Issues & Ideas

In the Quest for Big Data, Don’t Forget the Little Data!

In our growing excitement about the power of Big Data, it easy to overlook the importance of using the ‘little data’ out there. These are the data that organizations already collect, but which may not be used to their full potential.    Time spent summarizing, analyzing and using data is as important as collecting it!  Here are five simple tips for getting more from your data:

 

The Story Behind the Metric: Is Vancouver the 2nd or 215th Least Affordable City?

Over the past few years, I have often heard that  ‘Vancouver is the second least affordable city in the world.’  I usually use this metric to feel sorry for myself that I didn’t buy real estate right when I moved here 20 years ago.

 

When people say the word "world", I usually picture this:

 

 

The Value of Art and Culture (Part 3 of Connecting the Dots: Helpful Frameworks for Measuring Action and Impact)

Some of the most challenging impacts to define and measure relate to the value of arts and culture.  While it is quite common to see output numbers like attendance and participation rates for arts and culture-related initiatives, rarely do we see measures that relate to deeper impacts.

Connecting the Dots: Helpful Frameworks for Measuring Action and Impact (Part 2: Quality of Life and Well-being)

Measuring quality of life is a HUGE area and is increasingly being done to understand the key outcomes of many programs, particularly in social services, health care, community development and education. This is great!  Interest in measuring quality of life gets to the core of what measurement should be about - measuring what matters - rather than sticking with what is easy and not particularly important.

Connecting the Dots: Helpful Frameworks for Measuring Action and Impact (Part 1: The Environment)

When it comes to measuring and demonstrating value, we don't have to reinvent the wheel. Considerable work, thought and testing has gone into advancing many useful frameworks. I'll be devoting a few blogs to looking at some key frameworks that are used out there, starting with environmental frameworks.

 

Value for Citizens, not just Taxpayers!

How often do you hear politicians in the media talk about the needs of taxpayers?  Too often argues Daphne Bramham, in an editorial I read in Monday’s  Vancouver Sun, “We need citizens, not just taxpayers  and bookeepers.”  Bramham traces the deliberate replacement of citizen with taxpayer, which began in the 1980s with the American anti-tax movement that has since spread to Canada.  Along with that change, she says that politicians began talking more about how much

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