Measuring Grantee Performance

Most nonprofits, including some of the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation’s grantees, do not yet have convincing quantitative evidence of their programs’ effectiveness and lack the organizational capacity to muster it. That is why we invest heavily in helping grantees build their organizational capacity, including the internal processes, information technology and skilled personnel they need to measure, analyze and continually improve their performance.

The most basic measures of grantee performance and growth are the numbers of youth it serves and its annual revenues. We supplement these with program management information that helps grantees manage performance and helps EMCF monitor it. Such information includes:

  • Demographic data about the population a program serves;
  • Measures of engagement such as program intensity and duration (hours and days attended, for example);
  • Program completion or graduation rates; and
  • Subsequent placement in a job, enrollment in college or other post-secondary program.

The Foundation also works with grantees to develop measures of organizational health and management, including milestones tied to an organization's business plan for growth. Examples include:

  • Financial systems,
  • Staffing and talent development,
  • Capital to support expansion,
  • Adequacy of local public and private funding opportunities,
  • The management team's performance, and
  • The board's leadership and engagement.

We have found that developing and implementing these measures, though difficult and time- consuming, is essential to accomplishing our mission and our grantees’ missions. Setting clear performance objectives and establishing credible reporting systems to assess progress provide us and our grantees with an impetus to continually improve our performance.

  •  Print|

In the Spotlight

Nine Organizations Selected to Receive Social Innovation Fund Awards

The Edna McConnell Clark Foundation is investing up to $42 million over three years in nine organizations whose evidence-based programs promise to transform the life trajectories of thousands of low-income youth. In support of these grantees, the Foundation is establishing the True North Fund to leverage public money from the SIF and private money from the EMCF and institutional and individual philanthropic partners to effectively capitalize and expand programs that can serve more vulnerable young people.

Read More

 


Grantees In The News

A Families-First Approach to Foster Care

(Youth Villages) The New York Times, February 21, 2011

Read More

 


Nonprofit Pairs Up Nurses With Struggling First-Time Moms

(Nurse-Family Partnership) Huffington Post, March 14, 2011

Read More

 


Enlisting Professionals as Part-time Educators

(Citizen Schools) NBC Nightly News, October 15, 2010

Watch Video