relevant research and/or the proven practices of others in the field?
My Core Assumptions
An excerpt from Daniel and the Rhinoceros, which David Hunter wrote when he was director of assessment at the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation, captures my assumptions much better than I can: The [Edna McConnell Clark] Foundation has learned that grantees benefit from consultations provided in the area of evaluation, in which they are assisted in specifying the group(s) they seek to serve, clarifying outcome objectives for programs participants, describing program elements through which they intend to help participants achieve targeted outcomes, and identifying the human, material, organizational, and fiscal resources needed to deliver systems as intended. . . . This amounts to developing a theory of changea formal rendering of the approach adopted by the organization to change something about the world . . . and becomes the guide whereby the organization structures its daily activities to achieve its strategic goals and objectives. It also provides the framework within which each organization can examine what works and what does not work within its own programming and manage performance for continuous improvement.
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tion, however basic, to guide your programmatic and operational decisions and execution? In other words, is there a base upon which to build?
}} Can you show tangible examples of how you use information in
the daily course of operation? For example, do you have a welldefined budget with regular expense-to-budget reporting? Do you engage in regular collection and reporting of basic operational data (e.g., a school might track the number of applications, enrollment, student turnover, faculty turnover and churn within the year)?
}} Do people at each level buy in to the importance and utility
My Core Assumptions
The aphorism You can lead a horse to water, but you cant make it drink is especially applicable to measurement, use of data, and managing to outcomes. All the flashy systems, aesthetics, and favorable circumstances wont make someone do something he or she doesnt want to do. At the outset, dont make the mistake of mandating or imposing. Instead, seek out and work with those who have a demonstrated predisposition to use information to do what they do betteror who at least are not set against it. Past behaviors are reasonable predictors of staff members affinity for a performance-management approach. Orchestrate it so that front-line staff have early victories when working with data, and then highlight these victories so that the whole staff sees how data can help them do their jobs better. As the value becomes clearer, others will come on board.
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mine if you are doing the right things to eventually achieve the outcomes you intend for those you serve?
}} Are the people at various levels of your organization intimately
involved in identifying the information that they need to do their jobs and that you need to guide your efforts?
My Core Assumptions
Think of each outcome as what you have to manage toward. Ask what you need to know that will tell you when the outcome has been achieved and what leading indicators inform you that you are on track to get there. Most strong organizations track more than two or three measures, but they prioritize the top two or three to stay focused on what really matters. PLEASE dont make the cardinal sin of information designbasing the definition of metrics on what you know is available rather than on what you need! Be meticulous and absolutely demanding in scrutinizing each metric so you dont drown in data. Ask why you have selected each one. Could there be better ones? Easier ones that would serve as well? Invest heavily in defining your first set of metrics while also recognizing that this will be a continuous learning process and that the metrics and your ability to use them will evolve over time.
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mindset, process, and system vested in a senior member of the leadership team who has a title such as Chief/Head of Mission Effectiveness?
}} Have you encapsulated and codified the metrics and indicators
into an organized system that regularly collects, assimilates, stores, analyzes, and reports on the information and is accessible for inquiry?
}} Is there a professional who truly understands how to read
datathat is, who understands what goes with what, who can see patterns in numbers, who can interpret trends for others?
}} Does the organization understand the importance in investing
in such people?
}} Is the board on board with ensuring sufficient funds are in
trained in how the performance-management system works so they can monitor and manage their own performance and the performance of staff under their scope of responsibility?
}} Do you expecteven demandthat staff and managers apply
relevant information (planning, operational, demographics, etc.) to drive decision making and execution?
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My Core Assumptions
The definition of system is a set of interacting or interdependent entities forming an integrated whole. The inanimate entities of a performance-management system are the raw data, collection processes, information architecture, data store, reports, and user interface. But the leadership and staff bring life to the data and processes through keen judgment and decision making; curiosity and desire for continuous improvement; and the technical knowhow to ensure system integrity and accuracy. No performance-management system is perfect, so the strongest organizations encourage continuous refinement of their systems to make them simpler, more intuitive, more visually appealing, and more beneficial.
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This section provides a directory of articles, reports, books, and tools that amplify key themes of this monograph and will help you take the leap toward greater mission effectiveness. The materials are aligned to the Managing to Outcomes framework we shared on p. 64.
Were proud of this compendium, but we dont claim that it is definitive; the list surely reflects sins of omission and commission on our part. Please help us improve it by visiting the living version at leapofreason.org/compendium. This compendium benefited from the sage advice of Laura Callanan and director emeritus Les Silverman, McKinsey & Company; David Carrier and David Murphey, Child Trends; Michael Connolly, VMware; Matt Forti and Nan Stone, The Bridgespan Group; A. Marc Harrison, James Merlino, and Sarah Sinclair, Cleveland Clinic Foundation; David E. K. Hunter, Hunter Consulting; Fred Miller, The Chatham Group; Amy Main Morgenstern, Main Stream Enterprises; Nancy Osgood, The Osgood Group; and Victoria Vrana, Venture Philanthropy Partners.
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To compile this first version of the compendium, we followed a process we have used with great success over the years:
}} Determine the experts. We focused on identifying the top
experts for each topic rather than attempting to do a laypersons deep dive. Part of our ongoing learning process is to cultivate relationships with smart people who have knowledge and skills that far surpass our own.
}} Ask for help. As long as you dont abuse relationships by mak-
ing too many requests, people generally like to be asked for their input. Our first email went to more than twenty people, our roster of rock stars on these particular topics. The response rate was about 75 percent.
}} Give examples. To help the outside experts understand what
we were looking for, our internal team created a starter set of citations in each category. This helped ensure that we received relevant feedback.
}} Scrub, rinse, and repeat. Were big believers in the itera-
tive process. Over a three-month span, we went back to these highly respected colleagues twice more after our initial ask to further refine the list of resources. Each time the compendium got stronger.
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Each section provides our working definition of the category; Zagatlike introductory comments drawn from our experts assessments; and citations with links to the materials (in short form, to make them easier to type into a browser for those viewing this monograph in hard copy). Links may provide direct access to the resource, a venue for purchasing it, or an interview or article that mentions the resource and provides additional context.
