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ratings:
Length:
26 minutes
Released:
Aug 9, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

On this episode we chat with Shannon Williams, Director of Boulder Advocacy's Operations and Evaluation to learn more about the use of evaluation tools to make our organizations better advocates. Measuring success is much more than identifying wins and losses, it includes improving capacity and other incremental steps to achieving policy goals.   Voices on this episode Tim Mooney Shannon Williams Shownotes Understanding Evaluation Differences between advocacy and program evaluation. Beyond Wins & Losses Importance of considering interim milestones and not just the end goals. The "attribution conundrum." Embracing complexity, focusing on contribution rather than attribution. Building power and capacity as evaluation metrics. Importance of sustainability and setting up for long-term success. Understanding the vision of an organization and using the Theory of Change to achieve it. Resources ·       A User’s Guide to Advocacy Evaluation Planning (Harvard Family Research Project)* ·       The Advocacy Strategy Framework (Center for Evaluation Innovation)* ·       Data Playbook (Schusterman Philanthropies)* ·       Getting Started: A Self-Directed Guide to Outcome Map Development (ORS Impact)* ·       When the Best Offense is a Good Defense: Understanding and Measuring Advocacy on the Defense (ORS Impact)* ·       Advocacy Capacity Tool (ACT!) and ACT! Quick* ·       Amplifying Nonprofit Voices: Bridging the Advocacy Evaluation Gap  ·       Advocacy That Builds Power: Transforming Policies and Systems for Health and Racial Equity (Center for Evaluation Innovation) ·       Gigi Barsom, “A New Framework for Understanding Power Building,” Stanford Social Innovation Review, July 17, 2023    
Released:
Aug 9, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (98)

Nonprofits are important advocates on issues critical to every community, but sometimes the rules and regulations of advocacy can be barriers to entry. In Rules of the Game, Bolder Advocacy attorneys at Alliance for Justice use real examples to demystify these laws to help 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(4) nonprofits be bolder advocates, whether holding elected officials accountable, educating candidates, engaging voters, or lobbying for policy change.