This document outlines a standard 5-day training agenda for facilitating Election Situation Rooms (ESRs). The agenda covers basic concepts of ESRs, planning and preparation, implementation design, dynamics of operating an ESR, and evaluation methods. Key topics include the purpose of ESRs in collecting and sharing electoral information, use of the OpenESR software for data collection and reporting, competencies needed for project management and resource pooling, creating scenarios to respond to unexpected situations, importance of analysis and relationships with stakeholders, and establishing reliable alert systems.
DAY 5: ESRsimulationand evaluation methodsTidiani Togola
•ESR data collection,transmission, processing and analysisProduction of reports and statements (alerts, preliminary statement, press statements)
•ESR evaluation methods
Capstone Project Part V Action Plans Natasha House, Inc.docxannandleola
Capstone Project Part V: Action Plans/ Natasha House, Inc
********The Paper covers all of the information that was previously submitted for Natasha House, Inc. Please put all of the information together to make one who paper. Please Include the abstract and conclusion as well as the references.********
A theme throughout this course has been that human and social services professionals constantly apply theories and processes to address issues and challenges. As a social change agent, leader, and advocate, you should be able to apply relevant theories and processes to implement and support change on a local and global scale. As always, codes of ethics should provide guidance as you attempt to bring about change. As the final step in the development of your strategic plan, you will develop an action plan for each year of the strategic plan. For example, your plan might start off with strategic goals at the local level with plans to take these goals national or international in following years of the strategic plan.
The Assignment (15–22 pages):
Guidelines for each section of the Assignment are provided below.
Part I. The Fundamentals (3–4 pages): The fundamentals of a strategic plan include identifying the core values, mission, and vision, which represent the organizational identification (ID). The Assignment requires you to develop the organizational ID for the agency, organization, or community for which you will develop a strategic plan.
1. Identify and describe the core values of the agency.
1. Discuss the degree to which those core values are aligned with advocacy, leadership, or social change.
2. Explain how those core values contribute to the well-being of individuals, groups, societies, or international communities.
2. Identify and describe the mission of the agency, organization, or community.
1. Evaluate whether the mission statement is aligned with the core values of the agency, organization, etc.
2. Describe whether the mission statement promotes advocacy, leadership, or social change.
3. Discuss whether the mission statement provides evidence of how the agency/organization contributes to the well-being of individuals, groups, societies, or international communities.
3. Identify and describe the vision of the agency.
1. Evaluate whether the vision is aligned with the core values of the agency, organization, etc.
2. Describe whether the vision promotes advocacy, leadership, or social change.
3. Discuss whether the vision provides evidence of how the agency/organization contributes to the well-being of individuals, groups, societies, or international communities.
4. Identify and describe key stakeholders involved with the agency.
1. Discuss whether each stakeholder is internal or external to the agency/organization.
2. Describe the role each stakeholder has in the organization (i.e. leadership, management, staff, recipient of services, etc.).
3. Discuss how each stakeholder can be an essential element for gathering information to dev.
The document provides an overview of the IFRC Framework for Evaluation, which guides how evaluations are planned, managed, conducted, and utilized by the IFRC Secretariat. The framework promotes reliable, useful, and ethical evaluations to contribute to organizational learning, accountability, and the IFRC's mission. It outlines key parts of the framework, including evaluation criteria to guide what is evaluated and standards and processes to guide how evaluations are conducted. The framework is intended to guide those involved in evaluations and inform stakeholders about expected practices.
This document outlines the objectives and structure of a training on Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) skills and expertise for researchers. The training aims to build M&E capacity among researchers to strengthen development evaluation. It will cover M&E framework and tool development, as well as program and project evaluation. The training is expected to equip researchers with M&E skills and expertise to become M&E specialists or professional research consultants.
SFCG Nepal runs nine peacebuilding programs across 17 districts involving 42 staff. They developed a comprehensive monitoring system to ensure accountability, measure impact, and learn from their work. The system involves developing SMART indicators, conducting baseline studies, collecting and analyzing data, and disseminating findings through monthly monitoring bulletins discussed with managers and partners. While the system provides valuable insights, challenges remain in creating indicators across different impact levels, designing an effective data collection process, and ensuring the data is accessible and useful for all.
MeTA MSP workshop: The Generic Multi Stakeholder Process ModelMeTApresents
The document outlines a generic model for multi-stakeholder processes with 4 phases: 1) initiating, 2) adaptive planning, 3) collaborative action, and 4) reflexive monitoring. Each phase contains key steps and considerations for establishing an effective multi-stakeholder process, including clarifying goals, analyzing stakeholders and issues, developing shared visions and strategies, implementing plans of action, and continuously learning and adapting through monitoring and evaluation. The model emphasizes building understanding between stakeholders, strategic decision-making, maintaining commitment through communication and acknowledgment, and creating a culture of learning from both successes and failures.
