Anne Morais
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Turning to Podcasts for Evidence

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In political or social discussions with friends, my observations are sometimes met with a vague disinterest or even an eyebrow-raising doubt. Sure why not, my points may be worthy of such response.  However when I follow up my idea with “ I can’t remember where I read that,” the wave of doubt transforms to a posture of interest. 
 
People crave confirmation from an outside source.
 
Funders have their own version of confirmation - they want evidence.  In proposals, there are three distinct areas for which you should be providing evidence:

  1. Evidence of the problem you are addressing;
  2. Evidence that you can generate a specific outcome; and
  3. Evidence that if you generate a specific outcome, the problem will be addressed.
 
You are probably skilled in producing evidence for areas 1 and 2.  You have government-collected statistics, focus groups summaries, need assessment reports, surveys results; reports from think tanks and universities, pre- and post questionnaires, narratives, and media reports.
 
It is more difficult to produce evidence for point 3. You need to demonstrate that the achievement of a specific outcome, an outcome you can measure, will ultimately contribute to reducing the problem. Securing the evidence on your own often requires extensive timelines, strong research capacity, and dedicated funds- resources most charitable agencies do not have.
 
One solution is to turn to the wide world of research. If research confirms connection and causation, you can build a portfolio of evidence.

Where to look?  
 
Google is fine but not curated enough.  Podcasts are an excellent source of curated and focused stream of research.  My favourites include:
  • Malcolm Gladwell’s Revisionists History;
  • Freakonomics;
  • Hidden Brain; and
  • TED Radio Hour;
So the next time someone is not impressed with your social observations, casually claim that you can't remember in which podcast you heard it . ​
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