Remove Adopt Remove Articulate Remove Open Remove Phase
article thumbnail

How to Make Analytics a Priority – Finally!

Association Analytics

We can help you move analytics to the top of the list by giving you tips to build a business case and how to articulate it to others. Use softer, more open-ended questions to get detailed information that you will capture in writing for your plan. This will drive adoption of being a data-driven organization. What limits you?

Analytics 169
article thumbnail

Beyond the Newest Philanthropy Buzzword: Knowledge Work Is Core to Equitable Change

sgEngage

But it is not just a new buzzword, a box to be checked, or even a singular phase in the grant cycle. However, in the push towards impact, philanthropy has adopted a laundry list of activities—landscape scans, focus groups, case studies, logic models—to help in figuring out what is important to know to “do good” better.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Win Approval for Your Next Tech Project: A Guide

The Modern Nonprofit

At the end of this guided exercise, you’ll be able to articulate investment impact statements like: BY INVESTING $9,845 IN NEW TECHNOLOGY, OUR ORG WILL SAVE $79,155 OVER THE NEXT 5 YEARS. Just like building a house, your project (and related costs) consists of three phases: design, build, and maintenance. STEP 3: FOLLOWING UP.

Project 98
article thumbnail

The Networked NGO in India

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

100% of participants implement a process and write a social media policy that addresses organizational adoption issues. 100% of participants implement an action learning project that uses measurement to help improve their practice, share insights with peers, and identify opportunities to amplify each other’s voices through social media.

India 102
article thumbnail

What Makes an IT Project Successful? Nonprofit Edition

Connection Cafe

But as many of us have found out the hard way, on-time and on-budget projects do not necessarily mean a new system will realize proposed goals and yield expected value…or that users will even adopt the system as desired. Or would a “phase 2″ be more appropriate for some items? Executive Vision and Involvement.

Project 37