Remove Children Remove Intergenerational Remove Organization Remove Survey
article thumbnail

Philanthropic collaboratives are finding ways to more effectively measure impact

Candid

In a 2022 survey, nearly 70% of respondents cited building measurement, evaluation, and learning capabilities as a critical area in which they would like to invest. Other collaboratives may pursue broader goals that don’t lend themselves to common strategies and metrics, such as reducing intergenerational poverty.

Measure 59
article thumbnail

NextGen philanthropists and the transfer of intergenerational wealth

ASU Lodestar Center

1 The report was based on 310 survey responses and 30 in-depth interviews with people identified as next gen donors. When I want to get involved in an organization, it’s all in. Teaching philanthropy to children: why, how, what. Time, talent, treasure and ties Yes, ties. They want to be hands on and linked in. Bjorhovde, P.O.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

4 Reasons to Embrace Gen-Mix Volunteerism

VQ Strategies

Every individual, regardless of age, has skills and experience that can benefit mission-driven organizations. Simply put, co-generational teamwork will not only strengthen the outcomes of the program in the communities it serves but also foster greater intergenerational respect among volunteers. Knowledge spillover”. Program Stability.

article thumbnail

My First Intergenerational Social Media: Learning from Gen Z's and Value of Different Points of View

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Search Institute is an independent nonprofit organization whose mission is to provide leadership, knowledge, and resources to promote healthy children, youth, and communities. When I've do social media and nonprofit trainings, the audience consists of staff, board members, or volunteers from nonprofit organizations.

article thumbnail

Guest Post: Community and Civic Engagement in Museum Programs

Museum 2.0

We attentively respond to requests and purposefully use different modes of feedback to inform program design from our comment board, social media outlets, conversations and observations both inside and outside the museum, creative feedback at events such as our Show and Tell Booth and online visitor surveys specific to our programs.

Museum 49