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  The logical framework approach and the writing of proposals   March 25, 2003
GENERAL REMARKS
A proposal is a crucial document: donors will decide whether or not to finance your project based on what you have written.  Any proposal should reflect  thoughtful planning What is a proposal?
Identify the project idea Project Demand from the community Available resources Needs as defined by experts
Make sure that you are addressing a genuine problem and that you are equipped for it. Two-step approach: First define your project thoroughly and in a participatory approach, Then adapt your project proposal according to the targeted donor. Use the logical framework  which  is a  method  to design a project in a systematic and logical way .  Some recommendations…
LOGICAL FRAMEWORK APPROACH
What is a logical framework ? The Logical Framework Matrix provides a summary of : Why  a project is carried out What  the project is expected to achieve How  the project is going to achieve it Which  external factors are crucial for its success Where  to find the information required to assess the success of the project Which  means are required How much  the project will cost
The Logical Framework Matrix
The logframe and the project cycle * NGO’s mandate * NGO thematic/geo.   orientations *  outcome  : Programme strategy * pre-feasibility project studies *  outcome  : decision YES/NO * all significant aspects of  the idea are studied *  outcome  : logical framework * fundraising strategy  * proposal writing for donors *  outcome  : financing contract(s) * the agreed resources are used  to achieve the project purpose * reports / contract amendments *  outcome  : decision to continue as planned or re-orient the project * relevance and and  fulfilment of objectives  *  outcome  : how to use results in future programming
Organisations using the logframe USAID, USA GTZ, Germany DfID, Great-Britain NORAD, Norway DANIDA, Denmark AUSAID, Australia Intercooperation, Switzerland Ministry of Foreign Affairs, France DGCD, Belgium European Commission DGCS - Min. of For. Aff., Italy ICAX - Min. of Industry, Spain SIDA, Sweden UNIDO, Vienna FINNIDA - Min. of For. Aff., Finland HELLASCO, Greece WWF Int. Federation of Red Cross UNDP FAO
  Advantages of the logical framework Problems are analysed systematically The objectives are clearly formulated, logical and measurable The risks and conditions for success of a project are taken into account There is an objective basis for monitoring  and evaluation Your project proposal will be coherent
The logical framework approach Problem analysis : identifying stakeholders, their key problems, constraints and opportunities, determining cause and effect relationships. Analysis of objectives : developing objectives from the identified problems, identifying the relationships between the means and the ends. Analysis of the strategy : identifying the different strategies to achieve objectives, determining the major objectives (overall objectives and project purpose or specific objective).   Logframe : defining the project structure, testing its internal logic and formulating objectives in measurable terms, determining means and cost. Activity planning : determining the sequence and the relation between the activities, estimating their duration , setting the main stages in the process, assigning responsibility. Resources planning : from the activity schedule, developing the input schedule and the budget. Analysis phase Planning phase
1. Problem analysis Identify the major problem faced by the beneficiaries  Develop a problem tree  Identify the stakeholders affected in the proposed project
How to proceed with problem analysis ? Identify key problems existing within a given situation (brainstorming) Select a starter problem Look for related problems to the starter problem Establish hierarchy of causes and effects - problems which are directly causing the starter problem are placed below -  problems which are direct effects of the starter problem are placed above Complete with all other problems accordingly Review the diagram and verify its validity and completeness
1. Problem analysis EFFECTS CAUSES The system receives  no maintenance  The irrigation system is faulty Some irrigation  structures have been destroyed Support services for farmers are not available in the area The farmers have no  investment capacity Rice production is insufficient for the population of village x Agricultural practices are unsuitable Problem tree
1. Problem analysis Identifying stakeholders PUBLIC PRIVATE MICRO MACRO Farmers Agric. Ext. services MoA FAO Farmers’groups NGO Irrigation  Dept . Fertiliser  suppliers
2.  Analysis of objectives Problems Objectives Transforming Problems into Objectives Rice production is insufficient for the population of village x The irrigation system is faulty Agricultural practices are unsuitable The system receives  no maintenance  Some irrigation  structures have been destroyed Support services for farmers  are not available Farmers do not have  investment capacity Rice production is sufficient for the population of village x The irrigation system is working Agricultural practices are appropriate The system receives  proper maintenance  Support services for farmers  are available Damaged irrigation  structures are repaired Farmers have the resources to invest
2.  Analysis of objectives Objectives’ tree MEANS ENDS Rice production is sufficient for the population of village x The irrigation system is working Agricultural practices are appropriate The system receives  proper maintenance  Damaged irrigation  structures are repaired Support services for farmers  are available Farmers have the resources to invest
3.  Analysis of alternatives Possible criteria to choose the intervention logic of your project among different project alternatives: Available resources (especially HR) Probability of achieving the project purpose and its results Cost Timeframe Risks
3.  Analysis of strategy SPECIFIC OBJECTIVE  (or project purpose) EXPECTED RESULTS OVERALL OBJECTIVE CHOSEN STRATEGY Rice production is sufficient for the population of village x The irrigation system is working Agricultural practices are appropriate The system receives  proper maintenance  Damaged irrigation  structures are repaired Support services for farmers  are available Farmers have the resources to invest