While this list represents the desirable attributes of indicators most useful for these purposes, it is recognized that few indicators are likely to meet all of these criteria.
Hence, these criteria serve as a benchmark for weighing the potential costs and benefits of selecting one indicator over another.
This document provides a strategic plan for an organization from 2013-2015. It begins with an overview of the strategic planning process, which involved gathering input from members through various surveys and focus groups. It then outlines the organization's vision, mission, and 4 strategic goals. The goals are to: 1) Support members in building healthy human systems; 2) Transform the culture to be more inclusive; 3) Advance the field of organization development; and 4) Ensure long-term sustainability of the organization. Specific objectives and initiatives are provided for each goal.
DAY 5: ESRsimulationand evaluation methodsTidiani Togola
•ESR data collection,transmission, processing and analysisProduction of reports and statements (alerts, preliminary statement, press statements)
•ESR evaluation methods
Capstone Project Part V Action Plans Natasha House, Inc.docxannandleola
Capstone Project Part V: Action Plans/ Natasha House, Inc
********The Paper covers all of the information that was previously submitted for Natasha House, Inc. Please put all of the information together to make one who paper. Please Include the abstract and conclusion as well as the references.********
A theme throughout this course has been that human and social services professionals constantly apply theories and processes to address issues and challenges. As a social change agent, leader, and advocate, you should be able to apply relevant theories and processes to implement and support change on a local and global scale. As always, codes of ethics should provide guidance as you attempt to bring about change. As the final step in the development of your strategic plan, you will develop an action plan for each year of the strategic plan. For example, your plan might start off with strategic goals at the local level with plans to take these goals national or international in following years of the strategic plan.
The Assignment (15–22 pages):
Guidelines for each section of the Assignment are provided below.
Part I. The Fundamentals (3–4 pages): The fundamentals of a strategic plan include identifying the core values, mission, and vision, which represent the organizational identification (ID). The Assignment requires you to develop the organizational ID for the agency, organization, or community for which you will develop a strategic plan.
1. Identify and describe the core values of the agency.
1. Discuss the degree to which those core values are aligned with advocacy, leadership, or social change.
2. Explain how those core values contribute to the well-being of individuals, groups, societies, or international communities.
2. Identify and describe the mission of the agency, organization, or community.
1. Evaluate whether the mission statement is aligned with the core values of the agency, organization, etc.
2. Describe whether the mission statement promotes advocacy, leadership, or social change.
3. Discuss whether the mission statement provides evidence of how the agency/organization contributes to the well-being of individuals, groups, societies, or international communities.
3. Identify and describe the vision of the agency.
1. Evaluate whether the vision is aligned with the core values of the agency, organization, etc.
2. Describe whether the vision promotes advocacy, leadership, or social change.
3. Discuss whether the vision provides evidence of how the agency/organization contributes to the well-being of individuals, groups, societies, or international communities.
4. Identify and describe key stakeholders involved with the agency.
1. Discuss whether each stakeholder is internal or external to the agency/organization.
2. Describe the role each stakeholder has in the organization (i.e. leadership, management, staff, recipient of services, etc.).
3. Discuss how each stakeholder can be an essential element for gathering information to dev.
The document provides an overview of the IFRC Framework for Evaluation, which guides how evaluations are planned, managed, conducted, and utilized by the IFRC Secretariat. The framework promotes reliable, useful, and ethical evaluations to contribute to organizational learning, accountability, and the IFRC's mission. It outlines key parts of the framework, including evaluation criteria to guide what is evaluated and standards and processes to guide how evaluations are conducted. The framework is intended to guide those involved in evaluations and inform stakeholders about expected practices.
This document outlines the objectives and structure of a training on Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) skills and expertise for researchers. The training aims to build M&E capacity among researchers to strengthen development evaluation. It will cover M&E framework and tool development, as well as program and project evaluation. The training is expected to equip researchers with M&E skills and expertise to become M&E specialists or professional research consultants.
SFCG Nepal runs nine peacebuilding programs across 17 districts involving 42 staff. They developed a comprehensive monitoring system to ensure accountability, measure impact, and learn from their work. The system involves developing SMART indicators, conducting baseline studies, collecting and analyzing data, and disseminating findings through monthly monitoring bulletins discussed with managers and partners. While the system provides valuable insights, challenges remain in creating indicators across different impact levels, designing an effective data collection process, and ensuring the data is accessible and useful for all.
