Steve Delfin | January 21, 2014
CSR Results: Why the Difference Between Outcomes and Outputs Matters
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They filled Capital Hilton ballroom in Washington, DC; leaders of large and small charities from throughout the country trying to build higher performing organizations 鈥渕anaging to outcomes鈥. 听The 听was the brainchild of Mario Morino, Founding Chairman and Chairman of the where Morino, who made his fortune in the early days of the tech boom, has for the past two decades turned his innovative mind and business acumen toward helping the philanthropic sector embrace meaningful outcomes. 听听
His ground-breaking book, (2011), urges leaders government, business and the philanthropic sectors to take 鈥渂old action鈥 in order to focus increasingly limited resources where they do the most good in addressing pressing social needs. 听I鈥檝e been following Morino鈥檚 work now for over 15 years and have watched his influence begin to move the discussion from 鈥渨hy鈥 should we do this to 鈥渉ow鈥. 听听听And just as importantly, I watched the symposia and conferences discussing outcomes and evidence based philanthropy grow from gatherings of a couple dozen thought leaders, to what is now truly becoming a movement of change and impact.
This is important for several reasons and should be of serious interest to several key leaders and influencers in philanthropy. First, the reasons. Morino was the closing speaker at the After the Leap Conference. 听He should have been the first because his message actually framed the problem/reason why outcomes and results are so vital. 听听
Here are the whys:
- Economics and demographics. 听Shrinking disposable income, aging population and increased demands for basic human care services as a result of stagnant and declining wages and the inevitable drop in federal and state funding for human care services will require that we make hard choices. 听听In the past where government and human care and social interest institutions could survive and even thrive based on brand awareness and emotional appeal, there will now be pressure to only 听fund those institutions and organizations that can demonstrate through data and analytics that their programs work, are scalable to solve big problems, and sustainable. 听听
- Outcomes actually matter. 听There鈥檚 a big difference between outputs and outcomes. Outputs, while important, measure how much of something occurs and by when. 听Outcomes on the other hand measure behavior or systemic change. 听
- Performance actually matters. 听As multiple speakers at After the Leap emphasized, you can鈥檛 have competent, problem-solving, innovative, outcomes-driven organizations without the capacity and infrastructure to effectively and consistently execute.
‘How’ Complexity
As with any big idea, it鈥檚 the 鈥渉ow鈥 that gets complex. 听The concepts of 听鈥減erformance management鈥 and 鈥渆vidence-based outcomes鈥 have been bouncing around philanthropy and the civil sector for quite some time. 听In regard to the philanthropy side of the equation, there have and continue to be those who fear that embracing 鈥渂usiness practices鈥 will result in a loss of mission and soul by charitable organizations. If you want to see the debate, just go on line and search 鈥渆vidence based philanthropy鈥. 听Five years ago the search would have surfaced mostly stories and discussions that were negative. But now the body of evidence and knowledge has increased, demonstrating that for a growing number of high performing charities, performance management and an evidence-based approach is working.
In listening to the speakers, panel discussions, Q&A and hallway conversations, I came to the conclusion that given what Morino calls the coming 鈥渆ra of scarcity鈥, the performance management and evidence-based advocates are on the right path. 听And I鈥檝e become one of them.
Scaling Outcomes, Not Outputs
As a former philanthropy officer for a major multi-national company and now leading 精东影业鈥檚 Charities, an organization that works with employers to better connect their workplace giving, philanthropy and employee engagement efforts with broader CSR strategy, I see evidence that corporate funders and gatekeepers are beginning to get wind of this emerging movement and fast approaching need. 听But I also sense many of them are somewhat clueless, simply following a path of 鈥渄oing well by doing good鈥 and not seriously considering the effectiveness, sustainability or scalability of the causes and issues they fund.听
Numbers of grants given, numbers of volunteer hours by employees, numbers of toys or clothing collected and distributed are outputs. 听Good things, yes. 听But they are not outcomes.听
I have one last point on outcomes. 听There are a number of charity watchdog and rating service groups that have emerged over the years. 听Some have evolved into meaningful and substantive organizations that are working hard to embrace and incorporate more sophisticated analysis into their charity rating systems. 听Others continue to 鈥渞ate鈥 charity effectiveness on single factors, like administrative overhead, or salaries paid to executives, or outputs instead of outcomes. 听This is complex and nuanced stuff that cannot be 鈥渄umbed down鈥. Although some media outlets continue to try to do so with their annual Top 1o Best and Worst Charities story. 听In fact, one of Morino鈥檚 big ideas (which I love) is to take the After the Leap message on the road in the equivalent of an IPO road show for meetings with editorial boards, key community and business leaders, and other important stakeholders (how about donors!) to begin influencing their thinking. 听
It is going to take a tri-sector commitment and collaborative effort to meet the most vital human care and social responsibility needs as public sector resources become more scarce. 听As Morino says in Leap of Reason: Managing to Outcomes in an Era of Scarcity, if we don鈥檛 manage to outcomes we greatly diminish our collective impact. 听
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