Funder & Evaluator Affinity Network (FEAN)

Changing the way evaluators & funders work together to deepen social impact

Learning and evaluation — the “R&D” of the social sector — are critical functions for foundations seeking to maximize their impact. By supporting innovation, adaptation, and continuous improvement processes, learning and evaluation helps organizations get closer to the changes they seek.

At the same time, evaluation professionals working with and within philanthropy are experiencing a time of rapid evolution: growing complexity of philanthropic investments, foundations’ internal capacity constraints, and demand for learning-supportive skills and approaches. While ensuring a strong bench of evaluation professionals is critical to philanthropy, few mechanisms exist to support dialogue and capacity development across evaluators working in this sector.

Enter the Funder & Evaluator Affinity Network (FEAN).

Shared Goals of FEAN

  • FEAN brings together funders and evaluators to review the current state of evaluation in philanthropy;
  • identifies key opportunities and challenges in this field of practice;
  • works individually and collectively toward solutions that advance shared capacity on the part of evaluators working with, and within, philanthropy

Launch and Achievements

In June 2017 and with initial support from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, we convened a group of 27 leaders of small and midsize evaluation firms and funders to discuss the state of evaluation and test the salience of some key issues proposed by Meg Long of Equal Measure and Clare Nolan of Engage R+D.

The first meeting, held alongside the Grantmakers for Effective Organizations Learning Conference in Chicago, Illinois, affirmed the resonance of those issues among a diverse set of participants. It also underscored and elevated the need for funders and evaluators to work together in new ways to build the shared capacity of philanthropic evaluators — those within philanthropy as well as external consultants.

Building this sort of shared capacity requires a shift in perspective; rather than viewing evaluators as mere contractors, funders must recognize the crucial role evaluators can play in advancing knowledge about how to drive social change most effectively.

Overall, the Affinity Network has been met with great interest and excitement from many people in the philanthropic evaluation field, more than originally anticipated. As we head into the third and fourth years of the Funder Evaluator Affinity Network, we are shifting our emphasis towards action – supporting member action teams – and then beginning to embed aspects of the FEAN effort within existing, mission-, vision-, and values- aligned initiatives or organizations.

Evolution of the Funder Evaluator Affinity Network

Since the inaugural, exploratory meeting two years ago at GEO, the Funder Evaluator Affinity Network has adopted the principle of idea diffusion as our theory of how to shift field practice among evaluators working with, and within philanthropy. Our theory is predicated on having a set of “early adopters” and “influencers” i.e. individuals who have bought into the FEAN agenda early, and for whom advancing this agenda also advances their professional priorities – organizational and/or individual.   We view the now 250+ members of the FEAN network as our influencers, and we are looking to network members to begin to act differently because of their engagement with FEAN.  We have also seeded some early efforts – the research into past and current talent pipeline programs conducted by the Luminare Group and the piloting of the Evaluation Roundtable expansion by the Center for Evaluation Innovation – to help fuel FEAN member dialogue and action.

Moving Forward with Action Teams

In this third year, we are launching five action teams to provide FEAN members a more intimate and targeted opportunity to consider and test new ways of working. The action team topics, listed below, were identified by FEAN members as the most salient issues in their work and for the field:

  1. Improving the application of evaluation in philanthropic strategy and practice.
  2. Creating a “market place” for knowledge sharing to broaden the audience for evaluation beyond individual organizations.
  3. Supporting evaluator partnerships in philanthropy to increase collaboration and knowledge sharing, and reduce competition.
  4. Considering recruitment and in-role support for new and diverse talent to fit the field’s evolving needs.
  5. Advancing evaluation practice and capacity related to global challenges (i.e., international development, climate).

The launch of these action teams was a natural outgrowth of the interest and momentum expressed by FEAN members.  This year’s discussions will culminate in a workshop in the fall and a public-facing document. We look forward to seeing the results and recommendations developed by the team, and the ways that this work will continue to influence the practice of evaluation in philanthropy.

 

What FEAN’s Achieved

Since the first convening, the Affinity Network has grown to over 250 members. Along the way, the Network has achieved a variety of accomplishments:

  • Raised awareness of this effort and the issues it seeks to address by providing updates on our work on blogs hosted :
  • Hosted discussions at the annual American Evaluation Association (AEA) conferences in 2017 and 2018 and at the April 2018 conference of the Grantmakers for Effective Organizations (GEO) attended by 80 to 100 people each, including both new and returning participants.
  • Conducted a survey of network members in which more than 40 individuals responded and shared actions and solutions in support of the FEAN agenda.
  • Authored a Foundation Review article describing the evolution of this effort and sharing actions and solutions sourced through the survey as a way of sharing the knowledge being developed through this effort and catalyzing further field advancement.
  • Established a partnership with the Luminare Group to conduct an analysis of current practices and investments related to enhancing the nature of and access to the supply of evaluators in philanthropy and development of recommendations for improving the field.
  • Established a partnership with the Center for Evaluation Innovation to test an expansion of the Evaluation Roundtable model to help senior and emerging evaluators better understand and navigate foundations; increase the diversity of skilled and effective evaluators working in philanthropy; and build a collaborative network of evaluators working in philanthropy. we have completed the following activities in support of this objective.
  • Created a mechanism to support coordination across the Center for Evaluation Innovation, Luminare Group, and the Equitable Evaluation Initiative to and ensure our process is attentive to diversity, equity, and inclusion principles rather than reinforcing existing structural inequities.
  • Broadened the base of funding support for FEAN and partner efforts to include The California Endowment and the Ewing Marion Kaufman, David and Lucile Packard, Ford, California HealthCare, William and Flora Hewlett, Walton Family, MacArthur and James Irvine foundations.