When I started getting into data visualization design, human centered design, and user experience design I had this hope that a better understanding of design methodologies would ultimately help me to become a better evaluator.
But I had the causal direction flipped.
What I have learned over a decade of being both an evaluator and a designer is that while knowing design might make you a better evaluator, having a firm understanding of evaluation will definitely make you a better designer. Whether you are trying to design a business plan, website, or software application, having an evaluation mindset can give you a unique and rare perspective into our ever changing, complicated, and confusing modern world.
This post is the first in a series that I’m dubbing the “Evaluation Mindset.”
And I’m dedicating the series to all of you who see yourselves in my cartoons, who hang them up on your office walls and quietly chuckle at the kinds of jokes that nobody else seems to get. I hope this series resonates.
Our Actions have Consequences
It’s the kind of thing you try to teach your kids.
Often in the context of a temper tantrum or as part of a lecture following a “bad decision.”
“No, screaming and kicking your feet will not get you ice cream.”
“How do you think your little brother feels when you punch him in the arm?”
But there is also an incredible beauty to the idea that actions have consequences. If our actions did not have consequences there would be no reason to do anything. Our actions having consequences makes design possible.
Why do babies cry?
At first crying is likely the response to an overwhelming new world. Feelings, pains, visions, thoughts.
But over time children make a connection. When they cry, a parent appears.
Amazing.
Hungry, try crying. Just filled a diaper, cry. Don’t feel like being alone in the crib at night. Cry.
It works wonders, well at least until the parents start Googling bedtime routines and the Ferber method. Then all of a sudden, crying doesn’t just bring the parent.
The action (crying) doesn’t have the consequence (parent appearing). So the baby can keep trying, give up, or come up with some kind option C (i.e. project break outta the crib).
Inside the Black Box
If you have enough trust built up, or charisma, or slick marketing, or luck, or delusion, or slimy conman talk, you don’t need to connect your actions with the consequences you are trying to bring about.
Some of us though don’t really like doing things we don’t understand.
My mom had a saying she would pull out every now and again, “well, it is what it is.”
I have never believed that.
To me that’s give up talk. It’s the way we dismiss things as unchangeable. It’s the secret behind perpetuating the status quo. It’s the reason why people don’t vote, and worse, don’t run.
Embracing the idea that our actions have consequences gives us power. And being able to conceptualize the actions that lead to our ideal consequences can give us insight and put our work in context.
In evaluative terms, our actions are activities. Our consequences are outcomes. They are the impact a program’s activities can bring about.
And if you build around those ideas, you can model your design. You can collect evidence and evaluate. You can iterate your idea and make it better.
Good and Bad Impacts
Impact is a consequence.
It can be good, it can be bad, it can be both, and it can be neither.
But if actions lead to consequences, those consequences exist whether or not we recognize their existence.
Failing to measure a consequence doesn’t make it go away.
When a government program takes action to increase the availability of credit to low income neighborhoods it may bring about its intended consequence. But it also might bring about an unintended consequence, like an increase in high interest debt.
Inaction also has consequences.
You know the saying, “damned if you do, damned if you don’t.”
Inaction also has consequences. Doing nothing about climate change doesn’t make it go away. Given our pace, doing nothing is a choice in its own right.
Not voting will not make a certain president cease to exist. Quite the contrary.
Evaluation Mindset Practice
Okay, now it’s time to practice.
What are some of the actions you have taken today? What consequences have they brought about?
Is there a non-profit organization that you really respect? What actions do they take? What are the consequences of those actions?
Are there are other action/consequence pairs that come to mind? What would happen if you changed the action? What other kinds of consequences exist?
If I want people to read my blog, I have to publish posts and share them. Those are actions. I’ll consider this post successful if people read it (I’ll see that in my analytics) and then share it (Twitter @clysy) or comment on it.
So please do!
Amalia Lucena
Great!
Chris Lysy
Thank you Amalia ๐
Chris Olusola Ogedengbe
Well done !!. The idea of your post is great. It started by letting the readers know that evaluation is by accountability. I am impressed the way you explained it practically.
I do not know your area of specialty. If however, you an M&E specialist, I would have suggested that you illustrate Theory of Change (ToC) in the same practical way.
I look forward to other posts.
Regards
Chris
Chris Lysy
Thank you Chris ๐
Dena
Am definitely one of those people who chuckle at your posts. Big fan. Thanks for this. Love the boxing glove.
Chris Lysy
Appreciate the comment Dena ๐
Aimee
consequence from following Chris: learn something, laugh at a joke, apply an idea.
intended consequences from those actions: make the world better
thanks Chris!
Chris Lysy
Aww, thank you Aimee
Kirsten
I really liked the black box. I enjoy your posts.
Chris Lysy
Thank you Kirsten ๐
Rita S Fierro
Fun post Chris! Thanks ๐
Chris Lysy
Thank you Rita ๐
Jindra Cekan
Chris, as always, great drawings. I LO?d about the black box. So true re; so much climate change funding. Will definitely follow you. Waving!
Chris Lysy
And a wave right back to you, thanks Jindra ๐
Margaret Moon
Hello there Chris.
Loved this post, however that’s not unusual as I always like your work. You have a unique way of expressing complex ideas in ways that everyone can understand.
I wanted to mention that I have been sharing your work on our internal network (Evaluation Community of Practice group on Yammer). Always good to get the word out to as many people as possible via whatever channels are available.
cheers