4. The  log-frame
Levels of objectives The broader  impact(s)  to which your project  will contribute to, but will not enable to reach entirely The  outcome  of your project, what should be achieved at the enf of the project. Specific  outputs  which will contribute to the realisation of your project purpose Concrete activities that will be undertaken during the project Project  Purpose Expected Results Activities Overall  Objective(s) 4. The  log-frame
4. The log-frame Define  objectively verifiable indicators (OVI): !!! Do not make the confusion between «  criteria  » and «  indicators  » !!! A criteria is for instance: « number of… », « increase in…  » Whereas an indicator is « 150 persons per month », « 34% of increase in … »
Example of a good indicator Objective : The irrigation system is working The indicator should be «  SMART   »: S pecific  = The irrigation pumps are functioning properly in the project area M easurable  = 50 of the irrigation pumps are functioning properly in the project area Acceptable  = Is the indicator accepted by all the partners involved in the implementation of the project ? R elevant  = Are the irrigation pumps the main problem? T ime-bound  = 100% of the irrigation pumps are functioning properly in the project area at the end of the project 4. The  log-frame
Selection of sources of verification Administrative/ financial  report Management report Monitoring data Adapted monitoring  statistics Interviews of beneficiaries Specialised surveys Complexity Cost 4. The  log-frame
4. The log-frame Consider the various  risks and assumptions  on your project: =  external factors that may affect the projects’ implementation and long-term sustainability  = synergetic activities made by other actors Do not define assumptions that are endogenous to the project and the scheduled activities !! Only mention relevant hypothesis…
Is the RISK important to your project? Yes No What is its probability? Ignore Almost certain Unlikely Fairly Unlikely Can the project strategy be modified to eliminate the risk? Yes No Modify strategy, add activities STOP the project Formulate an assumption Risks/Assumptions 4. The  log-frame
Intervention logic of project + Assumptions   IN OUT Overall objective Project Purpose Results Activities + + + Assumptions Assumptions Assumptions Pre-conditions If the activities are carried out, and if assumptions are valid,  then  ... 4. The  log-frame
Logical framework 5. Activity-planning Plan of action Activities
5. Resource-planning Plan of action Means/Budget Travel etc. Material/ Equipment Human resources Budget Means:
TIME FOR A SMALL GROUP EXERCISE!! GROUP WORK
The logical framework : Two case studies Case study Bangladesh : Advocacy project in Bangladesh to promote the rights of persons with disabilities Case Study Nepal Project in Nepal to provide orthopaedic appliances and services to disabled persons Identify among the cards given : ·      Goal (1) ·      Project purpose (1) ·      Expected results (4) ·      Corresponding indicators for each (6) ·      Assumptions (5) Group work:  15 minutes –  Presentation:  5 minutes
10 frequently made errors in log-frame: Make sure to… 1.  Have only one specific objective. 2.  Have a coherence in the hierarchy between objectives and results. 3.  Formulate objectives and results as they were already achieved. 4.  Define “SMART indicators” (no activity, no vague indicator like criteria). 5.  Do not transpose the activities as indicators of the results. 6.  Do not define indicators next to the general objectives (they are irrelevant in most cases). 7.  Do not define sources of verification that are too expensive or impossible to get.  In any case, if an expensive source of verification is mentioned, be sure to integrate it in the activities and within the budget. 8.  Do not define hypothesis endogenous to the activities you should implement. 9.  Next to activities, mention the means (HR and material) and the costs.  10. Do not forget pre-conditions
WRITING PROJECT PROPOSAL
Preliminary remarks Proposal = is often the only tool for the donor to assess your project (e.g. reject it or not)  Write a proposal only when your project idea is already well defined! Be sure to stick to the donor’s criteria and values.
Select the right funding source DONOR’ S MANDATE : Which donor has a mandate compatible with your project ? ex. Humanitarian aid versus development (ECHO versus EuropeAid) ex. Refugees  (ex. Austcare) DONOR’S PREFERENCES : What are your potential donors preferences?  Ex: Mines victims (Irish Aid) SELECTION CRITERIA : How do donors evaluate project proposals and are you likely to be selected? Existence of an evaluation grid ? Consortium required?, etc…
Follow a logical thread:   Background -> Problem  -> Solution  -> Sustainability Ensure internal coherence  between: Problem - Objectives - Means Many donors follow the LFA Package your project into an attractive proposal (1)
Coherence checklist   Don’t leave a problem unsolved Don’t identify objectives that do not correspond to a problem Don’t identify objectives for which you don’t have appropriate means Don’t propose activities that are not related to problems and objectives Don’t list human resources that are disproportionate to the objectives you aim to achieve   Package your project into an attractive proposal (2)
Editing and layout   Pay attention to the language : Use simple language Use future tenses Be concise and logical  Avoid spelling mistakes Find a catchy title Pay attention to the layout/ presentation : Use your organization’s logo on the first page Use headers and footers Clear titles and paragraphs Break the monotony Add table of contents Print on standard format paper Package your project into an attractive proposal (3)
Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology: Partners Project implementation Activities Risks and assumptions Means Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes General structure
1. Executive Summary Why is it important: It is the  first  thing that is read Sometimes, it is the  only  thing that is read… It can be used by the donor to  communicate  about your project   Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes 1. Executive Summary Contents  What do you propose to do? Where? Why? For whom? With whom? For how long?
