Impact — Veterans Collaborative

What is collective impact?

“Large-scale social change comes from better cross-sector coordination rather than from the isolated intervention of individual organizations…” –– John Kania & Mark Kramer, Stanford Social Innovation Review: Collective Impact (2011)

 
 

The Collective Impact Forum describes “collective impact” as a network of community members, organizations, and institutions advancing equity by learning together, aligning, and integrating their actions to achieve population and systems level change. Facilitating the Five Conditions of collective impact requires centering equity by weaving the Five Equity Strategies into the process.

 

Five Conditions of Collective Impact

  • Developing a common agenda means bringing people together in a structured way to collectively define a problem and create a shared vision to solve it.

  • Establishing shared measurement means tracking progress in the same ways, allowing for continuous learning and accountability.

  • Fostering mutually reinforcing activities means integrating participants’ many different activities to maximize the end results.

  • Encouraging continuous communications means building trust and strengthening relationships among participants.

  • Having a strong backbone means a team dedicated to aligning and coordinating the work of the collaborative.

 

Five Equity Strategies

Equity strategies supporting emergence of collective impact conditions to achieve social change involve grounding the process by providing data and context to support targeted solutions; focusing on systems change, along with programs and services; shifting power within the collaborative by listening to and acting with community; and building equity leadership and accountability.


our roadmap

We’ve been using and adapting the framework outlined by John Kania and Mark Kramer in the Stanford Social Innovation Review as a guide for our process. We’re in the early phases of a long journey, with a current focus on bringing people together across sectors, building trust, mapping resource networks, and sharing data as we chart our course through Phase III.

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Participants are the heart of our organization. Since organizing ourselves in 2014, more than 1,300 service providers have participated in the collaborative. Over half of us are veterans or family members ourselves. We share space, directories, tools, events, trainings, information, and resources.

Unique participants over time through October 2023. Data identifying service providers who are also veterans and family members is not complete. Participants were affiliated with more than 627 unique organizations and agencies. Slack Connect data last updated in May 2022, which includes participants from more than 100 additional unique organizations using shared channels to collaborate via Slack Connect.


What are impact networks?

 
 

Converge – The Network Mindset: Scaling Out, Not Up

Interaction Institute for Social Change – Why Networks for Social Change

Stanford Social Innovation Review – Fostering Self-Organization

Stanford Social Innovation Review – Social Change Increasingly Requires Networked Action

GEO – What Role Can Grantmakers Play in Supporting Networks?


Food Security Direct Action

The Veterans Collaborative responded food insecurity among service members and veterans to increase access to targeted cash assistance during the pandemic. We received five $10,000 grants to purchase $50 grocery store gift cards through BWF’s Got Your 6 Network, along with individual donors and other grants totaling around $15,000.

With virtually no overhead as an all volunteer organization, nearly all of the funds went directly to purchasing gift cards. From January 2021 to January 2023, more than 55 organizations joined the fight for food security, distributing gift cards across the state to the households of more than 2,785 service members, veterans, survivors, and dependents, a third of which were children under age 18.

  • Vet + Dependants
  • Single Vet
  • Military + Dependants
  • Single Survivor
  • Survivor + Dependants
  • Gold Star Family
  • Single Military
  • Vet + Dependants
  • Single Vet
  • Military + Dependants
  • Single Survivor
  • Survivor + Dependants
  • Gold Star Family
  • Single Military
Service providers distributed gift cards in at least 85 different cities and towns across 11 of 14 counties in Massachusetts. This graph indicates the type of households receiving gift cards over two years. The charts below include more information about the recipients and where they were located in the state.

Never confuse movement with action.
— Ernest Hemingway