Impact

This much simplified sample impact report for an organisation shows which areas are doing well - and those where work is needed:

Q1      |█████████
Q2      |██████████
Q3      |
Q4    ██|
Q5      |██
Q6      |█████
Q7  ████|
Q8 █████|
Q9      |█████
Q10      |██████████
Q11      |█████
Q12      |
Q13      |███████

Example reports:


Monitor the impact and diversity of your services

To provide evidence that you've spent money wisely or are producing the right outcomes, use the Made an Impact software - it graphically shows the impact you are making, demonstrates diversity and acts as a contact manager.

This software is helping us to see how our services are working for our users, staff and volunteers.

It's already saved us lots of time doing diversity reports and it helps us find contact details quickly.

  • Chart individual progress, eg well-being 
  • Show the impact of your project or organisation
  • Check the diversity of all your people
  • Keep in touch with all your contacts
  • Made an Impact runs as a web site, as a service provided online here, on your own site or on your organisation Intranet.
  • Multiple users are supported, with multiple roles determining access to facilities. 
  • Add pages or edit information on the site.
  • Pricing: free trial and free for entirely voluntary groups; from £5/month for funded organisations.
  • Various assessment templates will be available, including methodologies provided by partner organisations.
  • Walk the talk: an explanation of outcomes, evidence, indicators and measuring impact.

"Thinking about, measuring and reporting on impact needs to become part of the natural way civil society organisations do things."  NCVO, Funding Commission – Funding the Future Report 2011

More information: Get in touch: Ask for a login to a sample site.

phdcc director Chris Cant

This flexible software is customisable to your needs - let me know how we can help.

Or get in touch if you simply want to talk through how to assess your work.

Technical director at phdcc, Chris Cant