1. Executive Summary DO : Write it only at the end Do it carefully Be concise DON’T  : Cut and paste Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
2. Presentation of the organisation Why is it important? Purpose : to establish credibility and image of a well-managed organization that meets critical needs in its area of work Tips Should not be too long If you are approaching a new donor, attach in appendix a presentation brochure and/or the last activity report Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
2. Presentation of the organisation Contents Who are you?  Philosophy/ mandate? History and significant interventions/track record Expertise in addressing the problem/need Organizational structure Major sources of support Affiliations/accreditations/ linkages Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
3. Project Background Contents   Who took the initiative? Does the project fit into an existing development plan or programme? Is this the first phase of the project, or the continuation of an activity already undergoing?  If this is the case, which have been the main result of the previous phase? What studies have been done to prepare the project?  Who else operates in this field? Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
3. Project Background Tips   You need to demonstrate that : The project arises from the beneficiaries and/or the local partners You know very well the local context You have the experience needed to run the project successfully You have been successful before Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
4. Problem Statement Why is it important? Unless donors are convinced that there is a  real problem , they will not agree to disburse money for our project ! Tips A “good” problem should: concern people be concrete and demonstrated  be solvable arise from a demand be an emergency or priority Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
4. Problem Statement Contents Description of the scope and magnitude of the problem  What are the immediate causes of the problem? What are the underlying  causes of the problem? What are the effects of the problem?  How does it affect people? Why does it have to be addressed?  Why now and not later? Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
5. Goal and Objectives Goals (or overall objectives) :   Describes the long-term goals, your project will contribute to. Project Purpose or Specific Objective:   Describes the objective of your project in response to the core problem. Expected Results:   Describes the outputs or concrete results of your project. Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
5. Goal and Objectives Objectives should be  SMART : S pecific  = they must meet the needs (problems) identified M easurable  = they should be measured by concrete indicators which should reflect the extent to which they have been attained A cceptable  = by all involved partners R elevant  = they must be adequate to the project socio-cultural environment  T ime-bound  = must be reached by the end of the project Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
6. Beneficiaries Contents Clearly identify  direct  and  indirect  beneficiaries : Directly receiving support Indirectly benefiting  How many? Where? Characteristics?  Specify how and at what stage they will be involved  in the project Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
7. Proposed Methodology Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Contents Partners Project implementation Activities Risks and assumptions Means Why is it important? Indicates how objectives will be achieved
Partners : Clearly distinguish between main partners and other partners Provide background information: Goals/philosophy? Area of intervention? Relationship with beneficiaries? Cooperation track-record? Role in the project Type of partnership you set up  Specify each partner’s role Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes 7. Proposed Methodology
Project implementation : Rationale for selecting a particular or unique methodology Project implementation structure: roles and responsibilities of all the project stakeholders Tip Use a chart to describe the project implementation structure Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes 7. Proposed Methodology
7. Proposed Methodology Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Activities : What will be done? How? By whom? Where? By when? Tips Be as precise as possible  Cluster activities by expected result  Use a work plan to summarise
7. Proposed Methodology Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Example:  Training: How many persons? For how long? Starting when? Which methodology will be used (seminars, in-house training, ad hoc courses, etc.) Why is the training necessary? Which new skills will the trainees acquire?
7. Proposed Methodology Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Risks/Assumptions : Risks  are external factors that could potentially jeopardise your project and are beyond the control of the project management Assumptions  are what you are supposing regarding those risks Why is it important? It helps assess the factors which could jeopardise your project It helps examining the project for completeness and consistency
7. Proposed methodology Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Means : Human resources : Explain the responsibilities and tasks of each key person in the project. Justify the need for expatriate personnel  Material resources : Give an explanation of the most important budget lines Justify vehicles
8. Budget Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget   Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Contents  Budget itself Budget explanations and justifications   Tips Prepare it using your plan of action Don’t inflate the budget Follow carefully donor’s requirements Disaggregate your budget for each year
9. Monitoring& Evaluation Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Why is it important? Monitoring : to assess whether your project activities are on track Evaluation : to assess whether your project is effective, efficient, has an impact, is relevant, sustainable… Contents What will be monitored and why? By whom? How often? Using which tools and methods?
10. Sustainability Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Contents Institutional sustainability Technical sustainability Socio-cultural sustainability Financial sustainability Why is it important? Because donors want to be sure that their investment will not be lost at the end of the project and that you are already planning the phasing out of the project.
11. Annexes Contents   Glossary Maps  Statistics/ policy documents Proof of registration and tax benefits for donors Financial statement Composition of Board of Directors List of major donors Annual report, brochures & publications Specific studies or evaluation reports Memorandum of agreement with partners Letters of support Pictures Others... Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
11. Annexes Tips Refer to the annexes  (see annex xy)  in the proposal, but.... If something is crucially important, write it  in  the proposal! Add a table of content for the annexes Write the annex number on the top of each page  “annex n°xy” Separate each annex by a coloured page Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget  Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
Cover letter (Use letterhead, mention project title, purpose, amount requested, contact person and list of enclosures) Project proposal:  Title page with logo Table of contents Executive summary Detailed proposal Annexes Requested attachments (Submit all documents requested by the donor which are not already included in the annexes) Proposal package
Ask someone exterior to the project to read it before any submission to a donor.  Final recommendation
CASE STUDY
Case study: Laos project Targeted donor:  ECHO (European Community Humanitarian Office) ECHO mandate: humanitarian and emergency actions Context:  Need of gap funding between two contracts with EuropeAid ( budget line B7-661 « mines ») EuropeAid mandate: long-term development oriented Project rationale : training of deminers in Laos, Savannakhet Province
Version I:  what would you change/improve ? 1. GENERAL INFORMATION   Title of operation: Technical support for the maintenance of Lao National Unexploded Ordnance (UXO LAO) activities in Savannakhet. Province of Lao PDR while preparing the consolidation of a 24 month final phase of the project.    Start-up date:  March 2002.
