Tag: Theory of Change

  • What does social value mean to you?

    What does social value mean to you?

    The Social Value International 2016 survey has launched!

    Each year Social Value International try to take a snapshot of how the Principles of Social Value are being used. We use this information to better support our members and the social value community at large through creating new guidance, training and campaigns.

    For more information on the Principles of Social Value, watch our short video below:

     

    The survey should take no longer than 15 minutes to complete and you will be entered in to a prize draw upon completion.

    Thank you from everyone at Social Value International and Social Value UK.

    Survey

  • The Seven Principles of Maximising Social Value

    The Seven Principles of Maximising Social Value

    This month we published a new report “The Seven Principles of Social Value, and why they are important for accountability and maximising social value”, that is available for free on our online resource library.

    Social Value is the value that stakeholders experience through changes in their lives. Some, but not all of this value is captured in market prices.

    The Principles of Social Value provide the basic building blocks for anyone who wants to make decisions that take this wider definition of value into account, in order to increase equality, improve well being and increase environmental sustainability. They are generally accepted social accounting principles.

    The Principles are not individually remarkable; they have been drawn from principles underlying social accounting and audit, sustainability reporting, cost benefit analysis, financial accounting, and evaluation practice. There are other guides available on the process of measuring and reporting social value and impact that also refer to principles, such as the Social Investment Taskforce Guidelines for Good Impact Practice. However, the Principles of Social Value can be distinguished by their focus on what underpins an account of social value, and on the questions that need to be addressed so that the information can be used to better inform decisions.

    The Principles were originally developed in 2009 and were updated in 2015 following the merger of the SROI Network and the Social Impact Analysts Association. This new report from Social Value UK explains the thinking that underpins these Principles.

    Please read the report here and let us know what you think in the comments section.

  • SROI: Can it have mainstream impact?

    SROI: Can it have mainstream impact?

    This is a guest blog from member Adrian Henriques. Adrian is Visiting Professor of Accountability and CSR at Middlesex University Business School and a member of the Social Value International Assurance Technical Sub-Committee. You can read more articles on his blog, or follow him on Twitter: @adrianhenriques.

    SROI is one of the pioneering initiatives for assessing an organisation’s social and environmental impacts. It has been deservedly successful over the last decade or so. It has many strengths – including the participation of stakeholders in the determination of impacts and their measurement – but it has largely been applied to social enterprises and charitable ventures. While there has been some interest from the corporate sector, this has largely been confined to corporate community or foundation projects. So is SROI destined to remain in that niche – or can it break out into the mainstream?

    Any SROI practitioner will know that there are many challenges in delivering a successful SROI evaluation: engaging stakeholders appropriately, quantification and defining proxies among them. But these are not the reason why SROI will have difficulty approaching the mainstream. The chief difficulty is that SROI is culturally oriented to the assumption that the organisation in question has a social mission or at least that it is trying to make a difference to social or environmental outcomes. Ideally that will be expressed as a ‘Theory of Change’.

    So to apply SROI successfully to large commercial companies, we need to be able to answer such questions as ‘What is Unilever’s Theory of Change?’ This may seem an absurd question, but here is a quote from Unilever’s website: “We have ambitious plans for sustainable growth and an intense sense of social purpose. Our purpose is to make sustainable living commonplace.” And they have a ‘sustainable living plan’ to go with it.

    Some people may not be convinced by all this, of course, but it does underline the importance of the question whether SROI can be applied to the mainstream businesses of an organisation like Unilever (not just to an appraisal of its many charitable projects). One response may be to try to prove that Unilever is not a social enterprise – and of course it does fall outside the usual understanding of that term. However I prefer to take the opposite tack and to challenge Unilever to prove that it is delivering on its social purpose, including through the application of SROI techniques. After all, making money is a social purpose and I believe it is important to reclaim all economic activity for the social good, not just that which is consciously trying to deliver benefit.

    Unfortunately the way SROI is applied in practice which is not very conducive to understanding mainstream commercial activity. In the calculation of impacts, traditional SROI subtracts ‘what would have happened anyway’ from the total impact that arises to arrive at the figure that can legitimately be attributed to the activities of the organisation in question. And that makes sense when the purpose of the organisation is to make a difference and SROI is trying to measure that that difference.

    Mainstream economic activity, however, takes place in a market context. If we suppose that the market is functioning well, then the answer to the question ‘what would have happened anyway’ had the commercial organisation not done what it did is: exactly the same thing! Another organisation would have done the exact same thing. That means that the social impact of a mainstream organisation, as measured by SROI, is always zero. Of course in some industries companies will try to get a competitive edge – perhaps through new technology or better thought-through processes. But in general and for mature markets, the marginal impact will be very small. This suggests that a social enterprises competing for public contracts, for example, only creates value to the extent that it does so above and beyond that provided by the social enterprises against which they are competing.

    That may be in line with some people think about large companies, but it does seem counter-intuitive to say that Unilever makes no difference whatsoever to the world – for good or ill. Doesn’t the fact of employing people make a positive difference? Surely it at least produces carbon dioxide that will have a measurable negative impact on the world? What sense does it make to say that Unilever is not responsible for any of that? Just because another company may have done identical things doesn’t mean that the things done don’t matter.

    The problem of course stems from the question to which SROI provides the answer. For traditional SROI, the question is really this one: ‘what difference does the organisation make?’. The word ‘difference’ is interpreted to mean doing something that is consciously intended, as well as the unintended consequences of doing so. The answer is set against an alternative in which, while some impacts undoubtedly occur anyway, typically no one else is trying to make a difference. But for mainstream companies, there is another question: what is the total consequence or impact of the organisation? It’s important to note that this is not a better, alternative question, just a different one – and one moreover whose answer is calculated in order to derive the traditional SROI figure.

