Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson, learners should be able to:
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Clearly define Result-Based Project Management (RBPM).
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Explain how RBPM works in real projects.
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Differentiate RBPM from traditional project management.
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Understand why many NGOs, governments, and donors prefer RBPM.
Introduction
Today, many organizations want to make sure that every project they support produces real and meaningful change. It is no longer enough to show that money was spent or activities were done. Donors, communities, and governments now demand results—not just reports.
This is where Result-Based Project Management (RBPM) comes in. RBPM helps project teams plan, manage, monitor, and report their work based on the results they aim to achieve, not just the activities they perform. It is a modern approach used globally by major organizations such as the United Nations, USAID, the World Bank, and many development agencies.
Clear Definition of RBPM
Result-Based Project Management (RBPM) is a project management approach that focuses on defining, achieving, measuring, and reporting the results of a project rather than only describing the activities completed.
In simple words:
RBPM means managing a project by focusing on the real changes you want to see, not just the work you plan to do.
Results in RBPM usually include:
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Outputs – immediate products of activities
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Outcomes – medium-term changes in behavior or conditions
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Impact – long-term positive change
RBPM answers important questions like:
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What change are we trying to bring?
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How will we measure that change?
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How do activities link to the expected results?
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How do we track progress and adjust when needed?
Why RBPM Matters
RBPM is important because it improves:
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Accountability – everyone sees what the project has achieved.
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Learning – teams learn what is working and what needs improvement.
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Efficiency – resources are used on activities that bring real results.
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Transparency – donors can easily see value for money.
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Impact – communities benefit through meaningful change, not empty activities.
Difference Between RBPM and Traditional Project Management
Below is a simple comparison to help learners quickly understand the difference:
| Traditional Project Management | Result-Based Project Management (RBPM) |
|---|---|
| Focuses on activities | Focuses on results and change |
| Success = completing the work | Success = measurable results achieved |
| Reports on what was done | Reports on what changed |
| Monitoring activities only | Monitoring indicators and results |
| Plans are activity-based | Plans are result-based |
| Less emphasis on measurement | Strong emphasis on performance measurement |
| Example: “We trained 200 farmers.” | Example: “Farmers increased crop yields by 20%.” |
In short:
Traditional project management asks:
“Did we do the activities?”
RBPM asks:
“Did the activities create real change?”
Practical Example
Imagine a project that wants to reduce youth unemployment.
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A traditional project would focus on activities:
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Hold trainings
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Invite speakers
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Provide materials
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An RBPM project would focus on results:
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Number of youth who gained new job skills
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Number of youth who actually got jobs
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Increase in youth income after training
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This shows why RBPM is more effective in real life.
Conclusion
Result-Based Project Management is a powerful, modern, and practical approach that helps organizations create, measure, and communicate real change in communities. Unlike traditional project management, RBPM focuses on results—not just activities. As you continue with this course, you will learn how to design projects using RBPM tools, track indicators, measure progress, and report results with confidence. RBPM is now a global standard, and mastering it will open opportunities in NGOs, government programs, and development agencies.
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson, learners should be able to:
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Explain why RBPM is used by modern organizations and donors.
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Describe how RBPM strengthens accountability in projects.
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Explain how RBPM helps in measuring real success.
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Give practical examples of RBPM in action.
Introduction
In development work, the biggest question is no longer, “How much did you spend?” or “How many activities did you complete?”
Instead, the world is asking, “What changed because of your project?”
This shift from activities to results is exactly why Result-Based Project Management (RBPM) is now the global standard for managing projects. Donors, governments, NGOs, and communities want to clearly see the benefits, improvements, and long-term impact of every project they support.
This lesson looks at why RBPM is important, focusing on two major areas:
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Improving accountability, and
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Measuring success using results.
1. RBPM Improves Accountability
Accountability means being able to show clearly what you did, how you used resources, and what the project achieved. RBPM makes accountability stronger in several ways:
a. Clear expectations from the start
RBPM begins with defining results, indicators, and targets. Everyone knows what the project aims to achieve right from the beginning. This transparency prevents confusion and reduces conflicts later.
b. Easy tracking of progress
Because RBPM uses indicators, project teams can track whether they are moving toward their goals. Stakeholders—such as donors and communities—can also follow progress objectively.
c. Better use of resources
RBPM ensures that money, time, and people are used on activities that contribute to real results. This prevents wasteful spending and improves trust between project teams and funders.
d. Evidence-based reporting
Instead of saying “we did activities,” teams show evidence of change. This increases credibility and strengthens long-term partnerships.
Practical accountability example:
A health project receives funding to reduce malaria cases.
