Encouraging & Practicing Evaluative Thinking

In my last post, I offered some common definitions of evaluative thinking compared to evaluation and stressed how critical evaluative thinking is to meaningful and useful evaluation. In this post, I want to share some tips for encouraging and practicing evaluative thinking within your organizations. Setting the Stage In their article Defining and Teaching Evaluative[…]

Evaluative Thinking: The Heart of (Meaningful, Useful) Evaluation

Anytime we do things for the “wrong” reasons, there’s a good chance that experience will be less fulfilling, less meaningful, and less useful than if we’d done it for the “right” reasons. The same is true of evaluation. When we do it because someone tells us to (funder, donor, accreditor) and not because we want[…]

Have Time or Money to Waste? Didn’t Think So!

I’ve said it here many times. I hate waste! As a sector that’s starved for resources yet charged with addressing some of society’s most intractable problems, we can’t afford to waste any time, energy, knowledge, or money! We’ve all heard the saying “time is money.” In our sector, time is money, and money is the[…]

Managing Funder Reporting

This is the fourth and final post in a series in which I implore nonprofits to do some critical reflecting and planning before you embark on any evaluation work or make changes to your data collection forms, tools, or processes. I think there are four key things organizations need to know when planning their evaluation[…]

Sparking Curiosity: Learning & Evaluation Questions

This is the third post in a series in which I implore nonprofits to do some critical reflecting and planning before they purchase, design, or modify their client databases. However, the same tips are helpful before you embark on any evaluation work or make changes to your data collection forms, tools, or processes, too. This[…]

Goals

6 Tips for Setting Meaningful Goals

Happy New Year!  This is the time of year when many of us make resolutions or set goals. Lose weight. Learn a new skill. Build our networks. Save a certain amount of money. I am wired for quality improvement, so I still do this every year. Though, I could benefit from following some of my[…]

Project Planning

What’s Driving Your Organization? Personalities, People, or Processes?

People in both for-profit and not-for-profit sectors often opine about the differences between the two.  In the non-profit world, we say we are different because we are motivated by mission rather than money. The business world sometimes says we should be more like businesses. I agree with both, to some degree. Because our organizations are[…]