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Overarching Themes
Resources that address how to drive change, improve effectiveness, and achieve greatness
Weve listed six valuable resources in this category. The first three are, in the estimation of our experts, must reads. In the two Good to Great studies, Jim Collins explains that leaders of great organizations must confront brutal facts. Nonprofits without a focus on outcomes may find it impossible to know or understand the importance of their own key brutal facts. In Competing on Analytics, Tom Davenport and Jeanne Harris provide high-profile examples that show how companies are using tools to accelerate innovation, optimize their effectiveness, and identify the true drivers behind their missionswork that we believe has transfer value to the social sector. }} Collins, James C. Good to Great and the Social Sectors: Why Business Thinking Is Not the Answer: A Monograph to Accompany Good to Great. Boulder, CO: J. Collins, 2005 | leapofreason.org/CollinsSocialSector }} Collins, James C. Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the LeapAnd Others Dont. New York: Harperbusiness, 2001 |
leapofreason.org/CollinsGoodtoGreat
}} Davenport, Thomas H., and Jeanne G. Harris. Competing on Analytics: The New Science of Winning. Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2007 | leapofreason.org/Davenport }} Green, Alison, and Jerry Hauser. Managing to Change the World: The Nonprofit Leaders Guide to Getting Results. Washington, DC: Management Center, 2009 | leapofreason.org/Green }} Kotter, J. P. Leading Change: Why Transformation Efforts Fail. Harvard Business Review, March-April 1995 | leapofreason.org/Kotter }} Sheehan, Robert M. Mission Impact: Breakthrough Strategies for Nonprofits. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2010 | leapofreason.org/Sheehan
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Resources that discuss the importance of strong boards, what defines them, and how they function, especially with respect to mission effectiveness and assessment
Our experts gave The New Work of the Nonprofit Board, Mission-Driven Governance, and More Effective Boards: A Detailed Guide the highest rankings. As the authors of More Effective Boards note, Beyond what to do, how the board does its work is equally important. All of the resources in this category can help spark good conversations in your organization. }} Fisman, Raymond, Rakesh Khurana, and Edward Martenson. Mission-Driven Governance. Stanford Social Innovation Review, Summer 2009 | leapofreason.org/Fisman (subscribers only) }} Jansen, Paul, and Andrea Kilpatrick. The Dynamic Nonprofit Board. McKinsey Quarterly, May 2004 | leapofreason.org/Jansen }} More Effective Boards: A Detailed Guide. In Bridgestar: Nonprofit Jobs, Careers, and Boards of Directors. Boston: Bridgespan Group, 2009 |
leapofreason.org/Bridgespan
}} The Source: Twelve Principles of Governance That Power Exceptional Boards. Washington, DC: BoardSource, 2005 |
leapofreason.org/BoardSource
}} Taylor, Barbara E., Richard Chait, and Thomas Holland. The New Work of the Nonprofit Board. Harvard Business Review, September 1996 | leapofreason.org/TaylorChait
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Performance Culture
Resources that discuss the importance of organizational culture and its vital role for organizations seeking to manage to outcomes
McKinsey & Company defines performance culture as the connective tissue that binds together the organization, including shared values and practices, behavior norms, and most important, the organizations orientation towards performance. As many of the resources below illustrate, a performance culture must be developed from within. In SuperCorp, Rosabeth Moss Kanter illustrates how companies use their strong cultures to adapt and innovate; these tenets are equally applicable to nonprofit organizations. Jeffrey Sonnenfelds article in the Harvard Business Review emphasizes the importance of building a highly accountable culture within the board. }} Connors, Roger, and Tom Smith. Change the Culture, Change the Game: The Breakthrough Strategy for Energizing Your Organization and Creating Accountability for Results. New York: Portfolio Penguin, 2011 | leapofreason.org/Connors }} Friedman, Mark. Trying Hard Is Not Good Enough. Bloomington, IN: Trafford Publishing, 2005 | leapofreason.org/Friedman }} Hogan, Cornelius, and David Murphey. Outcomes: Reframing Responsibility for Well-Being: A Report to the Annie E. Casey Foundation. Baltimore: Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2002 | leapofreason.org/Hogan }} Kanter, Rosabeth Moss. SuperCorp: How Vanguard Companies Create Innovation, Profits, Growth, and Social Good. New York: Crown Business, 2009 | leapofreason.org/Kanter }} Schorr, Lisbeth B. Common Purpose: Strengthening Families and Neighborhoods to Rebuild America. New York: Anchor Books, Doubleday, 1997 | leapofreason.org/Schorr }} Sonnenfeld, Jeffrey. What Makes Great Boards Great. Harvard Business Review, September 2002 | leapofreason.org/Sonnenfeld }} Transforming Giants. Harvard Business School Summit, October 2008 | leapofreason.org/HBSSummit
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Resources that provide insights into the leadership qualities that are most valuable for creating organizational change and performance
All three citations below received must-read ratings in our outreach. HBRs 10 Must Reads on Leadership offers insights from a compelling lineup of leadership gurus; its a seminar in a single volume. }} Goleman, Daniel, Peter F. Drucker, John P. Kotter, Ronald A. Heifetz, Donald L. Laurie, Robert Goffee, Gareth Jones, Warren G. Bennis, Robert J. Thomas, Jim Collins, David Rooke, William R. Torbert, William W. George, Peter Sims, Andrew N. McLean, Diana Mayer, Deborah Ancona, Thomas W. Malone, Wanda J. Orlikowski, and Peter M. Senge. HBRs 10 Must Reads on Leadership. Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2010 | leapofreason.org/Goleman }} Heifetz, Ronald, and Marty Linksy. A Survival Guide for Leaders. Harvard Business Review, June 2002 | leapofreason.org/Heifetz }} Taylor, William. Leader of the Future. Fast Company, May 1999 |
leapofreason.org/TaylorLeader
Clarity of Purpose
Resources that focus on why its important to have a clear direction and how to develop such clarity
Any resource by Peter Drucker will get high rankings in most circles. Our colleagues at McKinsey and Bridgespan provide great insights as well. They underscore the value of developing a clarity of focus that reflects the organizations opportunities, core competencies, and commitment. }} Colby, Susan, Nan Stone, and Paul Carttar. Zeroing In on Impact. Stanford Social Innovation Review, Fall 2004 | leapofreason.org/Colby }} Drucker, Peter. Managing the Nonprofit Organization: Principles and Practice. New York: HarperCollins, 1990 |
leapofreason.org/DruckerManaging
}} Kilpatrick, Andrea, and Les Silverman. The Power of Vision. Strategy & Leadership, Spring 2005 | leapofreason.org/Kilpatrick
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Resources that define the concept of a logic model for change or a theory of changethat is, how programs and services come together to achieve the organizations intended outcomes
We believe that all the resources weve listed below deserve must-read status. These individuals and organizations are true authorities and good explainers. }} Brest, Paul. The Power of Theories of Change. Stanford Social Innovation Review, Spring 2010 | leapofreason.org/BrestTheoriesofChange }} Child Trends. Child Trends Evaluation Resources. |
leapofreason.org/ChildTrendsEvaluation
}} Child Trends. LINKS (Lifecourse Interventions to Nurture Kids Successfully). | leapofreason.org/ChildTrendsLINKS }} Hunter, David E. K. Using a Theory of Change Approach to Build Organizational Strength, Capacity and Sustainability with Not-for-Profit Organizations in the Human Services Sector. Evaluation and Program Planning, May 2006 |
leapofreason.org/HunterTheoryofChange
}} W. K. Kellogg Foundation. Logic Model Development Guide. Battle Creek, MI: W. K. Kellogg Foundation, 2004. | leapofreason.org/Kellogg }} Mapping Change: Using a Theory of Change to Guide Planning and Evaluation. GrantCraft, a project of the Foundation Center and the European Foundation Centre | leapofreason.org/GrantCraft
Resources that identify traits and behaviors that reveal whether or not leaders are comfortable using data to guide key organizational decisions
We had a difficult time coming up with suggestions for this section; perhaps its one of those gray areas requiring more art than science. Fortunately, David Hunter provided one article to get you started, and we hope that readers will be able to help flesh out this section in the coming months. }} Hunter, David E. K. Daniel and the Rhinoceros. Evaluation and Program Planning, May 2006 | leapofreason.org/HunterRhinoceros
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Resources that put flesh on the terms metrics, indicators, outcomes, and other key concepts that underlie effective measurement