MeTA MSP workshop: The Generic Multi Stakeholder Process ModelMeTApresents
The document outlines a generic model for multi-stakeholder processes with 4 phases: 1) initiating, 2) adaptive planning, 3) collaborative action, and 4) reflexive monitoring. Each phase contains key steps and considerations for establishing an effective multi-stakeholder process, including clarifying goals, analyzing stakeholders and issues, developing shared visions and strategies, implementing plans of action, and continuously learning and adapting through monitoring and evaluation. The model emphasizes building understanding between stakeholders, strategic decision-making, maintaining commitment through communication and acknowledgment, and creating a culture of learning from both successes and failures.
While this list represents the desirable attributes of indicators most useful for these purposes, it is recognized that few indicators are likely to meet all of these criteria.
Hence, these criteria serve as a benchmark for weighing the potential costs and benefits of selecting one indicator over another.
This document provides a strategic plan for an organization from 2013-2015. It begins with an overview of the strategic planning process, which involved gathering input from members through various surveys and focus groups. It then outlines the organization's vision, mission, and 4 strategic goals. The goals are to: 1) Support members in building healthy human systems; 2) Transform the culture to be more inclusive; 3) Advance the field of organization development; and 4) Ensure long-term sustainability of the organization. Specific objectives and initiatives are provided for each goal.
The document outlines the steps for conducting an education needs assessment. It discusses that an education needs assessment establishes the need for a particular project by examining audience interest, knowledge, and environmental issues. The needs assessment process involves planning, defining participants, designing data collection strategies, gathering and analyzing data, and reporting results to identify priority needs. Key steps include using the TOP model to guide data collection, determining appropriate sampling, designing instruments, and analyzing both qualitative and quantitative data collected. The overall goal is to systematically identify any gaps in existing education services to effectively design new education projects.
The document discusses communication audits, which involve evaluating an organization's communication processes and systems. A communication audit aims to determine if all stakeholders are receiving intended messages, identify strengths and weaknesses, and indicate areas for improvement. The key steps of conducting an audit involve securing management commitment, identifying current practices, setting success standards, developing an action plan, and measuring results. Common audit methods include questionnaires, interviews, focus groups, and analyzing communication outputs and stakeholder feedback. The goals are to improve communication quality and relationships within the organization.
•The architecture for operationalization of an ESR
•Formalization of civil society relations and coordination
•Establishing an ESR data management system
This document outlines Rainmaker Solutions' approach to developing nonprofit business plans and fundraising campaigns. It discusses the differences between strategic and business planning and provides an overview of Rainmaker's five-step process to create a rigorous business plan and fundraising strategy through market research, financial modeling, and developing governance and marketing structures. The document also outlines Rainmaker's deliverables and benefits to clients, as well as proposed pricing and payment terms for their services.
Assessing and Advancing Community Readiness for Multi-Sector Data SharingPractical Playbook
This document discusses assessing and advancing community readiness for multi-sector data sharing. It provides a framework for exploring multisector collaboration and data sharing for community health. The framework examines enabling community factors like trust and infrastructure, as well as system features like governance and technical capabilities. The document also describes a tool for assessing community readiness for data sharing developed from a pilot test of communities in the All In initiative. It presents results on collaboration, data infrastructure, resources, data governance, workflows and technical functions from the pilot test to illustrate gaps communities can focus on improving.
Example of Company Profile CONFIDENTIAL Swiss-Asian Chamb.docxgitagrimston
Example of Company Profile CONFIDENTIAL
Swiss-Asian Chamber of Commerce Business and Investment Mission to Thailand and Myanmar, Nov 17 to Nov 27, 2011
Business and Investment Mission to Thailand and Myanmar
COMPANY NAME / ADDRESS
Muster AG
Zeughausstrasse 19
3380 Wangen an der Aare
Telephone: + 41 (0) 32 613 20 73
Facsimile: + 41 (0) 32 613 20 80
E-Mail: [email protected]
Contact Person:
Mr. Fritz Muster
CEO / General Manager:
Mr. Heiri Muster
COMPANY BACKGROUND
Year Established: 1984
Regional presence: in Switzerland, England
and USA
ISO 9002 and TS 16949 certified
CURRENT ACTIVITIES
Supplier of precision turned parts to the
automotive-, medical-, communication-
and automation-industry.
Supplier of subassemblies to various
industries, such as domestic appliances,
house technology etc.
NATURE OF BUSINESS
NEIDA AG supply precision turned parts and
subassemblies. We have an extensive know-
how of manufacturing performances in metal,
especially turning and milling.