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Traditional approach:
“We distributed 5,000 mosquito nets.” -
RBPM approach:
“Malaria cases reduced by 18% in 6 months because families used treated nets.”
The second statement shows accountability with evidence, not just effort.
2. RBPM Helps Measure Real Success
Success in modern projects is not defined by how busy the team was, but by what their work produced. RBPM provides a clear structure for measuring real results.
a. Success is measured through indicators
Indicators show whether outputs, outcomes, and impacts were achieved. Examples include:
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Number of farmers adopting new technologies
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Percentage increase in school attendance
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Reduction in poverty rates
These indicators make success measurable and visible.
b. Targets show achievement levels
RBPM sets targets such as:
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“Increase household income by 15%”
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“Train 500 youths, with at least 200 starting businesses”
Comparing actual results with targets tells whether the project succeeded.
c. Data-driven decision-making
RBPM uses data to highlight what is working and what is not. Teams can adjust quickly. This continuous learning improves project performance.
d. Long-term impact is visible
RBPM looks beyond short-term activities and focuses on long-term benefits. It answers big questions like:
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“Are communities better off?”
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“Has behavior changed?”
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“Has the quality of life improved?”
This gives a deeper understanding of real success.
Practical success measurement example:
A youth skills project offers entrepreneurship training.
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Traditional approach:
“We trained 300 youths.” -
RBPM approach:
“Out of 300 youths trained, 120 started a business within 3 months, and 40 created jobs for others.”
This shows real impact.
Conclusion
RBPM is important because it ensures projects are managed in a transparent, intelligent, and results-focused way. It strengthens accountability by showing exactly what changed and why. It also helps measure success through clear indicators, data, and evidence. As development organizations shift toward long-term impact and value for money, RBPM has become a core skill for project managers.
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson, learners should be able to:
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Explain the five core principles of RBPM.
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Understand why these principles guide all results-based projects.
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Apply each principle in real project situations.
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Differentiate between efficient, effective, relevant, impactful, and sustainable results.
Introduction
Result-Based Project Management is built on clear principles that ensure a project does not just complete activities but creates meaningful, long-lasting change. These principles guide planning, budgeting, implementation, monitoring, and reporting.
In this lesson, we focus on five core principles used globally by development organizations:
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Efficiency
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Effectiveness
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Impact
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Relevance
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Sustainability
Understanding these principles will help learners design stronger projects and make better decisions throughout the project cycle.
1. Efficiency
Efficiency means using the least amount of resources to produce the best results.
A project is efficient when it delivers outputs at minimum cost, within the shortest time, and with optimal use of staff, money, and materials.
Practical meaning:
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Avoiding waste
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Reducing unnecessary steps
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Getting value for money
Example:
A training project that reaches 200 women using a community hall (free venue) is more efficient than using an expensive hotel when both create the same output.
Efficiency answers the question:
“Did we use our resources wisely?”
2. Effectiveness
Effectiveness means achieving the planned outcomes. Even if a project is efficient, it is useless if it does not meet its goals.
Practical meaning:
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Outputs lead to expected changes
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The project achieves its main objectives
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Stakeholders experience real improvement
Example:
A farming project trains 500 farmers, and 300 start using new techniques. This shows effectiveness because training produced real behavior change.
Effectiveness answers the question:
“Did we achieve the results we planned for?”
3. Impact
Impact refers to the long-term, big-picture change created by the project. It is the highest level of results in RBPM.
Practical meaning:
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Communities have better living conditions
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People’s lives improve over time
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Long-term positive transformation happens
Example:
A 3-year water project reduces waterborne diseases by 40% in a district. This is impact because it shows improved health and quality of life.
Impact answers the question:
“What long-term changes happened because of the project?”
4. Relevance
Relevance means the project addresses the real needs and priorities of the community, government, or donor.
Practical meaning:
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The project fits local problems
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Activities match community priorities
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The project aligns with national policies and donor goals
Example:
In a community struggling with youth unemployment, a youth training project is relevant. But giving them agriculture tools they do not need would be irrelevant.
Relevance answers the question:
“Is this project solving the right problem?”
5. Sustainability
Sustainability means the project’s benefits continue even after funding or support ends.
Practical meaning:
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Communities continue using the skills
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Systems and structures remain functional
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Local ownership is strong
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No collapse after the donor withdraws
Example:
A solar irrigation project is sustainable if farmers can repair the equipment, buy spare parts, and maintain the system after the donor leaves.
Sustainability answers the question:
“Will the results continue after the project ends?”