VERSION II: What was written in the final version   VERSION 2 1. GENERAL INFORMATION    Title of operation: Maintenance of Handicap International Technical Assistance to UXO Clearance Operations in Savannakhet Province, Lao PDR   Start-up date:  01 March 2002
Version I:  what would you change/improve ? VERSION 1 :Number of direct beneficiaries:   UXO Lao staff in Savannakhet Province.  Currently UXO Lao assisted by HI have 160 deminers, surveyors, community awareness (CA) members and supporting staff in the province. The general population on the four most UXO affected districts of Savannakhet Province will also directly benefit of the clearance operations undertaken by UXO Lao.   The quantitative outputs of UXO LAO Savannakhet in the key activities since the HI project started are: Area Clearance: Agriculture land cleared:  2,534,935m 2  ( 58% of the total land cleared) Roving Tasks: Villages visited:  939 Community Awareness :  Villages visited:  561 out of more than 625
VERSION II: What was written in the final version   Number of direct beneficiaries: The general population on the seven most UXO affected districts of Savannakhet Province will directly benefit of the clearance operations and awareness activities undertaken by UXO Lao. The direct beneficiaries are more specifically, the populations of the districts of Phine, Xepon, Vilabuly, Nong, Atsaphanthong, Phalan Xai and Atsaphone. The number of direct beneficiaries is estimated to over 22 000 people. The vast majority of the beneficiaries are subsistence farmers from ethnic minority groups in remote areas Through activities undertaken in this programme, the local population will benefit from improved land accessibility, improved land availability, a safer working and living environment and an improved ability to avoid accidents caused by unexploded ordnance. Equally, UXO LAO staff in Savannakhet Province is a direct beneficiary of this programme. Currently UXO Lao staff assisted by HI includes de-miners, surveyors, community awareness (CA) workers and support staff in the province. The number of beneficiaries equals 160 employees of UXO LAO. Through activities undertaken in this programme, UXO LAO employees will benefit from training aimed at safer, more efficient and more diverse unexploded ordinance identification, removal and destruction.
Version I:  what would you change/improve ? 4.1. Overall objective(s) Phase 4 – Transfer of knowledge, skills and capacities to UXO LAO Savannakhet in respect of the application of comprehensive national procedure across all aspects of the programme leading to the complete withdrawal of HI technical assistance.   4.2. Project purpose/ Specific objective To provide reduced technical support to UXO LAO Savannakhet for UXO area clearance and disposal in order to allow UXO LAO to maintain limited activities to national standards.    This is an interim arrangement of six months that will allow limited continuity of operations for UXO LAO in Savannakhet until implementing partner funding becomes available. This will allow UXO LAO Savannakhet to conduct its full range activities (community awareness, survey, roving and area clearance) to national standards under the technical supervision of Handicap International technical advisor as described in the phase four financing proposal.
VERSION II: What was written in the final version 4.1.   Overall objectives: The populations of Phine, Xepon, Vilabuly, Nong, Atsaphanthong, Phalan Xai and Atsaphone of Savannakhet Province, Lao PDR live in a safer environment. 4.2.   Project purpose/ Specific objective: The negative impacts of UXOs in the districts of Phine, Xepon, Vilabuly, Nong, Atsaphanthong, Phalan Xai and Atsaphone of Savannakhet Province, Lao PDR are reduced.
Checklist: all the « good questions » to bear in mind when drafting project proposal 1.        Before writing the proposal: -            Is the stakeholder analysis done and complete ? -           Have I established a coherent objective tree and a concrete  problem ? -           Have objectives, results and activities been discussed with all  partners and accepted ? -           Do I know the donor to whom I will send my proposal (e.g.  mandate, criteria, specific format, etc.)? -           Is there an internal organisation that has been set up within HI  around this proposal ? and does each person know her tasks ? 2.        When drafting the proposal:   -           Is my proposal coherent (identified problem/suggested  activities/proposed mean)? -           Is my proposal precise enough (e.g. explanation of expected  results ad intended activities, definition of SMART indicators)? -           Is my proposal understandable by everybody (not to much  technical terms, explanation of them, etc.)? -           Do I have really respected the donor’s criteria ? -           Have I put the information in the correct place ? -           Have I corrected all the spelling mistakes ?

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Logical Framework And Project Proposal

  • 1. The logical framework approach and the writing of proposals March 25, 2003
  • 3. A proposal is a crucial document: donors will decide whether or not to finance your project based on what you have written. Any proposal should reflect thoughtful planning What is a proposal?