MAJOR PRODUCTS/SERVICES
Precision turned parts and Subassemblies
NEIDA choose the best manufacturing
method and machines available.
NEIDA then selects the most effective
location/subcontractors to achieve good
quality at the lowest cost.
NEIDA then monitor and control the order
throughout the entire production to achieve
the best product quality as required by our
customer.
COLLABORATIVE ARRANGEMENT SOUGHT
Close cooperation with Manufacturers in
Thailand to develop business opportunities in
the field of turned parts and subassemblies.
MAIN PURPOSE OF MEETING
PARTICULARLY WITH THAI COMPANIES
Know how transfer?
Looking for a distributor?
Joint Venture Partner?
COMPANY TARGETS
Manufacturing the most applicable parts
in Thailand for the European Market,
especially for the automotive industry.
COMPANY PROFILE
Sales Turnover: US$ 12’000’000
Registered Capital in USD: 100’000
Number of Employees: 20
Facilities:
large range of manufacturing equipment
at the location of our chosen and approved
subcontractors and at our own premises.
Major customers:
TRW, MAHLE, ABB, PARKER, HILTI etc.
Geographical Markets:
Central Europe, England and Asia
Export Markets (Countries):
Central Europe and USA
TYPE OF BUSINESS COOPERATION
NEIDA AG want to place new orders with
reliable and competitive manufacturers
BUSINESS INTEREST IN
NEIDA AG is interested to find competitive
manufacturers in order to increase sales in
Europe.
FORM OF INVESTMENT
NEIDA AG will invest into Know-How-
Transfer and into special technical
equipment to accomplish the specific
orders.
SACC_bms/22.09.2010
mailto:[email protected]
Unit 7: Business Strategy
Unit code: A/601/0796 QCF level: 5
Credit value: 15 ...
This document provides an overview of information, strategy, and strategic management. It defines information as data that has been organized and given context. Information literacy is knowing how to find, evaluate, and use information effectively. The building blocks of information are tool literacy, resource literacy, social-structural literacy, and research literacy. Strategy is defined as the long-term direction and scope of an organization to achieve competitive advantage through its resources. The elements of strategy are direction, scope, advantage, resources, environment, and stakeholders. Strategic management involves understanding customers, identifying critical success factors, envisioning the future, assessing competitors, and analyzing strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats.
The document discusses strategic management, which includes environmental scanning, strategy formulation, strategy implementation, and evaluation and control. It aims to integrate management functions to achieve organizational success. Key aspects covered include performing SWOT and PEST analyses to assess internal/external factors, identifying the organization's mission, objectives, and strategies, and implementing programs and budgets to execute the strategy.
This report documents the collective output of research activities undertaken by the Institute for Employment Studies in response to a request from EU-OSHA to undertake a review of successful OSH benchmarking initiatives. The overarching aim was to review OSH benchmarking schemes that have been set up at sector, Member State or European level in order to assess the benefits that such schemes can deliver, as well as their limitations, and to identify the key factors of and main obstacles to their success.
Workshop proceedings of "Identifying contextualized indicators to measure SDGs"4th Wheel Social Impact
Keeping social impact management at the centre, 4th Wheel Social Impact is committed to strengthening social programs in India by improving the way they are designed, implemented, monitored and evaluated. The organization believes the integration of data, technology and partnerships will enable the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The workshop focussed on Theory of Change, Indicator Development, SDG linkages of indicators.
This workshop was supported by Swedish Institute.
Total Economic Impact of ThoughtWorks Distributed Agile ApproachThoughtworks
- The document is a case study summarizing the findings of an analysis of the potential return on investment (ROI) from using ThoughtWorks' agile development approach on a software project for a US-based insurance and financial services organization.
- Key findings include an estimated ROI of 41-56% over 3 years from using ThoughtWorks, compared to an estimated 4% ROI if they had not used ThoughtWorks. Benefits came from increased efficiency, reduced defects, and delivering business requirements sooner.
- The analysis examined costs of ThoughtWorks' services, estimated at 54% of the total project costs, and potential benefits and savings from things like reduced rework, support staff needs, and accelerated timeline for realizing benefits compared
The document discusses strategic formulation and execution. It emphasizes that while well-formulated strategies are important, most strategies fail due to poor execution. Effective strategy evaluation is critical and includes reviewing strategy foundations, comparing actual and expected results, and taking corrective actions. Strategy evaluation allows organizations to adapt to changing environments and ensure strategic goals are met.
The document discusses developing a research agenda for impact evaluation of development programs. It proposes that the agenda should:
1) Cover different types and purposes of evaluations, questions addressed, users, and those conducting evaluations.
