Civic leaders interested in bringing sustained positive
change to their communities make choices every day as to how to use their financial,
physical and social capital. Those choices are usually informed by experience, lessons
learned from others and intuition. Too rarely they are informed by what I call “civic data.”
Civic data is the translation of relevant quantitative and qualitative measures into a narrative that is shared and used to inform and guide decisions.
Civic leaders -- those individuals who are willing to assume shared responsibility for achieving and sustaining positive change within their community -- need civic data to better understand what to do, whether what they are doing is working and to persuade others to alter their actions. Achieving what some call "collective impact" cannot be achieved without civic data.
Civic data has three distinct uses:
- To help civic leaders understand the type of change our community should seek. As Josh McManus of the Knight Foundation observes, “We need to fall in love with the problem.” One reason we need to fall in love with a problem is sustaining positive change requires civic leaders to make very difficult and challenging decisions (behavior change is never easy). Civic leaders are more likely to take those actions if they care passionately – are in love with the problem. Unlike affairs of the heart, when it comes to civic affairs our love needs to be informed with facts, figures, trends and other data that helps us understand what is going well and needs to be reinforced and what isn’t and needs to be transformed. Civic data alone cannot help us understand the change we should seek; but we cannot define the change without it.
- To help civic leaders develop a collective understanding of the progress individual and collective efforts are making toward the desired change. The desired change should be articulated by a clear, measurable goal(s). The metrics used and data collected/synthesized to assess that progress should be widely accepted, used and communicated among those who have assumed shared responsibility for and/or are affected by the change.
- To help individuals make critical decisions. Choices regarding the education of their children, the career they pursue, the neighborhood where they live, the type of business they start, where to locate their business can be informed by readily accessible, relevant and current civic data.
Advocates for civic data often make the incorrect assumption
that there is demand for it among public officials, private sector executives,
foundation leaders and others. Demand often needs to be built as civic leaders may
be comfortable or accustomed to making decisions with limited or no civic data.
Many communities use valuable resources to create civic data – often made
accessible through a “community dashboard” – that are not regularly used by
either civic leaders or residents. The civic data is curated to meet the
expectations of the advocates rather than the needs of civic leaders and
individuals.
Experience teaches us that centralizing responsibility for civic
data distances the data from the decision makers. Responsibility for civic data
should be embedded with those who are responsible for coordinating the
community’s efforts to achieve the clear, measurable goals in question. For
example, Summit Education Initiative (SEI) helps coordinate the community’s
efforts to achieve very clear education goals. It has effectively used civic
data to help stakeholders identify those goals and it helps stakeholders use
data to identify strategies and practices to achieve those goals. The civic
data and the civic strategy are embedded within the same organization.
Most importantly, civic leaders (particularly funders) need to value the civic data enough to continue to use it to inform their allocation of capital, as well as their other actions.
Most importantly, civic leaders (particularly funders) need to value the civic data enough to continue to use it to inform their allocation of capital, as well as their other actions.