---
name: analyzing-social-impact
language: en
description: Structures social impact measurement with theory of change, outcome metrics, and stakeholder analysis. Use when measuring social impact, designing impact metrics, or evaluating social outcomes.
tags:
  - analysis
  - sustainable-finance
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - ESG
    - Impact Investing
    - Sustainable Finance
  document_types:
    - Analysis Report
  skill_modes:
    - Analysis
---
# Analyzing Social Impact

Structures social impact measurement using theory of change logic models, quantitative/qualitative outcome metrics, and stakeholder-level analysis for ESG reporting, impact fund due diligence, and program evaluation.

## When To Use

- Evaluating a fund's or project's social outcomes against stated impact thesis
- Designing KPIs and outcome metrics for impact investing vehicles (e.g., community development funds, social bonds)
- Building or auditing a theory of change for grant-funded or blended-finance programs
- Preparing social impact sections for GIIN/IRIS+ aligned reporting, SFDR Article 8/9 disclosures, or B Corp assessments
- Comparing social performance across portfolio companies or program cohorts

## Inputs To Gather

- **Impact thesis or mission statement** — the intended social change and target beneficiary population
- **Theory of change documentation** — existing logic model, if any (inputs → activities → outputs → outcomes → impact)
- **Outcome data** — quantitative metrics (beneficiaries reached, jobs created, health outcomes) and qualitative evidence (case studies, beneficiary interviews)
- **Baseline and comparator data** — pre-intervention benchmarks or control group figures
- **Reporting framework alignment** — which standards apply (IRIS+, IMP five dimensions, UN SDG targets, SFDR PAI indicators, GRI) [VERIFY]
- **Stakeholder map** — list of affected groups (direct beneficiaries, communities, workers, investors, public sector partners)
- **Time horizon** — measurement period and whether longitudinal tracking is in scope

## Workflow

1. **Define scope and impact thesis alignment**
   - Confirm the social outcome domains in scope (e.g., affordable housing, health access, financial inclusion, education)
   - Map the stated impact thesis to specific UN SDG targets or IRIS+ thematic categories
   - Clarify whether the analysis is ex-ante (projected), interim (monitoring), or ex-post (evaluation)

2. **Build or validate the theory of change**
   - Construct a logic model: Inputs → Activities → Outputs → Outcomes → Long-term Impact
   - Identify causal assumptions at each link — flag where evidence is weak or missing
   - Note external factors and attribution challenges (deadweight, displacement, drop-off)

3. **Select and structure outcome metrics**
   - Choose 5–10 core indicators mapped to the theory of change outcomes
   - For each metric, specify: definition, data source, collection frequency, baseline value, and target
   - Align metrics to applicable framework taxonomy (IRIS+ metric ID, GRI disclosure number, SFDR PAI indicator) [VERIFY]
   - Distinguish output metrics (units delivered) from outcome metrics (change experienced by beneficiaries)

4. **Conduct stakeholder-level analysis**
   - For each stakeholder group, assess: what outcome is expected, depth of impact, duration, and whether it would have occurred anyway (additionality)
   - Apply the IMP five dimensions where appropriate: What, Who, How Much, Contribution, Risk
   - Identify negative or unintended effects on any stakeholder group

5. **Assess data quality and attribution**
   - Rate data reliability for each metric (verified/audited, self-reported, estimated, proxy)
   - Flag metrics where attribution to the intervention is uncertain — note confounding variables
   - Identify gaps where [VERIFY] with primary data collection or third-party validation is needed

6. **Score and synthesize findings**
   - Summarize performance against targets for each outcome metric
   - Provide an overall impact performance rating or narrative assessment
   - Highlight areas of strong performance, underperformance, and insufficient data
   - Compare to sector benchmarks or peer cohorts where available

## Output

- **Impact Analysis Report** containing:
  - Executive summary with impact thesis restatement and headline findings
  - Theory of change diagram or narrative with assumption annotations
  - Outcome metrics table (metric name, baseline, target, actual, data quality rating, framework alignment)
  - Stakeholder impact matrix (stakeholder group, outcome, depth, duration, additionality assessment)
  - Data quality and attribution notes with [VERIFY] flags
  - Recommendations for improving measurement, addressing data gaps, or adjusting the impact strategy
  - Framework alignment summary (which IRIS+/SDG/SFDR/GRI indicators are covered)

## Quality Checks

- Every outcome metric traces back to a specific node in the theory of change — no orphan metrics
- Output metrics and outcome metrics are clearly distinguished; the report does not conflate activity counts with beneficiary-level change
- Additionality is addressed — the analysis does not assume all observed change is attributable to the intervention
- Negative or unintended impacts are explicitly considered, not omitted
- Data quality ratings are assigned per metric; no metric is presented without a reliability note
- Framework alignment references cite specific indicator codes, not just framework names [VERIFY]
- All jurisdiction-specific or regulation-dependent claims (SFDR classification, national social enterprise definitions, tax-credit eligibility) are marked [VERIFY]
- Stakeholder analysis covers affected communities and workers, not only investors and fund managers