One colleague described Finding Out What Matters for Youth as a model that uses data to begin to unpack the black box between activities and outcomes, including questions of dosage. One other top read in this category is Positive Indicators of Child Well-Being, which is viewed as one of the definitive sources of metrics and indicators in the field of child development. }} Gambone, Michelle, Adena Klem, and James Connell. Finding Out What Matters for Youth: Testing Key Links in a Community Action Framework for Youth Development. Hamilton, NJ: Youth Development Strategies, 2002 | leapofreason.org/Gambone }} Lippman, Laura, Kristin Anderson Moore, and Hugh McIntosh. Positive Indicators of Child Well-Being: A Conceptual Framework, Measures and Methodological Issues. Innocenti Working Paper, October 2009 | leapofreason.org/Lippman }} National Institute on Drug Abuse. Promise Neighborhoods Research Consortium: What Works. Promise Neighborhoods Research Consortium | leapofreason.org/NIDA }} Sawhill, John, and David Williamson. Measuring What Matters in Nonprofits. McKinsey Quarterly, May 2001 | leapofreason.org/Sawhill }} Terzian, Mary, Kristin Anderson Moore, Lisa Williams-Taylor, and Hoan Nguyen. Online Resources for Identifying Evidence-Based, Out-of-School Time Programs: A Users Guide. Child Trends Research Briefs | leapofreason.org/Terzian }} Urban Institute, Child Trends, and Social Solutions. Outcomes and Effective Practices Portal. Forthcoming Winter 2011 |
leapofreason.org/OEPP
}} Wheatley, Margaret, and Myron Kellner-Rogers. What Do We Measure and Why? Questions about the Uses of Measurement. Journal for Strategic Performance Measurement, June 1999 |
leapofreason.org/Wheatley
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Resources that discuss whats needed to mentally prepare for, establish, and use performance-management systems
Howard Dresners work was recommended by the Cleveland Clinic Foundation group as a very good source. While it is written as a guide for private-sector organizations, there is good transfer value for nonprofits. In Performance Management and Evaluation: Whats the Difference? Child Trends scholars Karen Walker and Kristin Moore discuss the similarities and the differences between performance management and evaluation, the purposes of collecting information, the timing of data collection, the people primarily responsible for the investigation, and how benchmarks are derived and used. Its a succinct and helpful explanation of concepts often misunderstood. }} Dresner, Howard. The Performance Management Revolution: Business Results Through Insight and Action. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2008 |
leapofreason.org/DresnerRevolution
}} Hatry, Harry P. Performance Measurement: Getting Results, Second Edition. Washington, DC: Urban Institute Press, 2006 |
leapofreason.org/Hatry
}} Howson, Cindi. Successful Business Intelligence: Secrets to Making BI a Killer App. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2008 | leapofreason.org/Howson }} ICMA (International City/County Management Association). ICMA Performance Measurement KnowledgeNetwork. |
leapofreason.org/ICMA
}} Liner, Blaine, Harry P. Hatry, Elisa Vinson, Ryan Allen, Pat Dusenbury, Scott Bryant, and Ron Snell. Making Results-Based State Government Work. Washington, DC: Urban Institute, 2001 | leapofreason.org/Liner }} Miles, Marty, Sheila Maguire, Stacy Woodruff-Bolte, and Carol Clymer. Putting Data to Work: Interim Recommendations from the Benchmarking Project. Philadelphia: Public/Private Ventures, 2010 |
leapofreason.org/Miles
}} Penna, Robert M. The Nonprofit Outcomes Toolbox: A Complete Guide to Program Effectiveness, Performance Measurement, and Results. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2011 | leapofreason.org/Penna
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Compendium of Top Readings for Mission Effectiveness }} Taylor, James, and Neil Raden. Smart (Enough) Systems: How to Deliver Competitive Advantage by Automating Hidden Decisions. Harlow, England: Prentice Hall, 2007 | leapofreason.org/TaylorRaden }} United Way of America. Measuring Program Outcomes: A Practical Approach. Alexandria, VA: United Way of America, 1996 |
leapofreason.org/UnitedWay
}} Walker, Karen E., and Kristin Anderson Moore. Performance Management and Evaluation: Whats the Difference? Child Trends, January 2011 | leapofreason.org/Walker }} Winkler, Mary K., Brett Theodos, and Michel Gross. Evaluation Matters: Lessons from Youth-Serving Organizations. Washington, DC: Urban Institute, 2009 | leapofreason.org/Winkler }} Wolk, Andrew, Anand Dholakia, and Kelley Kreitz. Building a Performance Measurement System: Using Data to Accelerate Social Impact. Cambridge, MA: Root Cause, 2009 | leapofreason.org/Wolk
Resources that present methods, systems, and models to prepare for and ingrain managing to outcomes
We believe that tools, systems, and methods come into play as a result of your strategic direction rather than in place of it, but we recognize that leaders need frameworks to adapt. Here are two tools that may assist your efforts. The Center for Effective Philanthropy helps funders gauge their performance relative to peer foundations. The Organizational Capacity Assessment Tool developed by McKinsey & Company for VPP has been cited in more than twenty books and college courses, and more than seventy organizations have requested permission to modify or replicate the tool, post it on their websites,or distribute it totheir own grantees. }} Center for Effective Philanthropy Assessment Tools. Center for Effective Philanthropy | leapofreason.org/CEPTools }} Organizational Capacity Assessment Tool (OCAT). Effective Capacity Building in Nonprofits. Washington, DC: Venture Philanthropy Partners, prepared by McKinsey & Company, 2001 |
leapofreason.org/OCAT
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Resources that present a compelling case for managing to outcomes, which can be very helpful for sparking conversations within boards and leadership teams
Organizations need well-reasoned arguments from credible sources to persuade stakeholders that managing to outcomes can lead to greater mission effectiveness. All of the resources below can help. }} Bradach, Jeffrey, Thomas Tierney, and Nan Stone. Delivering on the Promise of Nonprofits. Harvard Business Review, December 2008 |
leapofreason.org/Bradach
}} Drucker, Peter F. What Is the Bottom Line When There Is No Bottom Line? In Managing the Non-Profit Organization: Practices and Principles: Including Interviews with Frances Hesselbein [et al.]. New York: HarperCollins, 1990. 107-112 | leapofreason.org/DruckerBottomLine }} Neuhoff, Alex, and Bob Searle. More Bang for the Buck. Stanford Social Innovation Review, Spring 2008 | leapofreason.org/Neuhoff }} Urban Institute and Center for What Works. Outcome Indicators Project. | leapofreason.org/UrbanInstitute
}} Heath, Chip, and Dan Heath. Switch: How to Change Things When Change Is Hard. New York: Broadway Books, 2010 |
leapofreason.org/Heath
}} Howard, Don, and Susan Colby. Great Valley Center: A Case Study in Measuring for Mission. Boston: Bridgespan, 2003 |
leapofreason.org/Howard
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Resources that provide context, additional insights, and considerations that may be of help to those transitioning to managing to outcomes
In the view of our experts, these resources below all provide great value and are relevant to managing to outcomes. Weve grouped them here because they didnt fit neatly into any of our other categories. }} Brest, Paul, Hal Harvey, and Kelvin Low. Calculated Impact. Stanford Social Innovation Review, Winter 2009 | leapofreason.org/BrestHarvey (subscribers only) }} Council of State Governments. States Perform. |
leapofreason.org/CouncilStateGovernments
}} Dresner, Howard. Profiles in Performance: Business Intelligence Journeys and the Roadmap for Change. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2010 | leapofreason.org/DresnerProfiles }} Gawande, Atul. The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right. New York: Metropolitan Books, 2010 | leapofreason.org/Gawande }} Kania, John, and Mark Kramer. Collective Impact. Stanford Social Innovation Review, Winter 2011 | leapofreason.org/Kania }} Keystone Guides for Impact Planning, Learning, and Assessment. London: Keystone Accountability for Social Change, 2009 |
leapofreason.org/Keystone
}} Kramer, Mark, Marcie Parkhurst, and Lalitha Vaidyanathan. Breakthroughs in Shared Measurement and Social Impact. Boston: FSG Social Impact Advisors, 2009 | leapofreason.org/Kramer }} Miller, Clara. The Four Horsemen of the Nonprofit Financial Apocalypse. Nonprofit Quarterly, March 2010 | leapofreason.org/Miller }} New Approaches to Evaluating Community Initiatives. Washington, DC: Aspen Institute, 1995 | leapofreason.org/AspenInstitute }} Priorities for a New Decade: Making (More) Social Programs Work (Better). Philadelphia: Public/Private Ventures, 2011 | leapofreason. org/PPV
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leapofreason.org/Silverstein
}} Stid, Daniel, and Jeffrey Bradach. Strongly Led, Under-Managed: How Can Visionary Nonprofits Make the Critical Transition to Stronger Management? Bridgespan Group, August 2008 |
leapofreason.org/Stid
}} Tierney, Thomas J., and Joel L. Fleishman. Give Smart: Philanthropy That Gets Results. New York: PublicAffairs, March 2011 |
leapofreason.org/TierneyFleishman
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Most nonprofits view collecting information on outcomes for their clients as a daunting task, a waste of resources, or both. However, the process of data collection and outcomes measurement is a critical activity for any nonprofit that seeks to improve the quality of services it provides. Without knowing what they do well and what needs to be improved, nonprofits can end up providing the same services for years without ever really knowing if they could be doing something different that would lead to greater benefits for the population they are serving. For a nonprofit to provide the best services possible to its clients, it must measure its outcomes. This is easier said than done; frequently the entire culture of the organization must change to become more accepting of the regular collection of outcomes. Fortunately, there are steps that a nonprofit can take to make this culture change more feasible and more lasting.
