A theory of change explicitly articulates the cause-and-effect steps for how a project or organization can turn inputs into a desired impact on the world (i.e. itās their theory of how theyāll make a change). They generally include the following sections:
Inputs /ā activities: What the project or organization does to create change (e.g. ādistribute bednetsā)
Outputs: The tangible effects generated by the inputs (e.g. ābeneficiaries have access to malaria netsā)
Intermediate outcomes: The outputsā effects, including benefits for the beneficiary, (e.g. āmalaria nets are usedā and āreduced incidence of malariaā)
Impact: What weāre ultimately solving, and why the intermediate outcomes matter (e.g. ālives savedā)
Best practices when crafting a theory of change (i.e. for creators):
Invest sufficiently in understanding the problem context (i.e. understanding the needs and incentives of the beneficiaries and other stakeholders, as well as barriers to change and the economic & political context)
Map the causal pathway backwards from impact to activities
Question every causal step (is it clear why A should cause B? how might it fail?)
Hallmarks of an excellent theory of change (i.e. for reviewers):
A focused suite of activities
The evidence and assumptions behind each step are explicitly named
The relative confidence of each step is clear
It is clear who the actor is in each step
Common mistakes to avoid in theories of change are:
Not making fundamental impact the goal (e.g., stopping at āincreased immunizationsā instead of āimproved healthā)
Being insufficiently detailed: (a) making large leaps between each step, (b) combining multiple major outcomes into one step (e.g. āgovernment introduces and enforces regulationā).
Setting and forgetting (instead of regularly iterating on it)
Not building your theory of change into a measurement plan
From: Nailing the basics ā Theories of change ā EA Forum (effectivealtruism.org)