How engageSPARK Helps You with USAID’s Accountability and Feedback Plans (AFPs)
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How do you make sure that your intervention actually benefits the constituents you’re trying to serve? How do you make sure that it has maximum impact? These and related questions usually have one answer: M&E—Monitoring and evaluation.
Recently, USAID—that giant US government agency for international development—has added a new piece to its M&E requirements: AFPs. How are they different from previous feedback gathering efforts—and how can you collect this feedback effectively? We’ll answer these questions in this blog post.
What are Accountability and Feedback Plans (AFPs)?
If you’re going to do a project for USAID , or are someone tasked with overseeing one, then you’ll probably have to come up with a so called AFP—short for Accountability and Feedback Plan. In this document you’ll explain how you’re going to involve people in the planning and evaluation of your project.
How can you make it the most effective? How can you make sure you get feedback from a wide range of stakeholders, not just the easiest to talk to? After you have processed the feedback you received from constituents about your intervention, how will these constituents hear back from you about what changed, if anything?
Of course, you might wonder: what’s new about this? Beneficiary Feedback Plans (BFPs) have been around for a while, after all. So let’s talk about how AFPs go further than BFPs.
But aren’t there Beneficiary Feedback Plans (BFP) already?
In short: BFPs got the ball rolling on getting feedback, AFPs make sure you don’t get off the hook too easily. ?? An “enhanced version”, as they put it, to identify and consult “key voices”. Specifically it’s about:
[…] intentionally reaching and consulting underserved and marginalized voices including, women, youth, with particular focus on girls, LGBTQI+, indigenous and persons with disabilities.
So, it’s not good enough that community leaders and your contracting partner give you the thumbs up. You have to dig deep—and make a plan for that. With AFPs, USAID wants you to broaden whom you involve in the design of the intervention, and whom you collect feedback from.
And while this is a requirement for USAID programs going forward, it really is about making sure that your project has the best possible impact on the community you’re serving.
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The five steps of the AFP journey
To set up and use an Accountability and Feedback Plan you will likely have to answer these five questions, as outlined in the USAID docs:
So, why are we writing about all this? Well, we believe we can help you with your M&E efforts—as we have helped many others .
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Where engageSPARK comes in
We at engageSPARK help organizations like yours communicate with people—often automated and at scale. So, for example, when IOM wants to survey migrants in Ghana using Voice IVR or at times illiterate migrants in Senegal using WhatsApp , we help do that. Read (many) more examples here.
The main tools we use are available through our web platform (you can sign up for free and check it out here —no credit card required):
All of these tools are a bit more powerful than we have space for in this article. If you have questions, ask us! We’re happy to talk , or point you in the right direction if we can’t help.
Conclusion
AFPs are about quality feedback—they encourage you to include a wider and more diverse range of constituents and stake holders. With their feedback, your impact can only grow. We at engageSPARK help people like you to get the answers you need to make it so.