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Far too often, nonprofits think of data collection and evaluation as a chore that has to be done to satisfy funding organizations. This line of reasoning, unfortunately, drives nonprofits to collect only whats required by funders in the short term, rather than information that would allow the organization to determine how to improve services for clients over time. To avoid this trap, a nonprofits leadership must change the conversation entirely. Leaders must recognize and then clearly communicate that outcomes measurement is not about simply counting things or gathering information. And it is not about satisfying funders. It is an internal effort aimed at figuring out what works and what doesnt, so that the organization can provide the best possible services to its clients. This approach usually resonates with nonprofit staff, nearly all of whom share a deep commitment to making a difference for those who need assistance.
our programming, a greater number of participants believed that domestic violence is an appropriate expression of love between partners, that domestic violence is an acceptable part of the Latino culture, and that there is no safe way to leave a violent partner. In a very real sense, our program caused harm to our participants, despite the best of intentions. Fortunately, because LAYC was collecting information on the participants attitudes before and after the program, we were able to make important changes to this program before starting with the next group of participants. In the original domestic violence classes we had provided the instruction in a mixed-gender environment. After seeing the negative results, we consulted with domestic violence experts and then split the classes into separate classrooms for men and women so that each could feel more comfortable expressing their feelings. This change, along with others, brought positive, statistically significant changes in attitude in every single cohort.
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In this way, staff can change their instructional patterns to match the needs of residents. By providing staff with information to help them refine and adjust their work, an organization can empower staff to continually improve the quality of services they provide to clients. Data can be a tool to allow staff to serve their clients better, rather than a burden to overcome. This ultimately is how the culture change can be maintained over time.
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Along with many others who work in the nonprofit sector, I believe that most claims about nonprofit organizations ability to deliver results as promised are unsupported by credible evidence. Indeed, I think it is fair to say that the sector suffers generally from a pervasive case of unjustifiable optimismby which I mean over-claiming nonprofits effectiveness while under-measuring their performance. Yet, paradoxically, many nonprofits in fact are over-measuring. They are, as has been noted by many observers, suffocating under the crushing weight of datadata they collect frantically, often resentfully, and use mostly to satisfy their diverse funders . . . but for little else. So, to ask the famous question, what is to be done? Is there a way for nonprofit organizations to navigate between the serpentine Scylla of unsupportable optimism and the engulfing Charybdis of mindnumbing over-measurement? Yes there is. In a nutshell, the answer is to develop robust theories of change that serve as blueprints for achieving specific results in well-defined domainsthat is, to make their strategic visions operational.
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of an organization and the services it delivers in order to help the population(s) it targets achieve key, socially meaningful outcomes. Its worth emphasizing that any theory of change can be useful only if it is tailored to serve a clear purpose. For example, if the object is to support the design, implementation, and evaluation of a new service program (say preventing drug and alcohol abuse among teenagers), a solid theory of change most likely will focus narrowly on issues of target population, program/service elements, dosage and duration of service utilization, and outcomes. But if the organization is farther along and the purpose is to help it to deliver current programming more broadly and sustainably, then a useful theory of change will need to expand its scope: It will need to address not only program issues, but also organizational and financial matters. I have developed a four-day approach to helping nonprofits develop theories of change tailored to their specific ambitions and needs. I insist on working with vertically integrated teams consisting of representation from the board, executive leadership, mid-level management, and a sampling of front-line staff. In these workshops we review in great detail the organizations mission; goals; objectives; target population; targeted outcomes; key indicators for managing performance and assessing success; organizational capacities; the degree of alignment among its constituent parts (e.g., multiple programs, multiple sites); data gathering and use at all levels of the organization to manage performance; and systematic efforts to learn from performance and understand whether the organizations efforts are achieving outcomes as intended. I work to help the group achieve consensus on all these matters, and where this is not possible, to have the executive director commit to a fully transparent process for making an executive decision. When successful, these workshops have two results: (a) an output, consisting of a very detailed blueprint that shows not only each step the organization will be taking to achieve alignment with its mission but also each step it will take to manage at high levels of performance, effectiveness, and efficiency; and (b) an outcome, in that the
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organization moves to a new level of clarity about its mission; high transparency regarding its operations; substantial alignment among its various operational units behind the achievement of its mission, goals, and objectives; a deeper and more realistic understanding of its resource needs; a new view of accountability for results; and a highly focused, streamlined approach to gathering and using performance data to support the achievement of success. For example:
}} Our Piece of the Pie (Hartford, CT) realized that its legacy pro-
gram of elderly services and its open-enrollment daycare center bore no relation to its mission to help inner-city, low-income young people successfully transition to adulthood. It decided to limit daycare access to teenage mothers and redesigned elderly services as a social enterprise providing stipends and workreadiness trainingboth dedicated to helping young people in its case-management program.
}} Juma Ventures (San Francisco, now replicating in San Diego)
decided to pull back its early growth efforts in order to deepen its target population to include first- and second-year (lowincome) high school students (because starting, as it had, with third-year students could not provide sufficient program dosage and duration to assure the attainment of its educational and work-related outcomes) and implement intensive casemanagement services.
}} Congreso de Latinos Unidos (Philadelphia) serves individuals
and families living mostly in the citys North End and other predominantly Latino neighborhoods. In the theory-of-change workshops, Congreso consolidated some sixty semi-autonomous, contract-driven programs with an aggregate of several hundred outcomes into a core case-management program with
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three key outcomes (health, education, and employment). The old programs became specialized services; clients develop individualized service plans and pathways through the system as their individual needs dictate. In other words, Congreso moved from being program-centric to being client-centric.
}} Summer Search (a national organization headquartered in San
Francisco) significantly clarified its target population; revised its ways of talking and working with teens; and abandoned some legacy practices that could not survive rigorous scrutiny.
}} The Center for Employment Opportunities (New York, NY, and
now replicating upstate) helps prisoners transition into employment upon their release. As part of developing its theory of change, the organization studied its participants and found that its success with young adults (age 1824) was much lower than with adultsand as a result built youth development practices into its programming for its younger clientsthatincreased its effectiveness with them. A recent, rigorous evaluation has shown that the organization significantly reduces recidivism.
