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How Should We Measure Financial Capability Outcomes?

How Should We Measure Financial Capability Outcomes?. Phil Carroll Financial Inclusion Officer United Welsh Housing Association. Purpose of Session. Establish the worth of outcome-based projects Examine different models for monitoring outcomes

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How Should We Measure Financial Capability Outcomes?

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  1. How Should We Measure Financial Capability Outcomes? Phil Carroll Financial Inclusion Officer United Welsh Housing Association

  2. Purpose of Session • Establish the worth of outcome-based projects • Examine different models for monitoring outcomes • Gather thoughts and ideas on how we can effectively demonstrate outcomes of FC work

  3. Outcomes vs Outputs • Outcome – “something that follows from an action, dispute, situation, etc.; result; consequence” • Output – “the act of turning out; production: the quantity or amount produced” An outcome is the impact of the intervention, it gives meaning to what has been produced

  4. Hard and Soft Outcomes • “Hard” Outcomes – quantitative achievement against pre-set targets, recorded once completed • “Soft” Outcomes – intangible, harder to measure. Reflect changes in attitude, behaviour, confidence. Recorded as progress during a project. They are not mutually exclusive – they can be achieved in turn, or in tandem

  5. Why so Important? • Funding • Balances the needs of different stakeholders • Increased accountability • Enables greater sharing of good practice • Learning for future projects

  6. “The Bigger Picture” • FC contribution towards a larger project or target • Organisational or “top-down” measures • Outcomes can be hard to identify – do they become outputs? Example – FC work with Cardiff hostel residents

  7. “Describe and Observe” • Statistic based • Describes actions not impacts – based on assumptions • Easiest to measure “30 advice surgeries were held in the last quarter” “attendance at financial education sessions increased by 20% last year”

  8. “Citizen-Centric” • Client focussed and defined outcomes • Soft outcomes – monitoring the changes in financial capability over time • The idea of “distance travelled” • Can lead to wider hard outcomes • See St Mungo’s Star

  9. Considerations • Project purpose and funding • Resource • Client engagement level

  10. Over to You!

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