Skip to main content

Home/ Regional Development Officers/ Group items tagged impact

Rss Feed Group items tagged

william doust

AFCPE | Journal Articles - 0 views

  • This article demonstrates that there are substantial costs to employers caused by the stresses associated with poor personal financial behaviors of employees. Approximately 15% of workers in the United States are currently experiencing stress from poor financial behaviors to the extent that it negatively impacts their productivity.
  • The Negative Impact of Employee Poor Personal Financial Behaviors on Employers
  •  
    The Negative Impact of Employee Poor Personal Financial Behaviors on Employers Author: E. Thomas Garman, Irene E. Leech and John E. Grable This article demonstrates that there are substantial costs to employers caused by the stresses associated with poor personal financial behaviors of employees. Approximately 15% of workers in the United States are currently experiencing stress from poor financial behaviors to the extent that it negatively impacts their productivity. The proportion of workers experiencing financial problems that negatively impact productivity for a single employer could range as high as 40 to 50% depending upon certain factors. The costs of reduced employee productivity because of poor personal financial behaviors are substantial. The full extent of the costs to employers is unknown. Key Words: absenteeism, employee assistance program, employee productivity, personal financial behavior, stress, substance abuse
william doust

Stanford Social Innovation Review : Articles : Creating High-Impact Nonprofits (Septemb... - 0 views

  • Conventional wisdom says that scaling social innovation starts with strengthening internal management capabilities. This study of 12 high-impact nonprofits,however, shows that real social change happens when organizations go outside their own walls and find creative ways to enlist the help of others.
  •  
    Six high impact practices for non-profits: bust myths & put your charity on steroids! - free PDF Stanford Social Innov.
william doust

Connected Kingdom - impact of internet in uk & demographics - 1 views

  •  
    Connected Kingdom - impact of internet in uk & demographics. 7.2% of gdp
william doust

CharityComms - Six things we learned at the Measuring Impact, Communicating Results con... - 0 views

  • Use case studies
  • tell us what you would have done differently,”
  • Keep it simple: tell us how and why you make a difference.”
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • ask the question “So what?” about every stat they include. “It’s what people get out of your services that really matters,”
  • If the information you gather will make you change nothing, don’t bother,”
  • “There WILL be things that your charity already measures,
  • Social Return on Investment (SROI)
  • measuring SROI is about giving value to the change that your charity makes to people’s lives
william doust

Stanford Social Innovation Review : Articles : Fostering High-Quality Connections (Dece... - 0 views

  • Fostering High-Quality ConnectionsHow to deal with corrosive relationships at work
  •  
    how charities can deal effectively with corrosive people - who may impact on brands and services!
william doust

Whitepaper: Sustainable Social Media Infrastructure « Miro - Internet TV Blog - 0 views

  • Whitepaper: Sustainable Social Media Infrastructure
  • A new type of non-profit organization is emerging, one that has never been possible in an offline world. These new organizations are creating permanent, sustainable public knowledge and communications infrastructure that is designed for public benefit.
  • The foundation world, largely absent from these success stories, should seize the opportunity to create new funding models for the next generation of long-term, public interest technology projects.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Mozilla Key TakeawaysOnline, a small amount of resources can serve millions of people. Web-based organizations can become self-sustaining in a way that has never been possible offline. When creating a website or building software, costs do not rise linearly with the number of people served. Successful social tech projects can quickly transition from being grant recipients to granting organizations. Non-profits have competitive advantages in the marketplace: high levels of trust and credibility and volunteer communities can multiply the reach of the paid staff. Open-source software can create a better product than the proprietary competition.
  • Non-profit projects online can build vibrant collaborative communities of volunteers and evangelists that would have been extremely difficult and very expensive to organize offline.
  • Tiny amounts of money can let smart projects reach enormous audiences. Avoiding some types of revenue can help protect the credibility and therefore success of certain non-profit tech projects. Revenue requirements relative to people served may be so small that perpetual grant support is the best long-term strategy.
  •  
    Xtine, here's tons of bits that you could nick to justify the impact of elearning @ CLP ;-) it will really, really - REALLY! inspire you ;-) will skype it to you ;-)
william doust

10 seeeeeriously cool workplaces - 0 views

  •  
    Fab website to do with workplaces and productivity - links nicely to May's edition of mind magazine. Research pointed to design and workplaces, hospitals, etc - and impact on wellbeing. Enjoy ;o) nicking some of this for my presentation ;o)
william doust

Emerald: Article Request - Funky offices: Reflections on office design in the 'new econ... - 0 views

  •  
    Funky offices: Reflections on office design in the 'new economy' Explores how & whether there is a sufficiently quantitative impact of the new economy work culture and new economy organisation's perspective on fun work environments. Paid for though. £13.00
william doust

Related Policies & Investigations: FLF and Learning Rev. - 2 views

Eliz (from clp found this fab report): "Just found this LSC publication online - specifically refers to family learning/crime reduction, social behaviour etc etc: " http://readingroom.lsc.gov.uk/...

FLF learning revolution policy informal adult learning

william doust

Impact on wellbeing framework & report: daily centres in Italy and the UK - NPC tools - 0 views

  •  
    Check this out when you've done your interventions for this year! It's a report with a wellbeing framework for children in after school services contexts. Enjoy
william doust

Volunteer Impact - Resources - 0 views

  •  
    Here's a pic-n-mix array of resources for the developing charitable organisation. Check them out and tell me what you think. It even includes policies!
william doust

Stanford Social Innovation Review : Articles : Loud and Clear (December 1, 2003) - 0 views

  • Loud and ClearCrafting messages that stick—What nonprofitscan learn from urban legends
william doust

Stanford Social Innovation Review : Articles : I Want You to Meet Joe (April 1, 2005) - 0 views

  • Want You to Meet Joe
  • How a riveting story can get your message across
  • Serious Business of Storytelling
  •  
    The powerful business side of good compelling showcase stories and get serious results! Stanford Social Innovation ;o) Bunny & Eliz - your fab stories!
william doust

Stanford Social Innovation Review : Articles : More Bang for the Buck (March 10, 2008) - 0 views

  • productivity could be a powerful way for nonprofit organizationsto multiply the impact of their work, the authors explore how three nonprofits succeeded in reducing costs without sacrificing the quality of their services
  •  
    productivity in credit crunch: reduce costs without sacrificing the quality of nonprofit services.
william doust

South West Forum News - 0 views

  •  
    "'Work at Any Price' Not Working 09/11/2009 Work does not provide a guaranteed route out of poverty, according to research published this week by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. A study of the experiences and perceptions of work among residents living in six deprived areas in the UK highlights the fact that many are trapped in a cycle of 'poor work/no work' that fails to lift them out of poverty. A team from Sheffield Hallam University found that poverty-level pay can force those in employment to work excessive hours, harming the quality of their family life. For those out of work, this can act as a disincentive to leave benefits, it says. Many of those interviewed saw the value in working, in terms of increased self-esteem and reducing isolation, but gained little financially. Other issues that the research highlights include the tensions between work and parenting, with many low paid workers unable to pay for childcare and their jobs lacking the flexibility to fulfill parenting responsibilities. The research is part of a wider three year study called 'Living Through Change in Challenging Neighbourhoods'. The wider project examines the extent to which the place where you live makes a difference to your experience of poverty, and is following the lives of 180 people over three years from 2008 to 2010."
1 - 17 of 17
Showing 20 items per page