Module 7. Measuring Impact and Ensuring Continuous Regeneration
Detailed overview
General description of the unit
This unit introduces participants to simple and practical ways of measuring impact and supporting continuous regeneration in organisations. It helps learners move beyond counting activities, such as workshops, meetings, participants, or reports, and focus instead on what has actually changed because of an action.
The unit explores the difference between activity, output, outcome, and impact. It also introduces useful evidence, indicators, feedback systems, learning loops, and continuous improvement. Participants are encouraged to reflect on how their organisation currently measures progress and what may be missing from this process.
The unit is connected to the Fit Lab Self-Assessment Tool, which helps individuals and organisations reflect on inclusion, equity, diversity, systems thinking, sustainability, leadership, and bias. Participants use self-assessment results as a starting point to identify one area for improvement, define one useful indicator, and design a small improvement action.
The aim is not to create complex evaluation systems. The unit supports a simple, realistic, and learning-oriented approach to impact measurement. It shows how evidence can help organisations make better decisions, include more voices, learn from mistakes, and improve their practices over time.
Target learner group (s)
- Managers
- Leaders
- Trainers
- Teachers
- VET professionals
- SME staff
- NGO staff
- Adult educators
- And professionals involved in organisational development, training, inclusion, sustainability, or project implementation.
It is especially relevant for learners who want to understand whether their actions, projects, training activities, or organisational practices are creating meaningful change. It can also support people who are involved in quality assurance, evaluation, internal improvement processes, or regenerative organisational practices.
Main educational goals
The main goal of this unit is to help participants measure and improve the impact of their organisational practices in a simple and useful way.
The unit aims to help participants understand the difference between what an organisation does and what actually changes as a result. It supports them in using evidence, feedback, self-assessment results, and indicators to make better decisions.
The unit also aims to strengthen a culture of continuous improvement and continuous regeneration. Participants learn that measurement should not be used for blame or bureaucracy. Instead, it should support reflection, learning, adaptation, and practical action.
Specific learning outcomes
- Knowledge: Participants will understand the difference between activity, output, outcome, and impact, and recognise how impact measurement supports inclusive and regenerative organisations.
- Skills: Participants will be able to identify one area for improvement, select one useful indicator, and connect evidence with practical decision-making.
- Attitude: Participants will develop openness to feedback, learning from mistakes, and using evidence as a tool for improvement rather than blame.
Expected time
Approximately 2 hours.
Keywords
Impact measurement; Continuous regeneration; Evidence-based improvement; Feedback systems; Useful indicators.
Activity 1: What Are We Measuring?
Participants reflect on what their organisation already measures and what it should understand better. The activity is delivered as a short icebreaker using individual reflection and group sharing.
Activity 2: From Activity to Impact
Participants learn to distinguish between activity, output, outcome, and impact. They work in small groups to classify practical examples and discuss cases that are difficult to define.
Activity 3: Fit Lab SAT Snapshot and Evidence Map
Participants use the Fit Lab Self-Assessment Tool as a reflection starting point. They identify one area where better evidence is needed and complete an Evidence Map worksheet.
Activity 4: Indicator Lab – One Useful Indicator
Participants create one practical indicator linked to a real organisational issue. They work in groups, complete an Indicator Card, and review another group’s indicator using simple guiding questions.
Activity 5: Learning Loop and 30-Day Improvement Experiment
Participants connect evidence with action by designing a small improvement experiment. They use reflection questions and worksheets to plan one realistic action to test within 30 days.
Activity 6: My Impact Commitment
Participants summarise their main learning and define one personal next step. The activity is completed through individual reflection, pair sharing, and a short closing message.