Grantees

Partnering to Drive Change

We believe that publicly accessible and actionable outcomes data is key to strengthening the cross-sector collaborations that ensure that working-class Americans can thrive in ways that matter to them. Our granting reflects a commitment to this reality and strives to advance these beliefs.

What changes when we focus on outcomes?

Our Giving Pathways

We implement our mission by funding efforts, convening collaborators and sharing learnings that strengthen pathways to economic mobility while also allowing us to learn alongside our grantees. Our granting is grounded in three key pathways.

Investing in Community Infrastructure and Capacity for using Outcomes:

We fund efforts to develop and sustain infrastructure that provides public access to outcomes data and tracks progress toward collectively-held community goals. This includes funding to:

  • Develop community dashboards in partnership with place based partnerships
  • Leverage the 6 effective practices to tether local policy and collaboration to chosen outcomes
  • Increase technical capacity and access to tools and training that support dashboard maintenance and sustainability
Energizing a social sector shift towards an outcomes focus

We fund work that promotes the value of tethering social sector efforts to clear outcomes. These shine a spotlight on the reduced access to economic needs and opportunity for working class Americans, elevate efforts that address the root causes of these issues and propel a field-wide shift to outcomes-based work. This includes funding to:

  • Support research and convenings
  • Motivate collaboration between sectors
  • Galvanize regional commitment to shared outcomes
Strengthening efforts to protect and reimagine public data infrastructures

Public data is the essential core of our work. Non-profits and place-based partnerships rely on federal data to understand the longitudinal patterns and shifts within their communities. Without this infrastructure, the social sector is flying blind. We fund work that ensures the resilience and reliability of public data including:

  • Funding organizations working to protect public data
  • Funding regional data collection efforts
  • Supporting organizations building up local data infrastructure

Who We Fund

Finding Common Purpose grants to a variety of organization and entities to further an outcomes movement.

Place-based partnerships and community organizations

Those working towards improving systems and economic outcomes within their communities.

Consultant practitioners

Partners who are developing tools or practices for sharing and leveraging outcomes for systems change.

Research organizations

Partners developing approaches, codifying learnings, and contributing to sector knowledge.

Institutions

Partners sharing learnings within the social sector field who have the influence to impact policy and practice.

Other

If your organization does not clearly fall under these categories but you see strong alignment between your work and our mission, we would love to hear from you.

Partnership with FCP has pushed us to clarify which indicators matter most, align them with our long-term strategy, and anticipate the supports residents will need to confidently use the [community] dashboard themselves.

David Harrington, Co-Director United for Brownsville

How We Fund

We do not currently grant through open application calls. We are interested in connecting with and funding organizations whose goals and efforts are in alignment with our mission or those whose work can help us better understand the issues we are focused on solving. If you feel that your organization’s work, current projects and goals fit into any of our granting pathways, please fill out the contact form and a team member will follow up with you.

What to expect as an FCP Grantee

We cultivate strong relationships with our grantees that support their vital efforts while providing opportunities for us to learn from each other. Our partnerships afford us the opportunity to gather credible evidence about why certain approaches are successful and how. We will engage with you through:

  • Check-ins and site visits to understand local context and share ongoing learnings
  • Convenings or learning cohorts with other FCP grantees
  • Learning and evaluation processes to understand your impact, challenges and opportunities for improvement

The Six Effective Practices

Based on a review of over five hundred place-based initiatives, we have identified six effective practices that ensure that community dashboards and other outcomes-sharing infrastructure are instrumental in improving regional collaboration and resource allocation, and can ensure public accountability while remaining accurate and sustainable in the long run. These practices include:

Theory of Change

A theory of change that is focused on a northstar outcome and illustrated with a limited number of holistic, interconnected outcomes that advance a community-driven vision for what it means to thrive within a defined geographic area.

Test link.

Outcomes-based Relationships

Strong, trusting, outcomes-based relationships with key institutions with power who work on outcomes included in the dashboard.

Continuous Community Engagement

Continuous community enagement, participation, and collaboration to support successful design, continued relevance, and long-term sustainability.

Dedicated Infrastructure

Longevity requires dedicated infrastructure — staff and funding — to sustain data collection, tracking, sharing, and storytelling.

Tools for Advocacy

Dashboards should be used as a tool to advocate for public policy, resource allocation, and increased program delivery effectiveness.

Media and Storytelling

Leverages media and storytelling to strengthen awareness, accountability, and sustainability.

Get Involved with Finding Common Purpose

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