Outcome Mapping
There are three stages of Outcome Mapping:
The first stage, Intentional Design, helps a programme establish consensus on the macro level changes it will help to bring about and plan the strategies it will use. It helps answer four questions: Why? (What is the vision to which the programme wants to contribute?); Who? (Who are the programme's boundary partners [individuals, groups, and organisations with whom the programme interacts directly and with whom the programme anticipates opportunities for influence]?); What? (What are the changes that are being sought?); and How? (How will the programme contribute to the change process?).
The second stage, Outcome and Performance Monitoring, provides a framework for the ongoing monitoring of the programme's actions and the boundary partners' progress toward the achievement of outcomes. It is based largely on systematised self-assessment. It provides the following data collection tools for elements identified in the Intentional Design stage: an Outcome Journal (progress markers); a Strategy Journal (strategy maps); and a Performance Journal (organisational practices).
The third stage, Evaluation Planning, helps the programme identify evaluation priorities and develop an evaluation plan.
Intentional Design
Step 1: Vision
Step 2: Mission
Step 3: Boundary Partners
Step 4: Outcome Challenges
Step 5: Progress Markers
Step 6: Strategy Maps
Step 7: Organisational Practices
Outcome & Performance Monitoring
Step 8: Monitoring Priorities
Step 9: Outcome Journals
Step 10: Strategy Journal
Step 11: Performance Journal
Evaluation Planning
Step 12: Evaluation Plan
Outcome Mapping introduces monitoring and evaluation considerations at the planning stage of a programme. Outcome Mapping moves away from the notion that monitoring and evaluation are done to a programme, and, instead, actively engages the team in the design of a monitoring framework and evaluation plan and promotes self-assessment. By using Outcome Mapping, a programme is not claiming the achievement of development impacts; rather, the focus is on the programme's contributions to outcomes.
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