  • 4. Identify the project idea Project Demand from the community Available resources Needs as defined by experts
  • 5. Make sure that you are addressing a genuine problem and that you are equipped for it. Two-step approach: First define your project thoroughly and in a participatory approach, Then adapt your project proposal according to the targeted donor. Use the logical framework which is a method to design a project in a systematic and logical way . Some recommendations…
  • 7. What is a logical framework ? The Logical Framework Matrix provides a summary of : Why a project is carried out What the project is expected to achieve How the project is going to achieve it Which external factors are crucial for its success Where to find the information required to assess the success of the project Which means are required How much the project will cost
  • 9. The logframe and the project cycle * NGO’s mandate * NGO thematic/geo. orientations * outcome : Programme strategy * pre-feasibility project studies * outcome : decision YES/NO * all significant aspects of the idea are studied * outcome : logical framework * fundraising strategy * proposal writing for donors * outcome : financing contract(s) * the agreed resources are used to achieve the project purpose * reports / contract amendments * outcome : decision to continue as planned or re-orient the project * relevance and and fulfilment of objectives * outcome : how to use results in future programming
  • 10. Organisations using the logframe USAID, USA GTZ, Germany DfID, Great-Britain NORAD, Norway DANIDA, Denmark AUSAID, Australia Intercooperation, Switzerland Ministry of Foreign Affairs, France DGCD, Belgium European Commission DGCS - Min. of For. Aff., Italy ICAX - Min. of Industry, Spain SIDA, Sweden UNIDO, Vienna FINNIDA - Min. of For. Aff., Finland HELLASCO, Greece WWF Int. Federation of Red Cross UNDP FAO
  • 11. Advantages of the logical framework Problems are analysed systematically The objectives are clearly formulated, logical and measurable The risks and conditions for success of a project are taken into account There is an objective basis for monitoring and evaluation Your project proposal will be coherent
  • 12. The logical framework approach Problem analysis : identifying stakeholders, their key problems, constraints and opportunities, determining cause and effect relationships. Analysis of objectives : developing objectives from the identified problems, identifying the relationships between the means and the ends. Analysis of the strategy : identifying the different strategies to achieve objectives, determining the major objectives (overall objectives and project purpose or specific objective). Logframe : defining the project structure, testing its internal logic and formulating objectives in measurable terms, determining means and cost. Activity planning : determining the sequence and the relation between the activities, estimating their duration , setting the main stages in the process, assigning responsibility. Resources planning : from the activity schedule, developing the input schedule and the budget. Analysis phase Planning phase
  • 13. 1. Problem analysis Identify the major problem faced by the beneficiaries Develop a problem tree Identify the stakeholders affected in the proposed project
  • 14. How to proceed with problem analysis ? Identify key problems existing within a given situation (brainstorming) Select a starter problem Look for related problems to the starter problem Establish hierarchy of causes and effects - problems which are directly causing the starter problem are placed below - problems which are direct effects of the starter problem are placed above Complete with all other problems accordingly Review the diagram and verify its validity and completeness
  • 15. 1. Problem analysis EFFECTS CAUSES The system receives no maintenance The irrigation system is faulty Some irrigation structures have been destroyed Support services for farmers are not available in the area The farmers have no investment capacity Rice production is insufficient for the population of village x Agricultural practices are unsuitable Problem tree
  • 16. 1. Problem analysis Identifying stakeholders PUBLIC PRIVATE MICRO MACRO Farmers Agric. Ext. services MoA FAO Farmers’groups NGO Irrigation Dept . Fertiliser suppliers
  • 17. 2. Analysis of objectives Problems Objectives Transforming Problems into Objectives Rice production is insufficient for the population of village x The irrigation system is faulty Agricultural practices are unsuitable The system receives no maintenance Some irrigation structures have been destroyed Support services for farmers are not available Farmers do not have investment capacity Rice production is sufficient for the population of village x The irrigation system is working Agricultural practices are appropriate The system receives proper maintenance Support services for farmers are available Damaged irrigation structures are repaired Farmers have the resources to invest
  • 18. 2. Analysis of objectives Objectives’ tree MEANS ENDS Rice production is sufficient for the population of village x The irrigation system is working Agricultural practices are appropriate The system receives proper maintenance Damaged irrigation structures are repaired Support services for farmers are available Farmers have the resources to invest
  • 19. 3. Analysis of alternatives Possible criteria to choose the intervention logic of your project among different project alternatives: Available resources (especially HR) Probability of achieving the project purpose and its results Cost Timeframe Risks
  • 20. 3. Analysis of strategy SPECIFIC OBJECTIVE (or project purpose) EXPECTED RESULTS OVERALL OBJECTIVE CHOSEN STRATEGY Rice production is sufficient for the population of village x The irrigation system is working Agricultural practices are appropriate The system receives proper maintenance Damaged irrigation structures are repaired Support services for farmers are available Farmers have the resources to invest
  • 21. 4. The log-frame
