-- The Coalition for Evidence-Based Policy's Social Programs that Work: www.evidencebasedprograms.org -- The Promising Practices Network: www.promisingpractices.net -- The California Evidence-Based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare: www.cachildwelfareclearinghouse.org -- The What Works Clearinghouse, U.S. Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences: http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/ -- The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention's Model Programs Guide (MPG), The U.S. Department of Justice: http://dsgonline.com/mpg2.5/mpg_index.htm -- The Child Trends' What Works Guide www.childtrends.org"I give to causes I care about, to organizations that cater to people I care about," said Ace Werner, a D.C.-area lawyer whose firm matches employees' charitable contributions. "Obviously I know the usual tips about giving, I'm not concerned that I'm being fleeced. But, I do wonder how useful my gift is. Perhaps I'm idealistic: I hope that the money I give makes a difference. That someone is benefiting from my contributions." Hunter also notes that the message is simple. Don't give until you are confident the organization is effective. Key criteria are:
-- Understand what it is trying to accomplish, whom is it serving, does it have the discipline and focus to achieve its mission, and whether it is making meaningful progress toward achieving its stated objectives. -- Know whether the organization is measuring services in a way that allows for continual improvement. -- Compare organizations and the evidence they have that they are getting the results they claim. -- Consider the social value of the organization. Art museums and a homeless shelters are incredibly important to our society...but do not provide the same social value. Be clear what you value and why...and be brave enough to put your money where you believe it is needed most, not just where it buys you social cachet.About David Hunter David E.K. Hunter, Ph.D. is an independent consultant to Social Solutions, helping the company improve the ways nonprofit organizations can implement Efforts to Outcomes (ETO). He also consults the Social (not-for-profit) and Public Sectors with a focus on organizational capacity building, developing strategies and theories of change, performance management, and the creation, delivery, and assessment of social value. Dr. Hunter was formerly the Director of Evaluation and Knowledge Development at the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation in New York City. Dr. Hunter is the author of numerous articles and has delivered a broad range of papers about strategic performance management and how to create, invest in, and sustain social value in complex situations with diverse stakeholders. For an interview with David, or a list of other industry insiders who are raising concerns about the effectiveness of social services delivery, please contact at Matthew Langan at 202-262-3340, matthew@dbcpr.com. About Social Solutions and ETO Software® Social Solutions is a national technology firm, serving the reporting needs of thousands of human services professionals from local nonprofits to national foundations. The company's ETO (Efforts to Outcomes) reporting software replaces one-size-fits-all data tracking with a reporting system tailored to the unique mission of each nonprofit organization. ETO Software® generates a clear and accurate measure of impact to improve service delivery, earn more funding, and reduce the time and resources dedicated to tracking. (1) according to a 2001 report from the Independent Sector (2) according to economist Charles Clotfelter as quoted by the Stanford Social Innovation Review
Contact Information: Contact: Matthew Langan 202-262-3340 matthew@dbcpr.com