Conclusion
The five principles—efficiency, effectiveness, impact, relevance, and sustainability—are the foundation of Result-Based Project Management. They help project managers make smarter decisions, use resources wisely, and ensure projects create real and lasting change. As you move forward in this course, you will see these principles repeatedly in planning tools like the Results Chain, LogFrame, and M&E plans. Mastering them is essential for anyone who wants to manage high-quality, world-class projects.
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson, learners should be able to:
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Describe the major RBPM frameworks used by global organizations.
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Explain how the UN, USAID, EU, and World Bank apply RBPM.
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Identify similarities in these frameworks.
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Understand how these international models guide local project management in Africa.
Introduction
Result-Based Project Management (RBPM) is not just a theory. It is a global standard used by the biggest international development agencies. These organizations manage billions of dollars in development programs every year, so they must use strong systems that ensure transparency, accountability, and real impact.
In this lesson, we explore the most common RBPM frameworks used by four major organizations:
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The United Nations (UN)
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USAID (United States Agency for International Development)
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The European Union (EU)
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The World Bank
By understanding these frameworks, learners can speak the “language” used in donor-funded projects and become more competitive in NGO and development jobs.
1. The UN Results-Based Management Framework
The United Nations is one of the pioneers of RBM. Their framework is based on four key elements:
a. The Results Chain
UN uses the classic chain: inputs → activities → outputs → outcomes → impact.
b. SMART Indicators
UN requires indicators to be Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound.
c. Theory of Change (ToC)
UN projects must show why certain activities will lead to certain results.
This creates clarity in planning and monitoring.
d. Annual Work Plans and Reporting
UN agencies (UNDP, UNICEF, FAO, WFP) report results annually and use scorecards to track performance.
Practical example:
UNICEF may run a child protection program where indicators include:
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Number of children accessing legal support
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Reduction in child marriage cases
This shows how UN tracks both outputs and outcomes.
2. USAID’s RBPM Framework (The Results Framework & MEL System)
USAID uses an RBPM system called the Results Framework (RF).
a. Strategic Results Levels
USAID links results from:
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Goal
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Development Objectives (DOs)
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Intermediate Results (IRs)
b. The MEL Plan (Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning)
Every USAID project must have a MEL plan showing:
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performance indicators
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baseline data
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targets
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data sources
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evaluation schedule
c. CLA (Collaborating, Learning, and Adapting)
USAID emphasizes learning. Teams must adapt based on evidence—not guesswork.
Practical example:
A USAID youth empowerment project may measure:
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% of youth gaining employment
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Number of youths starting businesses
This ensures USAID focuses on outcomes, not activities.
3. European Union (EU) – The Logical Framework Approach (LFA)
The EU popularized the LogFrame, one of the most widely used RBPM tools.
a. The LogFrame Matrix
It includes:
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Overall Objective
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Purpose / Outcome
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Outputs
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Activities
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Indicators
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Means of verification
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Assumptions
b. Project Cycle Management (PCM)
EU projects must follow PCM from identification → formulation → implementation → evaluation.
c. Strong focus on assumptions and risks
EU requires clear risk analysis before approval.
Practical example:
An EU agriculture project may track:
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Increase in crop productivity
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Number of farmers using climate-smart practices
4. The World Bank – Results Framework and Monitoring System
The World Bank uses RBPM as part of its Investment Project Financing (IPF) model.
a. Development Objectives (PDOs)
Every project has a clear objective measurable through outcome indicators.
b. Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
These show whether development objectives were achieved.
c. Implementation Status and Results (ISR) Reports
These are regular progress reports focusing on achieved results.
d. Emphasis on economic and social impact
World Bank measures financial, social, and environmental benefits.
Practical example:
A World Bank road project might measure:
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Reduction in travel time
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Increase in market access for farmers
Conclusion
The UN, USAID, EU, and World Bank all use RBPM, although their frameworks have different names. What they share in common is a strong focus on results, indicators, evidence, learning, and long-term impact. Understanding these systems is essential for anyone who wants to work in NGOs, donor-funded programs, or government development projects. The next lessons will start diving deeper into the Results Chain and practical tools for RBPM.
The introductory module is very helpful for a beginner like myself. It clearly outlines what is expected by the end of the course and provides practical, real-life examples that enhance understanding.
ReplyDeleteYou are most welcome
DeleteThis is an eye opener course and hope by the end of this training we are going to benefit and deliver.
ReplyDeleteMy question is:
For long time, we have different organisations in our communities. When the Project phases out, almost all projects run by these Organizations stopped. What could be the main cause to that situations looking at all the costs pumped to these communities?
Who is the problem between the community and the Organisation? What should be done to avoid these situations looking the donor funds used in different projects?