  • 22. Levels of objectives The broader impact(s) to which your project will contribute to, but will not enable to reach entirely The outcome of your project, what should be achieved at the enf of the project. Specific outputs which will contribute to the realisation of your project purpose Concrete activities that will be undertaken during the project Project Purpose Expected Results Activities Overall Objective(s) 4. The log-frame
  • 23. 4. The log-frame Define objectively verifiable indicators (OVI): !!! Do not make the confusion between «  criteria  » and «  indicators  » !!! A criteria is for instance: « number of… », « increase in…  » Whereas an indicator is « 150 persons per month », « 34% of increase in … »
  • 24. Example of a good indicator Objective : The irrigation system is working The indicator should be «  SMART   »: S pecific = The irrigation pumps are functioning properly in the project area M easurable = 50 of the irrigation pumps are functioning properly in the project area Acceptable = Is the indicator accepted by all the partners involved in the implementation of the project ? R elevant = Are the irrigation pumps the main problem? T ime-bound = 100% of the irrigation pumps are functioning properly in the project area at the end of the project 4. The log-frame
  • 25. Selection of sources of verification Administrative/ financial report Management report Monitoring data Adapted monitoring statistics Interviews of beneficiaries Specialised surveys Complexity Cost 4. The log-frame
  • 26. 4. The log-frame Consider the various risks and assumptions on your project: = external factors that may affect the projects’ implementation and long-term sustainability = synergetic activities made by other actors Do not define assumptions that are endogenous to the project and the scheduled activities !! Only mention relevant hypothesis…
  • 27. Is the RISK important to your project? Yes No What is its probability? Ignore Almost certain Unlikely Fairly Unlikely Can the project strategy be modified to eliminate the risk? Yes No Modify strategy, add activities STOP the project Formulate an assumption Risks/Assumptions 4. The log-frame
  • 28. Intervention logic of project + Assumptions IN OUT Overall objective Project Purpose Results Activities + + + Assumptions Assumptions Assumptions Pre-conditions If the activities are carried out, and if assumptions are valid, then ... 4. The log-frame
  • 29. Logical framework 5. Activity-planning Plan of action Activities
  • 30. 5. Resource-planning Plan of action Means/Budget Travel etc. Material/ Equipment Human resources Budget Means:
  • 31. TIME FOR A SMALL GROUP EXERCISE!! GROUP WORK
  • 32. The logical framework : Two case studies Case study Bangladesh : Advocacy project in Bangladesh to promote the rights of persons with disabilities Case Study Nepal Project in Nepal to provide orthopaedic appliances and services to disabled persons Identify among the cards given : ·     Goal (1) ·     Project purpose (1) ·     Expected results (4) ·     Corresponding indicators for each (6) ·     Assumptions (5) Group work: 15 minutes – Presentation: 5 minutes
  • 33. 10 frequently made errors in log-frame: Make sure to… 1. Have only one specific objective. 2. Have a coherence in the hierarchy between objectives and results. 3. Formulate objectives and results as they were already achieved. 4. Define “SMART indicators” (no activity, no vague indicator like criteria). 5. Do not transpose the activities as indicators of the results. 6. Do not define indicators next to the general objectives (they are irrelevant in most cases). 7. Do not define sources of verification that are too expensive or impossible to get. In any case, if an expensive source of verification is mentioned, be sure to integrate it in the activities and within the budget. 8. Do not define hypothesis endogenous to the activities you should implement. 9. Next to activities, mention the means (HR and material) and the costs. 10. Do not forget pre-conditions
  • 35. Preliminary remarks Proposal = is often the only tool for the donor to assess your project (e.g. reject it or not) Write a proposal only when your project idea is already well defined! Be sure to stick to the donor’s criteria and values.
  • 36. Select the right funding source DONOR’ S MANDATE : Which donor has a mandate compatible with your project ? ex. Humanitarian aid versus development (ECHO versus EuropeAid) ex. Refugees (ex. Austcare) DONOR’S PREFERENCES : What are your potential donors preferences? Ex: Mines victims (Irish Aid) SELECTION CRITERIA : How do donors evaluate project proposals and are you likely to be selected? Existence of an evaluation grid ? Consortium required?, etc…
  • 37. Follow a logical thread: Background -> Problem -> Solution -> Sustainability Ensure internal coherence between: Problem - Objectives - Means Many donors follow the LFA Package your project into an attractive proposal (1)
  • 38. Coherence checklist Don’t leave a problem unsolved Don’t identify objectives that do not correspond to a problem Don’t identify objectives for which you don’t have appropriate means Don’t propose activities that are not related to problems and objectives Don’t list human resources that are disproportionate to the objectives you aim to achieve Package your project into an attractive proposal (2)
  • 39. Editing and layout Pay attention to the language : Use simple language Use future tenses Be concise and logical Avoid spelling mistakes Find a catchy title Pay attention to the layout/ presentation : Use your organization’s logo on the first page Use headers and footers Clear titles and paragraphs Break the monotony Add table of contents Print on standard format paper Package your project into an attractive proposal (3)
  • 40. Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology: Partners Project implementation Activities Risks and assumptions Means Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes General structure
  • 41. 1. Executive Summary Why is it important: It is the first thing that is read Sometimes, it is the only thing that is read… It can be used by the donor to communicate about your project Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 42. Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes 1. Executive Summary Contents What do you propose to do? Where? Why? For whom? With whom? For how long?
