HOPE's impact journey proves importance of measuring change
Danielle Kutchel
The co-founder of a new co-investment housing scheme explains why it?s so important to think about the change you want to create.
The Centre for Social Impact?s Amplify Online tool is helping essential workers buy homes close to their place of work.
Amplify Online, which assists not for profits to measure the impact of their programs, is underpinning the Home Owners' Partnering Equity (HOPE) initiative by providing the measurements the initiative needs to prove its success to potential investors.
HOPE Housing aims to empower essential workers to buy a place to live that?s closer to their place of work.
CEO of HOPE Housing, Tim Buskens, told Pro Bono News the program uses a shared equity model, with the initiative co-investing up to 50 per cent of a home?s purchase price for essential workers like emergency services staff and teachers.
By enabling these people to live closer to their place of work, Buskens said the workers experienced benefits like less stress, better work-life balance and improved productivity.
HOPE came out of discussions Buskens had several years ago with co-founder Tim Sims. Both came from finance backgrounds and decided they wanted to help address the nation?s housing crisis.˜
With family links to police officers and nurses, the pair decided to start by tackling the challenge of housing for essential workers. Initially though, they didn?t really know what to do.
?We had a very clear view of the problem, but we didn't really have the solution,? Buskens explained.
?We knew it needs to be commercial or scalable because even though we're a for-purpose, we needed to attract institutional investment capital, real money, to scale the investment. We had to deliver a commercial return.
?We wanted to ensure the solution was adaptable and scalable because we?re starting with essential workers, but we wanted to think about how we can evolve to [help] low income, single parent families, Indigenous and other marginalised groups that have struggled with housing.?
Enter the Centre for Social Impact?s Amplify Social Impact tool.
See more: New tool launches to equalise the sector
Keen to ensure that their solution was measurable, Buskens and Sims engaged with the Centre for Social Impact about what they hoped to achieve and what metrics could be applied to it to define their impact. The pair couldn?t have met at a better time. Amplify was in the process of seeking feedback from test users of its service as to how it could be improved and what sorts of measurements and indicators not for profits and for-purpose organisations needed - and HOPE was one of its test cases. HOPE Housing launched this month, and Buskens said he is looking forward to continuing to work with Amplify as the two grow. ?Part of my thought process is imagining what I want to change and working with CSI and developing our frames, what we can change, and then measuring it and finding out whether what we imagine is right or not. It?s a good learning process in itself, because then we can evolve and change or do things differently.?
See more: New tool launches to equalise the sector
Keen to ensure that their solution was measurable, Buskens and Sims engaged with the Centre for Social Impact about what they hoped to achieve and what metrics could be applied to it to define their impact. The pair couldn?t have met at a better time. Amplify was in the process of seeking feedback from test users of its service as to how it could be improved and what sorts of measurements and indicators not for profits and for-purpose organisations needed - and HOPE was one of its test cases. HOPE Housing launched this month, and Buskens said he is looking forward to continuing to work with Amplify as the two grow. ?Part of my thought process is imagining what I want to change and working with CSI and developing our frames, what we can change, and then measuring it and finding out whether what we imagine is right or not. It?s a good learning process in itself, because then we can evolve and change or do things differently.?