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteI think the problem starts at the planing phase. The sustainably of the project part iis overlooked because most of the project we have been having were not looking at the impazt the project will have to the society and some of the project were not really relevant to the view of the communities but thad just been imposed on them
DeleteThis is very true, most of the projects which are started in most communities they don't match the needs of our communities, they are just imposed on them, some projects are too advanced as compared to community, capacity, so once the project phases out no one in the community will have the capacity run such projects, other projects are too expensive as compared to community disposable income so once the machinery used in a projects break down no one has the capacity to fix such machines
DeleteThis introduction is very helpful for the beginners like my self but try to give some clear examples of real life but i understand its my first lesson I will be able to apply my self on the ground after I have learn deeper
ReplyDeleteNoted , thanks so much
DeleteThis is real helpful for a beginner like me
ReplyDeleteWelcome
DeleteI would like to appreciate sir, especially how we have started. It's very interesting to be part of the students this time around. However, you haven't communicated when are we going to have our next lesson. We would love to know and get prepared and also when are we writing the first exams?
ReplyDeleteSoon after module 5 which is three days from now
DeleteMine is a question, during your teaching especially On Result Baded Project Management, you mentioned about the two Output, is the two statements different because of Immediate and Medium term change?
ReplyDeleteYes it might be like that, coz we have output, outcome, and impact...
DeleteHello, I also noted the same. However, in the course of the training and when I referred back to the typed notess, I established that is was just a slip of the tongue.
DeleteSo, though outputs was mentioned twice, there is;
Outputs - immediate products
Outcomes - medium term and
Impacts - long term
That's very true, we are now on the same page
DeleteWell articulated, and the practical examples forwarded are very relevant and clearly assist explaining the lessons enabling me to grasp every bit of it! Thanks to you Mr Jere and entire SkillBridge Institute for this initiative! Waiting for the next lessons of module 2 tomorrow!
ReplyDeleteMost welcome boss
DeleteI have started in a good pace am learning a lot from you
ReplyDeleteGreat
DeleteIf possible teach us how to develop log frame matrix.
ReplyDeleteWe will do it in the coming modules
DeleteThat helpful to me
ReplyDeleteIt's helpful indeed
ReplyDeleteThese lessons 100% helpful
ReplyDeleteGreat
DeleteI would like to appreciate you sir, the presentation is very clear, helpful and practical more questions will follow after studying these notes but for now I would like to be clear in two areas
ReplyDelete1. Does the training offers certificate only or it can go up to Bachelors, masters and PHD, willing to Persue more than certificate
2. accrowname MEAL would like to be clear some says Monitoring , Evaluation Accountability Leaning which is the correct one
Of course right we just go up to certificate level only
DeleteMEL is about focuses on monitoring and evaluation, learning plus improving the projects while MEAL focuse monitoring and evaluation, learning and improving the project plus being accountable to the doner and other stakeholders. Both of them are very correct
I have enjoyed today's lesson
ReplyDeleteGod bless you
Much appreciated sir, never have i had interest in learning project management but the way you are delivering the lessons have sparked curiosity in me
ReplyDeleteYou are most welcome, let's continue being together in the training
DeleteMr trainer,
ReplyDeleteJust an observation from yesterday's typed notes. On comparison between the traditional and Results based PM if you they could be presented in table format. Thanks.
Another quick observation, I have seen so many comments here picked as anonymous, but in the introductions yesterday it was clarified that this program is participatory, and that participation is through the website. How are you going to identify such participants? I am asking considering that one of my responses to an anonymous question went out as an anonymous as well.
Hello Mr Bisweck
DeleteYou are very right we could have done better by presenting infographic table to differentiate traditional and RBPM
I think most people they are not aware on how they can allow your name to appear on top, they need to take note that when you are typing the comment on top it gives and option on anonymous and typing the name. Once you type your name it will be able to appear for good
How can we further differentiate between output and outcome since they are both things seen after input and activities in short they are fruits of input due to the assets we had at first can’t we conclude that they are both the same output and outcome
ReplyDeleteThese two things are related by but they are very different, output are immediate results after doing activities eg, borehole that has been constructed is an output but outcome is an effect of having an output, eg after having a borehole people will have access to clean water.. for further information you can go module 2 that's where alot have been explained
DeleteWhat a wonderful information to get
ReplyDeleteThat's great
DeleteThe lesson is just wonderful.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much for bringing this course team
ReplyDeleteThank you so much sir..... All is well
ReplyDeleteI like knowledge again from this course please continue to make us wise and professional.
ReplyDeleteI the area to be covered in this course
ReplyDeleteKindly help me differentiate Results from, outputs, Outcomes, Impact, purpose and goals, I get confused. If some terms are similar such that they are used interchangeably, also please let me know.
ReplyDelete