  • 43. 1. Executive Summary DO : Write it only at the end Do it carefully Be concise DON’T : Cut and paste Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 44. 2. Presentation of the organisation Why is it important? Purpose : to establish credibility and image of a well-managed organization that meets critical needs in its area of work Tips Should not be too long If you are approaching a new donor, attach in appendix a presentation brochure and/or the last activity report Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 45. 2. Presentation of the organisation Contents Who are you? Philosophy/ mandate? History and significant interventions/track record Expertise in addressing the problem/need Organizational structure Major sources of support Affiliations/accreditations/ linkages Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 46. 3. Project Background Contents Who took the initiative? Does the project fit into an existing development plan or programme? Is this the first phase of the project, or the continuation of an activity already undergoing? If this is the case, which have been the main result of the previous phase? What studies have been done to prepare the project? Who else operates in this field? Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 47. 3. Project Background Tips You need to demonstrate that : The project arises from the beneficiaries and/or the local partners You know very well the local context You have the experience needed to run the project successfully You have been successful before Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 48. 4. Problem Statement Why is it important? Unless donors are convinced that there is a real problem , they will not agree to disburse money for our project ! Tips A “good” problem should: concern people be concrete and demonstrated be solvable arise from a demand be an emergency or priority Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 49. 4. Problem Statement Contents Description of the scope and magnitude of the problem What are the immediate causes of the problem? What are the underlying causes of the problem? What are the effects of the problem? How does it affect people? Why does it have to be addressed? Why now and not later? Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 50. 5. Goal and Objectives Goals (or overall objectives) : Describes the long-term goals, your project will contribute to. Project Purpose or Specific Objective: Describes the objective of your project in response to the core problem. Expected Results: Describes the outputs or concrete results of your project. Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 51. 5. Goal and Objectives Objectives should be SMART : S pecific = they must meet the needs (problems) identified M easurable = they should be measured by concrete indicators which should reflect the extent to which they have been attained A cceptable = by all involved partners R elevant = they must be adequate to the project socio-cultural environment T ime-bound = must be reached by the end of the project Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 52. 6. Beneficiaries Contents Clearly identify direct and indirect beneficiaries : Directly receiving support Indirectly benefiting How many? Where? Characteristics? Specify how and at what stage they will be involved in the project Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 53. 7. Proposed Methodology Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Contents Partners Project implementation Activities Risks and assumptions Means Why is it important? Indicates how objectives will be achieved
  • 54. Partners : Clearly distinguish between main partners and other partners Provide background information: Goals/philosophy? Area of intervention? Relationship with beneficiaries? Cooperation track-record? Role in the project Type of partnership you set up Specify each partner’s role Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes 7. Proposed Methodology
  • 55. Project implementation : Rationale for selecting a particular or unique methodology Project implementation structure: roles and responsibilities of all the project stakeholders Tip Use a chart to describe the project implementation structure Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes 7. Proposed Methodology
  • 56. 7. Proposed Methodology Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Activities : What will be done? How? By whom? Where? By when? Tips Be as precise as possible Cluster activities by expected result Use a work plan to summarise
  • 57. 7. Proposed Methodology Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Example: Training: How many persons? For how long? Starting when? Which methodology will be used (seminars, in-house training, ad hoc courses, etc.) Why is the training necessary? Which new skills will the trainees acquire?
  • 58. 7. Proposed Methodology Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Risks/Assumptions : Risks are external factors that could potentially jeopardise your project and are beyond the control of the project management Assumptions are what you are supposing regarding those risks Why is it important? It helps assess the factors which could jeopardise your project It helps examining the project for completeness and consistency
  • 59. 7. Proposed methodology Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Means : Human resources : Explain the responsibilities and tasks of each key person in the project. Justify the need for expatriate personnel Material resources : Give an explanation of the most important budget lines Justify vehicles
  • 60. 8. Budget Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Contents Budget itself Budget explanations and justifications Tips Prepare it using your plan of action Don’t inflate the budget Follow carefully donor’s requirements Disaggregate your budget for each year
  • 61. 9. Monitoring& Evaluation Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Why is it important? Monitoring : to assess whether your project activities are on track Evaluation : to assess whether your project is effective, efficient, has an impact, is relevant, sustainable… Contents What will be monitored and why? By whom? How often? Using which tools and methods?
  • 62. 10. Sustainability Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes Contents Institutional sustainability Technical sustainability Socio-cultural sustainability Financial sustainability Why is it important? Because donors want to be sure that their investment will not be lost at the end of the project and that you are already planning the phasing out of the project.
  • 63. 11. Annexes Contents Glossary Maps Statistics/ policy documents Proof of registration and tax benefits for donors Financial statement Composition of Board of Directors List of major donors Annual report, brochures & publications Specific studies or evaluation reports Memorandum of agreement with partners Letters of support Pictures Others... Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 64. 11. Annexes Tips Refer to the annexes (see annex xy) in the proposal, but.... If something is crucially important, write it in the proposal! Add a table of content for the annexes Write the annex number on the top of each page “annex n°xy” Separate each annex by a coloured page Executive summary Presentation of the organisation Project background Problem statement Goal and objectives Beneficiaries Proposed methodology Budget Monitoring and evaluation Sustainability Annexes
  • 65. Cover letter (Use letterhead, mention project title, purpose, amount requested, contact person and list of enclosures) Project proposal: Title page with logo Table of contents Executive summary Detailed proposal Annexes Requested attachments (Submit all documents requested by the donor which are not already included in the annexes) Proposal package
  • 66. Ask someone exterior to the project to read it before any submission to a donor. Final recommendation
  • 68. Case study: Laos project Targeted donor: ECHO (European Community Humanitarian Office) ECHO mandate: humanitarian and emergency actions Context: Need of gap funding between two contracts with EuropeAid ( budget line B7-661 « mines ») EuropeAid mandate: long-term development oriented Project rationale : training of deminers in Laos, Savannakhet Province
  • 69. Version I: what would you change/improve ? 1. GENERAL INFORMATION   Title of operation: Technical support for the maintenance of Lao National Unexploded Ordnance (UXO LAO) activities in Savannakhet. Province of Lao PDR while preparing the consolidation of a 24 month final phase of the project.   Start-up date: March 2002.