}} Roca (Chelsea and now also Springfield, MA) scaled back its
service capacity for several years to rethink and codify its use of transformational relationships and allocate its resources more effectively to help gang- and street-involved young adults leave violence behind and gain sustained employment. While it is essential that nonprofits develop theories of change, this is just the first step. To become high performing, they must implement (build) what is called for in the blueprint. In general, it takes anywhere from three to six years. In the cases mentioned above, the organizations went on to reconsider board responsibilities; rethink fundraising strategies and goals; redesign organizational structures; deepen management capacities; introduce new HR systems with clear accountability
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for results; and design and implement performance-management data systems that capture who gets served, the delivery of all elements of programming as codified, monitoring of service quality, appropriate service utilization, and the achievement of outcomes.
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Conclusion
Bring up performance management with many nonprofit leaders and youve got a good chance of watching their eyes glaze over or widen with fear and loathing. Performance management conjures up the worst dehumanizing practices of the corporate sector and reeks of data gathering run amok. But this need not be the case. If a nonprofit really knows what it is doing and whyif it has a theory of change that is meaningful (to key stakeholders), plausible (in that it makes sense to stakeholders and key experts), doable (within the resources and capacities of the organization and, perhaps, its strategic partners), assessable (with measurable indicators of progress and success), and monitorable (with well-articulated implementation and performance standards), then designing simple, useful performance metrics really isnt forbiddingly hard, and managing to outcomes can be a reality. Those who depend on nonprofits in order to overcome structural and individual obstacles and to improve their lives and prospects deserve no less.
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I have implemented performance-management systems in both forprofit and nonprofit settings. As counterintuitive as this sounds, Im convinced that most nonprofits are just as well suited to manage to outcomes as their for-profit counterparts. Why ? The simple answer is that nonprofits are highly mission-driven. Most nonprofits attract people who have self-selected based on the mission of the organization. As a result, the nonprofit professionals passions and interests usually align directly with their organizations reason for existence. Such an alignment gives these professionals intrinsic motivation. (Daniel H. Pink explores this concept beautifully in his book Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us.) The assumption underlying the typical performance-management system in the for-profit world is the need for extrinsic motivators. If I can reward or reprimand you based on the outcomes, the team will be aligned around the goals we are trying to achieve. This is not to say that people who work in the private sector dont love their jobs or arent motivated! Its just that what motivates them about their job is often the what and the how of their role in the company rather than the companys overall mission. A software engineer, for example, might be more motivated by the elegance of the technology he or she is developing than by the companys impact on its customers or in the marketplace.
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In my experience, building a performance-management system that taps into intrinsic motivation involves three essential ingredients:
}} Creating a feedback culture }} Becoming bilingual }} Relieving the pain.
data are at everyones fingertips. Ideally, feedback should include the perspective of clients, since client feedback underscores the connection to the mission and may diffuse tension. In order to produce true culture change, the leader must be both vulnerable and committed to change based on staff feedback. Gerald Chertavian, Year Ups founder and CEO, uses town halls with staff across the country not only to gather input on what to do differently but also to publicly acknowledge mistakes he has made. We owe it to the young adults we serve to be relentless in learning from our mistakes so they can continue to have the opportunities that are commensurate with their talent, he says. By both acknowledging his mistakes and using language that centers on our ultimate goal, Gerald creates an environment where the team wholeheartedly embraces feedback.
Becoming Bilingual
If you put for-profit and nonprofit professionals in a room together, theres often a big cultural divide. For-profit professionals often unintentionally use language that may come across as patronizing and condescending to their nonprofit counterparts. On the other side, nonprofit professionals can display holier-than-thou self-righteousness. To be successful at performance management, both sides must seek to understand before asking to be understood. As I reflect on my first years as a board member of a nonprofit theater company (soon after I left a Fortune 500 company), I cringe when I think about how I often fell into this trap. My fellow board members and I pushed the theater staff for data on return on investment for set design. We graphed which types of performances were most profitable. And we even began inserting ourselves in program selection. The staff often considered us corporate outsiders who did not exhibit heart for the mission. Instead of getting riled up about statistical significance and trends, we would have been better served by trying to understand
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what the executives got riled up about. Eventually we learned that what was important to them was the role that the theaters art played in creating dialogue in the community and representing the voice of a systematically underrepresented demographic. What drives the passion in your nonprofit? Perhaps its the light in a childs eyes when she grasps a new concept or the beauty of seeing an abandoned landscape converted into a family-friendly park. If you can tap into that passion and then translate the wonky world of data into the language of mission, it is far more likely that nonprofit professionals will buy in to the need for performance management. Dont believe me? Which of the following messages would resonate more with you? Building a performance-management system is critical to enhancing sustainability to ensure that you fulfill your organizations mission. OR Please help me understand what it takes to serve your clients well. With your coaching, we can find ways to ensure that we consistently fulfill the mission were both passionate about. This may not seem like a breakthrough concept, but its amazing how many outcomes initiatives fail simply because of language.
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failing. The response is usually You needed millions of dollars for that? I could have told you that for free! The real need is to go deeperto gauge not just whether something is working or not, but to understand why. To get more granular, you must first establish credibility with the service providers by making their lives easier, not harder. If you are working within a feedback culture and speaking in authentic, mission-focused language, it will be easy to spot opportunities for reducing pain for service providers. At most organizations the wish list is a mile long. If you address a few of the big concerns, youll soon find that the outcomes initiative has transitioned from a push to a pull. When Year Up set out to implement the Salesforce enterprise data system, for example, COO Sue Meehan engaged our admissions teams from the beginning. Team members were initially skeptical that Salesforce could make their lives easier. With their help, however, Sue built out our Salesforce system not only to make the admissions process smoother and quicker but also to help the admissions teams identify the students who, based on key indicators from previous classes of students, were most likely to benefit from our high-support, high-expectations culture. Weve now seen a subtle but hugely significant shift from Why do we need Salesforce? to Why doesnt Salesforce have everything we need?
Conclusion
Performance management is not easy. It takes a rare (and sometimes at odds) combination of tenacity and sensitivity to pull it off. But when its done rightwhen it truly taps into the intrinsic connection to mission that so many nonprofit professionals bring to their jobs day in and day outthen the results can be profound. Passionate people, empowered with data, can do remarkable things to drive performanceand, more important, transform lives.
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Performance Management
The Neglected Step in Becoming an Evidence-Based Program
by Kristin Anderson Moore, Ph.D., Karen Walker, Ph.D., and David Murphey, Ph.D.
The current focus on being evidence-based has drawn considerable attention to the value of random-assignment and quasi-experimental evaluations, and thats a good thing. Random-assignment evaluations are the exquisite show horses of the evaluation world, while quasi-experimental evaluations are the trotters. These two kinds of evaluations help funders, practitioners, and policymakers identify whether and for whom programs can make a real and lasting difference. Implementation evaluationsanother thoroughbredfocus on whether a program is being implemented well and with fidelity. But the focus on these pretty horses has drawn attention away from the workhorses that help programs manage and improve their performance on an ongoing basisperformancemanagement systems.
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As the figure shows, the initial step involves assessing the risks and needs of a community, along with its available resources, followed by an identification of the groups or places with the highest incidence of these. Following a risk assessment, the focus may shift to identifying programs or intervention strategies that have been evaluated and found to affect the risks or needs of the community. To illustrate, lets say that a risk assessment identifies teen pregnancy as an important issue for a community and, further, that the rate is highest among Latinas. Having identified a program that has been rigorously evaluated and found to reduce the birth rate among Latina teens, the community decides to implement this new program. Given todays focus on outcome and impact evaluations, a nonprofit may immediately jump ahead and decide to conduct an evaluation of the program as soon as possible. It might be a quasiexperimental or random-assignment evaluation, or perhaps an implementation evaluation. But any of these would be premature. It is first necessary to put a performance-management system in place.