    The techniques of SROI can still be used to provide answers to the total impact question, albeit with some technical differences. This leads to what I call the ‘absolute SROI’, as opposed to the ‘marginal SROI’ of the traditional technique. Absolute SROI values are useful to assess the scale of impacts and to compare one aspect of a mainstream business to another. They could also be used to evaluate the total impact of a social enterprise, which may become more appropriate as larger parts of the public sector are turned into what can be very large social enterprises.

    I believe that SROI needs to adapt in order to address the impact of mainstream business. And a key part of that adaptation will be to include the calculation of absolute SROI in its portfolio and in the presentation of results. Similar approaches have already been used by organisations such as the Crown Estate which makes use of gross economic value added. And it has been used by Veolia in the calculation of the impact of some of its mainstream businesses. My contention is that if SROI itself is to move into the mainstream it must adapt its techniques.

  • Localis report recommends an outcomes based approach in strategic commissioning

    Localis report recommends an outcomes based approach in strategic commissioning

    A recent report published by independent think-tank Localis, named “Commission Impossible? Shaping places through strategic commissioning” has highlighted the potential benefits of implementing innovative impact measurement models such as SROI and payment by results, finding that a large number of the councils they surveyed had either used, or where planning to use, an outcomes based approach to commissioning.

    The report refers to SROI as a good way of defining value, finding that “many authorities are trying to integrate the principles into commissioning, procurement and the funding of discrete projects.”

    It found that of all the councils surveyed almost everyone uses, or is planning to use, an outcomes based approach in their strategic commissioning. Mapping outcomes is a key stage of the SROI process, which allows users to develop an impact map, or “theory of change” to illustrate the relationship between inputs, outputs and outcomes.

    Localis state that SROI and other innovative approaches are “gaining credence” with 53% of councils planning on using SROI models in their approach to deliver on strategic commissioning plans.

    One of the key lessons, as outlined by this report, states that; “SROI, payment by results and other innovative models have the potential to revolutionise the way services are delivered. In the absence of sufficient data on the financial savings of early intervention, a focus on outcomes may be a useful way to shape the development of the social investment market.” In SROI, it is often preferable to start by forecasting what social value may be in order to ensure the right data collections systems are in place. For an evaluative SROI, outcomes data is essential.

    In the section headed; “Support a thriving market for all sectors” the report states that “Central Government should support councils to open up services to all organisations including small and voluntary organisations, by helping evidence social return on investment and reducing procurement barriers.” It also states that “councils should look to utilize social return on investment, payment by results and other innovative funding models that have the potential to revolutionize the way services are delivered.”

    To read the full report, visit the Localis website here.

  • SROI and Logic Models

    SROI and Logic Models

    JEREMY NICHOLLS 18TH JUNE 2013

    From time to time we are asked about the relationship between the logic model or log frame approach, for example as also used in approaches like Results Based Accountability, and SROI. I have heard people saying they prefer one approach to the other, or that SROI should make more use of logic models or logic models should make more use of SROI.

    From my perspective SROI uses logic models as part of applying the principle of understanding change and so I wondered why there were these different perspectives.

    The more I looked at the relationship, the more I realised that, though on the face of it the two approaches share similar thinking, they start from completely different perspectives before then going on to use similar language.

    The issue is that logic models start with the organisation’s objective and then work out how, or not, the activities logically lead to that objective. This is an excellent approach to improving the management of an organisation, of aligning activities with objectives. Thinking this through could mean having to change activities or change objectives or both. But it will add clarity and improve management.

    SROI starts from completely the other end and asks what happens as a result of the activities. How do these activities lead to change. This is an accountability framework since it seeks to identify all material changes that result from an activity, positive and negative and for all stakeholders affected.

    You would certainly hope that the objectives would show up as part of this analysis but you would also expect other changes to be highlighted as well. SROI argues that the organisation should be accountable for these changes if they are material (at least starting with the perspective of those affected). This also improves management, helps targeting, service design, classification and understanding of stakeholders experiences and views.

    So the two approaches share a need to develop an understanding of the relationship between activities and change, informed by stakeholders, supported where possible by research and experience. SROI requires the causality to be tested as well. This is also true of some applications of the logic model but not all. Those approaches that  describe a sequence from outputs to outcomes to longer term impact are less likely to test causality of impacts. Those that describe impact as being outcomes less what would have happened anyway will have to test for causality.

    But they differ in that SROI analysis results in several outcomes, positive and negative and needs a judgment on where in a chain of outcomes, as one thing leads to another, the value being created or destroyed should be accounted for and managed. In the logic model approach the decision on how far to go is made when setting objectives and this gives rise to the idea of a final outcome, whereas in fact outcomes tend to lead to other outcomes ad infinitum.

    Secondly SROI encourages the classification of stakeholders not, for example, by the group targeted in the objectives but by groups of people experiencing specific but material outcomes as these arise from the analysis.

    Thirdly SROI needs a process to help determine which of the various logic models that emerge should the organisations be accountable for and therefore manag ; perhaps not all of them. A process called determining materiality. Valuation, from the stakeholders’ perspective, is important as it helps determine materiality, allowing the relative importance of different outcomes to be compared. Organisations that manage against objectives have determined what is material and so don’t need this process and don’t need to compare relative importance of different outcomes.

    All this means is that accountability is more complex than managing objectives and so naturally enough a reasonable first step for many organisations is to manage objectives and gain clarity on how activities lead to outcomes.

    However moving from this to becoming more accountable is not a simple progression. It means changing the logic from how do we achieve our objective to what happens in pursuit of our objective, changing from thinking backwards from objectives to forwards from activities.

    And that’s less easy.