The Great Nonprofit Evaluation Reboot: A New Approach Every Staff Member Can Understand
Couldn't load pickup availability
About this book
Finally. A book about evaluation for non-evaluators. Who are non-evaluators? Busy professionals like you who need answers but dont have time to take an applied research and methods class. If youve picked up other books on evaluation and felt like you were left out of the conversation youre not alone. Elena Harmans The Great Nonprofit Evaluation Reboot puts the focus back on learning from evaluation. Not only that its jargon-free and brimming with actionable strategies to help you find the answers to your questions about how to measure your efforts and learn on purpose rather than by accident. Theres a chapter for every nonprofit position and how each staff member can uniquely apply evaluation to improve outcomes in fundraising communications leadership and governance. Plus theres even a chapter just for funders. What you can expect: More about thinking and learning instead of data and accountability The three most important steps to discovering how your nonprofit can grow Productive strategies using common language for evaluation Pros cons and how-tos for keeping evaluation in-house and hiring consultants How everyone can take the first step thats right for their organization The Evaluation Reboot in Four Parts: Part One Disconnected: The Evaluation Field and Nonprofits We Serve The evaluation fields journey over the years has affected our perceptions and realities about the client and evaluators relationship. Harman explains her misgivings about counterproductive practices in evaluation and shares her vision for healthier client-evaluator partnerships and their profound benefits. Part Two Breaking It Down If youre considering evaluation for your programs the first step is often the most difficult. Harman breaks down the five core elements of effective evaluation one by one. Think of these core elements as the backbone of effective evaluation. By the end of the section you have a better understanding of how to get started and how to effectively measure your outcomes. Part Three Pick Your Position: How Evaluation Can Work for You Carrying out evaluation cuts across the entire organizational chart and needs the engagement of every staff member. This section explains how each position can uniquely apply evaluation techniques to amplify their results. Harman introduces the bodys head and limbs as a metaphor to explain how programs require the animation of all body parts to move evaluation forward. Part Four Lets Get Started This section of the book prepares you to apply the authors discussions thus far in Part Two which provide a necessary framework or as she explains the backbone for effective evaluation. Then Part Three explores all the moving parts or positions that activate evaluation. This last portion of the book assembles and cross-references content that Harman finds helpful for making those early steps including a Nonprofit Evaluation Bill of Rights. What Nonprofit Experts Have to Say: insightful and practical essential evaluation methods that development officers can easily apply evaluation as a learning tool rather than an accountability measure opened my eyes to ways in which evaluation can support communications appreciated a focus on educating donors about what data to ask for and why a solid path to grantee evaluation without strain and frustration
