Khulisa celebrates 25th birthday with M&E competition

Home » Khulisa celebrates 25th birthday with M&E competition

Extension of M&E birthday competition deadline

Khulisa is delighted with the quality submissions received for the #Khulisa25 M&E capacity building competition. We have received requests for a deadline extension and are delighted to announce that the new submission deadline is Monday 17 September 2018. Winners will be announced at our birthday brunch on Wednesday 10 October.

 


 

Outputs, outcomes, theory of change, log frames. If you’re working in the non-governmental or public sector, chances are you often come across the abstract universe of Monitoring & Evaluation (M&E) terms. Although you may understand the concepts (or may even have read long academic articles about it), you might still feel in the dark when it comes to M&E implementation. If your organization fits the description, then Khulisa Management Services’ 25th Birthday Competition is for you.

 

 

When Khulisa was established in 1993, the phrase M&E was completely new to the development world. “We became one of the first M&E firms on the continent to respond to new public funding demands, driven by evidence and accountability,” says Ms Jennifer Bisgard, one of Khulisa’s founding directors.

 

To celebrate 25 years in business, Khulisa is launching a capacity building competition providing assistance to organizations in need of technical M&E support.

 

“M&E capacity constraints remain one of the biggest challenges for many development-based organizations. We decided to celebrate our 25th birthday by providing help with basic M&E concepts such as the development of a theory of change, setting up monitoring systems or providing tips on data visualization and reporting,” says Ms Bisgard.

 

The application is open to all Southern African organizations, including government departments, NGOs, civil society organizations and consultancies.

 

“We are following a needs-based approach with the entries, which in return gives us an indication of the most pressing M&E challenges in small organizations,” says Ms Bisgard. “One of Khulisa’s key values is learning and thus we expect applicants to share what they’ve learnt from the process and how they implemented better evaluation techniques in their organization”.

 

To enter, interested organizations should send a cover letter and application, stipulating their specific M&E needs. Khulisa’s passion for the development of M&E professionals has been central to its operating philosophy. Its annual internship programme has propelled emerging evaluators into the profession since 1995.

 

In 2005, Ms Bisgard was the founding chairperson of the South African Monitoring & Evaluation Association (SAMEA). She has also been involved in global initiatives to build evaluation capacity such as the African Evaluation Association (AfrEA) and the International Organization for Cooperation in Evaluation (IOCE). In 2015, SAMEA recognised her for her outstanding commitment to M&E professionalization over the last decade.

 

Khulisa’s work spans multiple sectors in development including health, education, youth development, economic growth, democracy, governance, agriculture and nutrition. Its project focus is predominantly in Africa, but it has expanded to Indonesia, India and Sri Lanka in the last two years and opened an office in Washington DC in 2014.

 


Do you want to win free M&E technical support?

Competition terms & conditions

One Response

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Khulisa celebrates 25th birthday with M&E competition

 

Outputs, outcomes, theory of change, log frames. If you’re working in the non-governmental or public sector, chances are you often come across the abstract universe of Monitoring & Evaluation (M&E) terms. Although you may understand the concepts (or may even have read long academic articles about it), you might still feel in the dark when it comes to M&E implementation. If your organization fits the description, then Khulisa Management Services’ 25th Birthday Competition is for you.

 

 

When Khulisa was established in 1993, the phrase M&E was completely new to the development world. “We became one of the first M&E firms on the continent to respond to new public funding demands, driven by evidence and accountability,” says Ms Jennifer Bisgard, one of Khulisa’s founding directors.

 

To celebrate 25 years in business, Khulisa is launching a capacity building competition providing assistance to organizations in need of technical M&E support.

 

“M&E capacity constraints remain one of the biggest challenges for many development-based organizations. We decided to celebrate our 25th birthday by providing help with basic M&E concepts such as the development of a theory of change, setting up monitoring systems or providing tips on data visualization and reporting,” says Ms Bisgard.

 

The application is open to all Southern African organizations, including government departments, NGOs, civil society organizations and consultancies.

 

“We are following a needs-based approach with the entries, which in return gives us an indication of the most pressing M&E challenges in small organizations,” says Ms Bisgard. “One of Khulisa’s key values is learning and thus we expect applicants to share what they’ve learnt from the process and how they implemented better evaluation techniques in their organization”.

 

To enter, interested organizations should send a cover letter and application, stipulating their specific M&E needs. Khulisa’s passion for the development of M&E professionals has been central to its operating philosophy. Its annual internship programme has propelled emerging evaluators into the profession since 1995.

 

In 2005, Ms Bisgard was the founding chairperson of the South African Monitoring & Evaluation Association (SAMEA). She has also been involved in global initiatives to build evaluation capacity such as the African Evaluation Association (AfrEA) and the International Organization for Cooperation in Evaluation (IOCE). In 2015, SAMEA recognised her for her outstanding commitment to M&E professionalization over the last decade.

 

Khulisa’s work spans multiple sectors in development including health, education, youth development, economic growth, democracy, governance, agriculture and nutrition. Its project focus is predominantly in Africa, but it has expanded to Indonesia, India and Sri Lanka in the last two years and opened an office in Washington DC in 2014.

 


Do you want to win free M&E technical support?

 Competition terms & conditions