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Having such a system enables an organization to monitor program implementation and success over time.
ongoing basis
}} Defined benchmarks to assess the progress of participants, the
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Group leaders (staff members, who are usually college students) are assigned to work with small groups of children. While working with students on the days academic and free-choice activities, group leaders closely observe the childrens behavior to take advantage of teachable moments when they have opportunities to intervene, both to redirect negative behavior and to reinforce positive behavior. As one might imagine, ensuring the quality of a program that employs college students and focuses on improving behavior and social interactions poses challenges. Each year the organization must train new group leaders and ensure that they applythe programs strategies consistently. To address these challenges, program managers have developed a performance-management system that is used diagnostically to ensure that staff are monitoring the students and properly addressing emerging behavioral problems. Group leaders rate childrens behaviors on a weekly basis, and supervisors review ratings prior to regular supervision meetings. Managers also use the system to supervise staff. Group leaders are expected to record a number of teachable moments each week, and supervisors read the case notes of those interactions in order to ensure both their quantity and their quality. Finally, managers use the system to make progress on the programs goals. One of the programs key goals is the improvement of childrens behavior during regular school time. Specifically, the program aims for all children to achieve a rating of 85 percent or higher on school behavior, as measured by indicators on the students report cards such as organizational skills and the ability to work with other students. Several years ago, when managers realized that many children were not reaching the 85 percent benchmark, WINGS added a program component to address in-school behavior. In order to focus on those childrens needs and support and encourage communication with teachers, group leaders write individualized student plans and share those with teachers. Although the program has not yet achieved its goal for all students, report cards indicate steady progress.
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Conclusion
As critical as good evaluations are, they need to be preceded by and built upon the knowledge provided by a performance-management system. Essentially, this means developing and using your in-house capacity before inviting others in to do expensive random-assignment or implementation evaluations.
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What It Takes
Building a Performance-Management System to Support Students and Teachers
by Patricia Brantley
At Friendship Public Charter School, we have not shied from controversy in pursuit of better outcomes for our students. Friendship manages four traditional public schools and sixpublic charter schools in Washington, DC, and Baltimore, MD. When Michelle Rhee was chancellor of the DC Public Schools, we partnered with her to turn around DCs most troubled high school, Anacostia Senior High. When Rhee launched one of the countrys first performance-based evaluation processes for unionized teachers, Friendship had the distinction of managing these teachers at Anacostia. The media interest in these efforts and in Rhees pathbreaking partnership with a charter-school operator was unprecedented. While in general the media have done a good job of explaining why we, the school district, and others are working to use data in much more comprehensive ways (including for evaluating teachers), the media have done very little to illustrate the how. In this essay I will try to complete the picture. Ill describe the hard work that has gone into collecting, using, and communicating the data we need in order to assess teachers fairly and support their development in the classroom, and Ill share insights on how we have used these data to engage students and parents more deeply than ever beforea process that has yielded concrete results for our students.
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how changing various inputs would yield greater or worse performanceand tie that performance specifically to each persons efforts.
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To make these drivers more than just nice platitudes, we spent the next three months identifying fifteen essential sub-drivers and over three hundred key performance indicators. Figure 1 shows how this worked for a sub-driver of the Excellent teaching and learning opportunities driver.
1 Drivers of value
ILLUSTRATIVE
Ensure all employees will be highly qualified, highly skilled, and effective Percent of HQ teachers
% teachers rated highly effective % reduction in regrettable attrition Motivation rating on employee surveys
Maintain the highest quality, highest skill, and most effective workforce possible Carry out human resource functions efficiently
Arriving at the sub-drivers and indicators was a difficult process and required many hours of internal debate. We assembled a dozen ad hoc teams to help. On each team we carefully placed an agitator who would challenge the group by asking, So what? As inclusive as the process was, we didnt always get it right. Just when we were starting to feel good about where we had landed, we discovered wed missed a critical element: whether the indicators were measurable. As we moved to designing the framework to track sub-drivers and key performance indicators, we found that 15 percent of our indicators were either impossible or impractical to measure.
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We made the difficult decision to drop unmeasurable indicators if we could not find a suitable substitute.
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Figure 2 shows a screen shot of a dashboard that gives teachers a real-time view into the average daily attendance, number of unexcused absences, low grades, and test scores, among other things. Each chart on the dashboard allows the teacher to drill down to the underlying dataor, as we put it, move from numbers to names. Previously, our teachers had to compile data on Excel spreadsheets to get access in one place to all of their student indicators. Today, any time an entry is made in a student record, the dashboards update automaticallysaving each teacher as much as eight hours a month. I recently visited classrooms where teachers posted their dashboards as their classroom scorecard to motivate students to work together to improve attendance and reduce discipline infractions. In a fourth-grade class, students proudly showed me the day when they qualified for a pizza party by having thirty days in a row of no infractions and perfect attendance.
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Lesson Two: Build the system to support teacher development, not just assessment. At Friendship, weve found that the best teachers are constantly learning and growing. In building our system we focused on collecting the data that would provide the information we needed in order to assess our teachers fairly and, as important, to nurture their growth. The indicators on the teacher dashboards reflect the indicators chosen by teams of teachers, school leaders, parent representatives, and board members to be part of each teachers performance evaluation and professional development planning. With performance indicators such as average daily attendance, discipline referrals, and student assessments, we are now putting in the hands of our teachers the data they would typically not have seen compiled until it was time for their evaluation. Each teacher now knows on a moment-tomoment basis how student performance in his or her classroom is tracking and can intervene more quickly and intelligently. Similarly, our coaches and administrators can see how each teacher is performing in order to build and deliver the professional development programs tailored to their specific needs. We recently expanded one of our middle schools to serve earlychildhood students, starting at preschool. Early in the school year, we brought the early-childhood teachers together to examine and discuss data on the young students. It was the first time that many of the teachers new to Friendship had ever had to share publicly how their students were performing against standards. During the talk, the professional development organizer noted later, our best teachers, especially from our established early-childhood programs, were able to help the new teachers around increasing vocabulary, improving instruction, and ensuring that early-childhood classrooms are more than just daycare.
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Lesson Three: For real breakaway performance, make the data useful for students and parents (not just administrators and teachers). Friendships overarching goal is to develop ethical, wellrounded, literate, and self-sufficient citizens. High student achievement, high graduation rates, and high levels of college acceptance are necessary but not sufficient results. College completion and career access are our higher aspirations. To achieve our goals for our students, we work to ensure that they develop the key behavioral competencies necessary for making good choices and that they demonstrate an independent drive for results outside the structured and supportive environment of our schools. Friendships goals are expressed most clearly in our academic and extracurricular emphasis on parent and student ownership of individual performance. Because of this emphasis, we built our performance-management system in a way that would ensure that students and their parents understand and value the new data. Teachers begin by helping students learn how to track their own data. We expect students as young as kindergartners to be able to explain and provide evidence of their progress to their teachers, their peers, and their parents. Once students have demonstrated sufficient mastery of these skills and behaviors, they are introduced to grade-level-appropriate student dashboard tools to assist them in tracking their progress and setting more ambitious goals for themselves. We extend our work to parents by preparing customized data reports that they can review with the teacher and their child. Weve learned that our parents are hungry for more data about their childs progress and want to feel knowledgeable about what the data mean and what they can do to help their child succeed.
diagnose performance issues, better identify our best teachers, and better target solutions. Our oldest and newest campuses best tell the story of the impact of building a system to better manage performance. At Chamberlain Elementary, which Friendship founded in 1998, we received our first standardized test results in the spring of 1999. We raised the percentage of proficient students to over 40 percent, but by 2006 proficiency languished in the mid to upper 30s. Since implementing the performance management system, weve seen a strong increase in reading and math proficiency. As seen in Figure 3, at our newest charter elementary campus, Southeast Elementary, our latest test scores show that we have more than doubled the proficient students in reading and math since opening the campus.
