Event Planner Spain, event organizers in Spain and Morocco Ideas and resources for events and meeting in Spain and Morocco: event staff, congresses, conventions, events, catering...
Internet leaders: May 1.361.666 page views
Newsletter (15,000+ subscribers) Event Planner Spain mobile version RSS Event Planner Spain
 Search Hotels
 and Venues
 Search Event
 Agencies
 Search Event
 Suppliers
   Services
Event Planner Spain, meeting planners in Spain
See all categories
Evenia Olympic Resort and Congress Centre. Convention and Congress Hotel & Spa Costa Brava Spain
The Meetings Show UK

Register now for The Meetings Show UK<br/> <b>Olympia, London 9-11 July</b>
Register now
Olympia, London 9-11 July

Interesting reading
How Hoteliers Can Leverage New Pinterest Features to Enhance Their Online Marketing Strategy How Hoteliers Can Leverage New Pinterest Features to ...
Business, Just Not As Usual Business, Just Not As Usual ...

Numbers + Narrative

Send this article to a friend
Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to Digg Share to Delicious More...
Numbers + Narrative How to find your Social Return on Investment (SROI).

Many event professionals try to make a positive difference through community service events, in support of a social responsibility (CSR) program. It makes us feel good. It can also make a real difference in the community. But how can we measure that and then tell the story of the change we created? Social return on investment (SROI) helps to do that.

According to Alison Lingane and Sara Olsen, writing for the California Management Review, the purpose of SROI is to tell the story of the social impact of an organization (or an event) compared to the financial investment you made to make the impact happen. This is a broader concept than financial return on investment and measures value created by changes to social, environmental and economic systems, or what is called the triple bottom line.

SROI is designed to measure value added, or what you have uniquely contributed. This is the concept of “impact” as defined by the SROI Primer, a publication of the New Economics Foundation and the London Business School. “Impact” is derived by first taking your “inputs”, determining the “outputs” of the activity through consultation with key stakeholders, and then determining the change that occurred. Impact is that change, less the change that would have happened anyhow.

For example, your service project involves volunteers in donated trucks who pick up food donated by community agencies, bring it to the food bank, then help to sort it. Your inputs are volunteer time and labor. You determine, from talking to the food bank, the outputs are 5,000 pounds of food picked up and the elimination of US$2,000 of labor costs. In addition, you discover that without the labor and trucks you provided, only 2,000 pounds of food could have been picked up. Because you were able to offer trucks with a large capacity, the food bank was able to promote food donation to more pick-up locations, generating an additional 3,000 pounds of food. The labor required to sort the 2,000 pounds of food would have been $800. Your impact was therefore the additional 3,000 pounds of food and $1,200 in labor savings.

The next step is determining how the impact compares to your inputs, or the SROI ratio. You estimate that it took ten volunteers five hours each to collect the food. If you assign a value to the volunteer time (i.e. $50), determine the value of each pound of food (i.e. $2), and include the cost of running the trucks, you can determine this ratio. Ten volunteers, each donating 5.5 hours, totals 55 hours at $50/hour, for a value of $2,750. The cost of running the trucks is at least the cost of fuel; we estimate $50 per truck for five trucks. The cost of the trucks is therefore $250 for a total cost of $3,000. We estimate that the food is worth $6,000 ($2 times 3,000 pounds of food). If we add this to the $1,200 in labor cost savings, we get $7,200. So, your SROI ratio is 7,200/3,000, or 2.4:1. Therefore, for every dollar you invested in the project, you generated $2.40 worth of benefits.

Now we need to tell our story. This helps build the emotional connection for stakeholders such as event participants and employees. The story is known as the “theory of change.” According to Social Return on Investment: A Practical Guide for the Development Cooperation Sector, the theory of change tells the story of how stakeholders’ lives have changed or are expected to change as a result of the project. The story should include measureable objectives; specifically identifying how your organization believes it can make a difference.

This methodology can be used in advance, to compare SROI ratios of possible projects and determine which one might have the most impact based on your best estimates. In the meeting and event industry, which is increasingly under scrutiny by regulators and internal managers, being able to use both numbers and narrative to tell your story is important and one that can raise your value in your organization. And that is a theory of change that we could all benefit from. One+
Comment on this news item
Name     Email

See more sustainable events news, corporate social responsibility (CSR)
See more Meeting Professionals International (MPI) news

Number of views of this article: 2,354

Tags, news section: Agencies  Business  CSR  Environmental  Event  IT  London  Management  Meeting  Organization  Social 

Tags, event suppliers: Agencies 

Newsletter
Suppliers
by (1) keyword
Search News
by (1) keyword
Search all
Loading
Member Access
username
password
Agència de Promoció d'Activitats i de Congressos - UAB Campus. University campus with hotel-convention centre, residential complex and sports facilities for all kinds of events near Barcelona, Spain
Go4it Events. Event planning company on the Costa Blanca and the rest of Spain
Hotel Emperador. Business and meeting hotel in Madrid’s Gran Via, Spain
Palacio de Ferias y Congresos de Málaga. Trade Fair and Congress Centre Malaga, Convention Centre Spain
Palacio de Congresos Hospital de Santiago. Historic Event Venue Jaen Spain

 
About Us | Advertise | Contact Us | Legal | Site Map | Links
If you are planning any type of event in Spain or Morocco, contact us or browse our directory with more
than 750 quality suppliers to request proposals and quotes directly, free of charge and without commissions.

With more than one million page views and 1,000 requests for proposals a month, Event Planner Spain is currently the
most visited event organization portal in Spain, available in eight languages, with visits from 160 different countries.
If you provide services for events in Spain or Morocco, register your company and ask for a free, six-month trial period.
If you want to advertise on our portal, please check advertise or contact us for an interesting proposal.

Event Planner Spain, S.L.
Paseo de la Sierra, 38-20, 29018 Málaga, Spain
© Copyright Event Planner Spain 2006-2013
Tel. +34 952 294 327

PadInTheCity. iPad and display  rental / hire for tradeshows, events and companies in Spain

Last event supplier

PadInTheCity. iPad and display rental / hire ...
5.000 Hotel Rooms and 4.000 Menus for Only €10

Last offer

5.000 Hotel Rooms and 4.000 Menus for Only ...
eCooltra Starts to Operate in Madrid

Last news

eCooltra Starts to Operate in Madrid ...
Hotel Santos Saray. 4-star event and meeting hotel in the centre of Granada, Spain

Random event supplier

Hotel Santos Saray. 4-star event and meeting hotel ...
Midsummer Night Party

Random offer

Midsummer Night Party'13 at Finca Mas Solers ...
Companies Don

Random news

Companies Don't Reply to Clients' E-mails ...

Málaga Convention Bureau Member MPI Member, Meeting Professionals International CO2 Neutral Website Exhibiting at EIBTM, global event for meetings and incentives IMEX 2014 – Frankfurt 20-22 May. The essential worldwide exhibition for incentive travel, meetings and events