Policy - Page 21 of 21 - NPC


Volunteers and data collection
Volunteers are the lifeblood of many charities and play an integral role in the services they provide. At NPC’s Impact Leadership Conference last week, we heard from two charities that had successfully motivated their volunteers to collect reliable impact data.

The morality of charity
A lot of us hold the belief that we should give to charity, be it from a sense of religious duty, or from a feeling that we should give something back. Yet the question of morality seems to end once we have decided whether or not to give.

Business Connectors
We’re helping Business in the Community (BITC) to measure the impact of an ambitious new programme which harnesses business expertise to tackle local issues.

The Olympic legacy: Using sport to change lives
Legacy was at the heart of London’s Olympic bid which pledged to ‘inspire a generation’. What will this mean in practice? How can we harness the energy around sport this summer to engage disadvantaged young people and communities and improve lives? How can we measure the benefits of sport?


NEETs charities must work together to prove their worth
Read about the shared measurement pilot in which Tomorrow's People took part in Impact measurement in the NEETs sector, published today and available to download for free from NPC's website.


Digging down into donor motivation
At NPC we are passionate about helping the voluntary sector achieve as much as it can; helping charities and funders make the biggest possible difference to the lives of the people they help.

The importance of mental health problems are often lost in translation
Too often, experts don't translate their jargon into the language of their audience; this is true of mental health and employment as it is of many areas.

Social Impact Analysts Association (SIAA) launches today
Today, two-and-a-half years on, and after much planning and discussion about what such an organisation would look like, the Social Impact Analysts Association (SIAA) launches with a sold-out ‘unconference’ in central London.