SOUTHEAST ELEMENTARY STUDENT SCORES Reading
21 06 28 32 48 43 12 08 09 10 06 20 07
Mathematics
54 27 50
07
08
09
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where to invest time, energy, and money to move student achievement throughout the classroom, the schoolhouse, and the network of schools we manage. A strong work ethic will always be key to our approach. But now we have the data to help us direct that effort in a way that more predictably produces student success.
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Nonprofit and educational leaders often wish they had a simple toolkit for determining whether their programs are working to improve the lives of those they serve. Unfortunately, no such silver bullet exists. Nor should it. The only way for schools and other organizations to get a full, useful sense of whats working and whats not is to invest significant time in developing an integrated, comprehensive approach. The organization cant just settle for information thats easy to measure. It must clarify whats important to measure and then determine how best to do so using both qualitative and quantitative means. At the Lawrence School, an independent, private day school in Northeast Ohio serving students in grades one through twelve who learn differently, we are beginning to define desired outcomes for our students and gather data to determine what works (and what doesnt). We hope that these experiences will serve as a precursor to the development of an outcomes-driven performance framework. Although we are still in the early stages of this work and recognize that the outcomes we are defining are very specific to our school and its unique population, I believe that were learning important lessons that are applicable to other organizations providing direct services to children and youth.
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Beyond #2 Pencils
As a psychologist specializing in assessment, I spend much of my time reminding students, families, and educational leaders to consider what each kind of data truly measures and how much it matters for an individual or organization at that particular moment. Were learning that meaningful outcomes assessment requires flexibility; a clear focus on the right outcomes with measurement of each students incremental gains; and dedication to observing the whole student. Accepting the level of ambiguity that comes with the progression of small steps toward achieving ultimate outcomes (e.g., a diploma) is necessary in these early stages. Intelligent use of independent testing (e.g., standardized tests given to groups or individuals) is one critical component of outcomes assessment. Unfortunately, the hyper-polarized political climate regarding testing has obscured both the value and the limitations of standardized measurement methods and has triggered a holy war between More testing! on one side and Get rid of all testing! on the other. But test data alone are insufficient in our work with students who learn differently. Looking at functional outcomes in combination with test scores provides a more complete picture of the developmental progress and impact we seek. Functional outcomes are the real-life variables that often matter most to a person or an organization. For example, consider these questions that speak to important functional outcomes:
}} If my child goes through your program, will she be more likely
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Essays: An Integrated Approach to Outcomes Assessment }} Can this student balance a checkbook, follow a budget, read a
bus schedule? Functional outcomes are often qualitative in nature, but this does not mean that such data should be considered soft or less valuable. Functional outcomes data provide critical evidence about the real-world impact of an intervention on a childs life, both in terms of change on a personal level (e.g., she reads more books) and the attainment of important milestones (e.g., she earns her bachelors degree). Determining which functional outcomes we are trying to effect, why we are trying to effect them, and how we can do so provides a framework within which we focus, communicate, and demonstrate our efforts. Determining critical functional outcomes is often as simple as rewording your organizations main goals, which might look something like this:
}} I want our kids to stay in school longer. }} I want to reduce turnover within key organizational areas. }} I want our kids to keep a job for two years.
A good functional outcome is one that matters, is easy to see, and requires no special skill for understanding its relevance.
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Because our students learn differently, our approach to assessment varies in both structure and intent. We believe that the overall success of an individual students development and our intervention strategies is best measured through frequent, standardized assessments combined with individualized attention. We use tests, administered by trained professionals, that are intentionally not tied to our curriculum. Results therefore reflect a completely independent evaluation, in much the same way that a companys finances are audited by outside accountants. Each student is tested before admission and again at the end of the school year, and average and individual scores are tracked to identify programmatic and individual areas of need. Teacher observations and performance on daily class work are also factored equally into a students progress evaluation, as are reports from parents about improvements in quality of life at home and in behavior at school. Our integrated perspective helps trained teachers explain these data to parents and students in the context of curricular and functional domains so that the scores have appropriate meaning. Our careful approach to gathering data also provides opportunities for teachers to adjust their teaching strategies, integrate support, and otherwise personalize the delivery of curriculum.
so far behind his friends, is now reading like any other child his age, the emotional impact of our institutional goals is palpable. By providing unambiguous evidence of improvement in basic academic skills, these data indicate a promising start and show that we are doing what we say we are doing. But its a marathon, not a sprint. We will continue to follow each student to see if gains are maintained and to ensure that our efforts are yielding benefits as a program and for each individual student. Additionally, we must determine the relationship between gains on these tests and a students progress in curriculum and functional domains so that the results can be integrated and communicated in an effective way that leads to positive changes (e.g., more efficient allocation of limited resources) in our organization. If our data cannot be used to help both individual students and the program as a whole, we are wasting our time. Yet, using this integrated approach is not without obstacles. Not every organization has easy access to a psychologist or other professionals trained to administer tests individually. It takes considerable time and resources to record and track data; determine which functional outcomes to measure and how to measure them; and ascertain how the data will be used for the benefit of individual students and the program as a whole. But this is the exciting part. After all of this work, we are left with a plan that is real, not theoretical, and concrete ideas about how to do more of whats working and eliminate whats not. Programmatic victories cant be claimed overnight. We are still working on how best to measure basic skill development in our Upper School students, since deficits in older children are more likely to be resistant to intervention and since testing in basic skills does not address the complex problem-solving and abstract-thinking abilities that are so critical. We also cant say definitively that Lawrence students are more likely to graduate from college, because there have been only six graduating classes; we need many more years of data. Still, we can say that Lawrence graduates attend two- and four-year
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colleges at a rate of about 96 percent, compared with 16 percent of children with learning differences who dont go to Lawrence. So, after several years of work, we can declare, We have preliminary data indicating that we are succeeding, but we have a long way to go.
Conclusion
Vanessa Diffenbacher, head of Lawrences Lower School, explains the underlying rationale for our integrated approach to outcomes assessment: We want to teach our students the foundational skills of lifelong learning, not just passing the next test. We teach them how to become independent learners, not what to memorize, and no single test suffices for measuring that kind of progress. Our approach reflects our emphasis on the whole child and lets us know if we are succeeding both as a program and for each individual student. Yes, its a huge amount of work for us, but our students deserve it. An integrated approach to assessment helps us construct appropriate learning environments and develop instructional approaches and practices that make stepping stones out of stumbling blocks for both students and teachers. It requires a great deal of institutional courage to refuse to default to a one-size-fits-all, cookie-cutter view and instead to pursue meaningful measurement for each student, but weve found the payoff worthwhile. Perhaps Lou Salza, Lawrence head of school, put it best when he said, Learning is a personal experience: one size fits few. Meaningful outcomes measurement follows that same maxim.
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Contributors
Patricia Brantley
Patricia Brantley is chief operating officer of Friendship Public Charter School, a $30 million local education agency serving eight thousand students. She is responsible for strategic initiatives, new school expansion, and oversight of existing school operations. She has launched a number of signature programs to extend the Friendship brand, including Supplemental Education Services, the Friendship News Network, and the Friendship Leadership Development Academy. She has also strengthened Friendships development capacity, raising millions of dollars in new grants and donations. Before becoming COO, she facilitated the restructuring of Friendships Collegiate Academy and the start-up of the first Early College High School in Washington, DC. A graduate of Princeton University, Pat has served in a variety of corporate and nonprofit leadership positions, including founding director of the Partnership for Academic Achievement; vice president of Washington Linkage Group, a government relations and public affairs firm; interim executive director of the Dance Institute of Washington; chief development officer for the National Council of Negro Women; national manager of marketing and public relations for the Black Family Reunion; vice president of client services for Correct Communications; and manager of services marketing for Prudential Insurance Company. She is co-founder of the Catalyst Project, an initiative to foster innovation and accountable leadership in the civic sector.