  • 70. VERSION II: What was written in the final version   VERSION 2 1. GENERAL INFORMATION    Title of operation: Maintenance of Handicap International Technical Assistance to UXO Clearance Operations in Savannakhet Province, Lao PDR   Start-up date: 01 March 2002
  • 71. Version I: what would you change/improve ? VERSION 1 :Number of direct beneficiaries: UXO Lao staff in Savannakhet Province. Currently UXO Lao assisted by HI have 160 deminers, surveyors, community awareness (CA) members and supporting staff in the province. The general population on the four most UXO affected districts of Savannakhet Province will also directly benefit of the clearance operations undertaken by UXO Lao.   The quantitative outputs of UXO LAO Savannakhet in the key activities since the HI project started are: Area Clearance: Agriculture land cleared: 2,534,935m 2 ( 58% of the total land cleared) Roving Tasks: Villages visited: 939 Community Awareness : Villages visited: 561 out of more than 625
  • 72. VERSION II: What was written in the final version Number of direct beneficiaries: The general population on the seven most UXO affected districts of Savannakhet Province will directly benefit of the clearance operations and awareness activities undertaken by UXO Lao. The direct beneficiaries are more specifically, the populations of the districts of Phine, Xepon, Vilabuly, Nong, Atsaphanthong, Phalan Xai and Atsaphone. The number of direct beneficiaries is estimated to over 22 000 people. The vast majority of the beneficiaries are subsistence farmers from ethnic minority groups in remote areas Through activities undertaken in this programme, the local population will benefit from improved land accessibility, improved land availability, a safer working and living environment and an improved ability to avoid accidents caused by unexploded ordnance. Equally, UXO LAO staff in Savannakhet Province is a direct beneficiary of this programme. Currently UXO Lao staff assisted by HI includes de-miners, surveyors, community awareness (CA) workers and support staff in the province. The number of beneficiaries equals 160 employees of UXO LAO. Through activities undertaken in this programme, UXO LAO employees will benefit from training aimed at safer, more efficient and more diverse unexploded ordinance identification, removal and destruction.
  • 73. Version I: what would you change/improve ? 4.1. Overall objective(s) Phase 4 – Transfer of knowledge, skills and capacities to UXO LAO Savannakhet in respect of the application of comprehensive national procedure across all aspects of the programme leading to the complete withdrawal of HI technical assistance.   4.2. Project purpose/ Specific objective To provide reduced technical support to UXO LAO Savannakhet for UXO area clearance and disposal in order to allow UXO LAO to maintain limited activities to national standards.   This is an interim arrangement of six months that will allow limited continuity of operations for UXO LAO in Savannakhet until implementing partner funding becomes available. This will allow UXO LAO Savannakhet to conduct its full range activities (community awareness, survey, roving and area clearance) to national standards under the technical supervision of Handicap International technical advisor as described in the phase four financing proposal.
  • 74. VERSION II: What was written in the final version 4.1.   Overall objectives: The populations of Phine, Xepon, Vilabuly, Nong, Atsaphanthong, Phalan Xai and Atsaphone of Savannakhet Province, Lao PDR live in a safer environment. 4.2. Project purpose/ Specific objective: The negative impacts of UXOs in the districts of Phine, Xepon, Vilabuly, Nong, Atsaphanthong, Phalan Xai and Atsaphone of Savannakhet Province, Lao PDR are reduced.
  • 75. Checklist: all the « good questions » to bear in mind when drafting project proposal 1.       Before writing the proposal: -           Is the stakeholder analysis done and complete ? -          Have I established a coherent objective tree and a concrete problem ? -          Have objectives, results and activities been discussed with all partners and accepted ? -          Do I know the donor to whom I will send my proposal (e.g. mandate, criteria, specific format, etc.)? -          Is there an internal organisation that has been set up within HI around this proposal ? and does each person know her tasks ? 2.       When drafting the proposal:   -          Is my proposal coherent (identified problem/suggested activities/proposed mean)? -          Is my proposal precise enough (e.g. explanation of expected results ad intended activities, definition of SMART indicators)? -          Is my proposal understandable by everybody (not to much technical terms, explanation of them, etc.)? -          Do I have really respected the donor’s criteria ? -          Have I put the information in the correct place ? -          Have I corrected all the spelling mistakes ?

Editor's Notes

  1. Schedule: 13.30 – 13.40 Introduction of participants and facilitators 13.40-13.50: Expectations from the participants (flipchart) 13.50-13.55: introduction to the whole session: General recommendations/ LFA-Group exercise/ Contents of a project proposal-group exercise 13.55-14.05: Brainstorming: what does it take to write a winning proposal? 14.05-14.35: PP on General recommendations 14.35-15.15: PP on the LFA 15.15-15.30: Tea/coffee Break 15.30-16.00: Group exercise LFA (15 min for actual work- 5 min for presentations by each group) 16.00-16.30: PP on the contents of a project proposal 16.30- 16.40: Introduction to the group exercise 16.40-18.10: Group exercise 18.10-18.20: tea/coffee break 18.20-18.50: presentation and discussion 18.50-19.00: Evaluation of the session