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Laura Callanan
Laura Callanan joined the Social Sector Office of McKinsey & Company in 2008 as a member of the Philanthropy Practice. She supports foundation and nonprofit clients, leads work on sustainable capitalism, and leads the Learning for Social Impact initiative (lsi.mckinsey. com). Immediately prior to joining McKinsey, Laura was an independent consultant working with the Synergos Institute, a nonprofit organization addressing global poverty and social injustice, and E-Line Media, a double-bottom-line publisher of video games with social impact. Previously, she was senior advisor at the United Nations Development Programme in the Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery, where she served as chief of staff, and executive director of the Prospect Hill Foundation, where she oversaw grantmaking in the areas of environmental conservation, reproductive health and rights, and nuclear nonproliferation. Before that, she was an associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation. She had general management responsibility for all activities related to the $3 billion endowment and investment responsibility for the foundations venture capital and private equity portfolio. She also served as a member of the foundations Program Venture Experiment (ProVenEx) commitment committee and oversaw investment decisions for program-related investments and similar public-private activities. Laura is an adjunct professor at New York Universitys Stern School of Business, where she teaches about the nonprofit capital marketplace.
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Isaac Castillo
Isaac Castillo is director of learning and evaluation for the Latin American Youth Center (LAYC) in Washington, DC. He oversees all of LAYCs research and evaluation efforts, including the implementation and maintenance of a center-wide database system to track demographic and outcomes information on all youth attending programs at LAYC. He also provides direct assistance to each LAYC program with the intent of improving outcomes and facilitating effective reporting to funding agencies. His work at LAYC has been highlighted in publications such as the Chronicle of Philanthropy, Youth Today, and the Wall Street Journal. Prior to joining LAYC, Isaac worked with a private research and evaluation firm in Bethesda, MD, and completed program and crosssite evaluations for a wide spectrum of agencies, including federal and state governments, private foundations, and community-based organizations. In 2000 he completed an evaluation entitled Assessment of State Minority Health Infrastructure and Capacity to Address Issues of Health Disparity for the U.S. Office of Minority Health. He also worked on an evaluation designed to measure the effectiveness of school- and community-based violence-prevention programs for gang-involved youth, sponsored by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. Isaac received his undergraduate degree in human resource management from Syracuse University and his M.S. in public policy analysis from the University of Rochester. As an undergraduate Isaac was named an All-American Debater. He continues to work with the debate community, currently serving on the board of directors for the Associated Leaders of Urban Debate (ALOUD).
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Jonathan Law
Jonathan Law is a consultant in McKinsey & Companys Social Sector Office in New York City. Since joining the firm in 2001, he has worked with senior clients in the social sector and in financial services. His client work has focused on social impact assessment, urban revitalization, and policy and advocacy. He recently helped lead the Learning for Social Impact initiative, a collaboration between McKinseys Social Sector Office and top U.S. foundations and sector thought leaders. Prior to joining McKinsey, Jonathan worked at the United Nations, the New York City Economic Development Corporation, and the law firm of Cravath, Swaine & Moore. Jonathan earned an A.B. in social studies from Harvard College and a J.D. from Columbia Law School.
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Mario Morino
Mario Morino is co-founder and chairman of Venture Philanthropy Partners (VPP) and chairman of the Morino Institute. His career spans more than forty-five years as entrepreneur, technologist, and civic and business leader. He also has a long history of civic engagement and philanthropy in the National Capital Region and Northeast Ohio. In the early 1970s, Mario co-founded and helped build the LEGENT Corporation, a software and services firm that became a market leader and one of the industrys ten largest firms by the early 1990s. He retired from the private sector in 1992. Since then, he has sought to level the playing field for children of low-income families, focusing almost exclusively on economic, social, and educational issues. Mario founded the Morino Institute in 1994 to stimulate innovation and entrepreneurship, advance a more effective philanthropy, close social divides, and understand the impact of the Internet on our society. In 2000 Mario co-founded VPP as a philanthropic-investment organization that concentrates investments of money, expertise, and contacts to improve the lives and boost the opportunities of children of low-income families in the National Capital Region. In 2010 VPP was one of only eleven organizations selected by the Social Innovation Fund, administered by the Corporation for National and Community Service, for its inaugural portfolio. In addition to his roles with VPP and the Morino Institute, Mario serves as a member of the board of trustees of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, an honorary trustee of the Brookings Institution, an emeritus trustee of Case Western Reserve University, a board member of the Lawrence School, and a board member of Saint Joseph Academy. He is a special advisor to Echoing Green and Within3; a member of the PEACE X PEACE advisory council; a member of the advisory board for the Center for the Advancement of Social Entrepreneurship (CASE), Fuqua School of Business, Duke University; and a member of the board of governors of the Partnership for Public Service. He also informally advises scores of organizations and individuals across a range of areas. He lives in Greater Cleveland with his wife and three children.
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Lynn Taliento
Lynn Taliento is a partner at McKinsey & Company. Based in Washington, DC, she played a founding role in the creation of the firms Social Sector Office (SSO), which brings an objective, fact-based approach leading to tailored solutions to complex societal challenges. The SSO has specific expertise in economic development, global public health, education, and strategic philanthropy. Lynn works exclusively with national and international foundations, nonprofit organizations, and individual philanthropists on issues of strategy, organization, and operations. She has particular expertise in the areas of advocacy, strategic planning, private-public partnerships, and governance. Her recent work includes developing a strategy for an innovative advocacy effort focused on global poverty, defining a five-year plan for one of the largest international development organizations in the world, analyzing impact and best practices in the field, and creating an advocacy strategy for a leading foundation. Fluent in Spanish, Lynn spent four years in McKinseys Mexico City office, where she worked on strategy and policy engagements for clients in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. Prior to joining McKinsey in 1994, she was an advisor to the minister of the economy of the Czech Republic and a press secretary in the U.S. House of Representatives. Lynn graduated summa cum laude from Yale University with a bachelors degree in American Studies, and she earned a masters degree in public policy from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, where she was a Kennedy Fellow. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband and two children.
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Cheryl Collins
Cheryl Collins is senior advisor for Morino Ventures, LLC. She began working with Mario Morino in October 1992, during his discovery/ journey phase that led to the Morino Institutes formation in 1994. Since then, she has served in key behind-the-scenes roles and provided support to philanthropic, educational, and civic initiatives of the Morino Institute and family, including the Potomac KnowledgeWay Project, the Netpreneur Program, the Youth Development Collaborative (YDC) Pilot, the YouthLearn Initiative, and Venture Philanthropy Partners. She administers the Morino Institute grant program and the Morino familys scholars program, which provides student scholarships at several colleges and universities. Her operations roles have encompassed a diverse set of responsibilities, including technology management, editorial oversight, web production, knowledge management, and research. Previously, Cheryl worked with students in grades seven through twelve, teaching English, journalism, and creative writing, and she was a program advisor for gifted programs at the Arkansas Department of Education. An active volunteer for her community of faith, she has worked with the preschool program since 1994 and serves on Southview Community Churchs personnel committee. Cheryl received a B.A. from Hendrix College, an M.Ed. in administration from Harding University, and an M.Ed. in gifted and talented education from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. She lives in Northern Virginia.
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