2) Be developed through consultation with various stakeholders and review of existing documentation and examples.
3) Include different types of research like documenting current practices, trials of methods, and longitudinal studies of impact evaluations.
4) Address important questions like how to involve communities and accommodate different views of evidence, and how to represent complex interventions and identify unintended impacts. Support is needed to develop the agenda through legitimate processes and interdisciplinary cooperation.
The document outlines the key steps in the public relations process:
1. Research is conducted to define problems and understand audiences. Various research methods are described.
2. Planning and programming involves setting objectives, budgets, schedules and strategies based on research findings.
3. Actions are taken and communication is implemented to achieve program goals using appropriate tactics.
4. Evaluation assesses program preparation, implementation and results to determine effectiveness and make adjustments.
Whole systems change across a neighbourhood
How can we collaborate with people to help them build their resilience? Get under the skin of the culture and the lives people live. Identify people’s feelings and experiences of community and understand what people think is shaped by different values and by the environment and infrastructure around them. The future of collaboration could bring many opportunities but people find it more difficult to live and act together than before. How can we help people…and communities build their resilience? Understand people’s different situations and capabilities to develop pathways that help them build resilient relationships. Help people experience and practice change together. Help people grow everyday practices into sustainable projects. Turn people’s everyday motivations into design principles. Support infrastructure that connects different cultures of collaboration. Build relationships with people designing in collaboration for the future…now.
This document provides an overview of key concepts and methods for evaluating programs, including:
1. SWOT analysis, the steps in program evaluation, milestone charts, Gantt charts, PERT, critical path method, Bennett's hierarchy of evaluation, and the logical framework approach.
2. It describes each method at a high level - for example, that SWOT analysis identifies strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats, and that the critical path method uses mathematical calculations to schedule project activities.
3. Bennett's hierarchy presents a logic model for educational programs with 7 steps from inputs to end results, showing how the program causes changes in knowledge and practice.
This document discusses the preparation phase of the strategic planning process. It involves organizing and staffing the planning effort through the creation of leadership positions and committees to oversee planning. It also involves training participants to ensure they have the knowledge and skills for effective strategic planning. Examples provided include organizing a university planning council and executive committee, as well as conducting a training program on strategic planning facilitated by a consultant. The goal of preparation is to properly structure the planning process and equip participants for their roles in developing strategic plans.
About Potato, The scientific name of the plant is Solanum tuberosum (L).Christina Parmionova
The potato is a starchy root vegetable native to the Americas that is consumed as a staple food in many parts of the world. Potatoes are tubers of the plant Solanum tuberosum, a perennial in the nightshade family Solanaceae. Wild potato species can be found from the southern United States to southern Chile
Synopsis (short abstract) In December 2023, the UN General Assembly proclaimed 30 May as the International Day of Potato.
The document outlines the steps for conducting an education needs assessment. It discusses that an education needs assessment establishes the need for a particular project by examining audience interest, knowledge, and environmental issues. The needs assessment process involves planning, defining participants, designing data collection strategies, gathering and analyzing data, and reporting results to identify priority needs. Key steps include using the TOP model to guide data collection, determining appropriate sampling, designing instruments, and analyzing both qualitative and quantitative data collected. The overall goal is to systematically identify any gaps in existing education services to effectively design new education projects.
The document discusses communication audits, which involve evaluating an organization's communication processes and systems. A communication audit aims to determine if all stakeholders are receiving intended messages, identify strengths and weaknesses, and indicate areas for improvement. The key steps of conducting an audit involve securing management commitment, identifying current practices, setting success standards, developing an action plan, and measuring results. Common audit methods include questionnaires, interviews, focus groups, and analyzing communication outputs and stakeholder feedback. The goals are to improve communication quality and relationships within the organization.
•The architecture for operationalization of an ESR
•Formalization of civil society relations and coordination
•Establishing an ESR data management system
This document outlines Rainmaker Solutions' approach to developing nonprofit business plans and fundraising campaigns. It discusses the differences between strategic and business planning and provides an overview of Rainmaker's five-step process to create a rigorous business plan and fundraising strategy through market research, financial modeling, and developing governance and marketing structures. The document also outlines Rainmaker's deliverables and benefits to clients, as well as proposed pricing and payment terms for their services.
Assessing and Advancing Community Readiness for Multi-Sector Data SharingPractical Playbook
This document discusses assessing and advancing community readiness for multi-sector data sharing. It provides a framework for exploring multisector collaboration and data sharing for community health. The framework examines enabling community factors like trust and infrastructure, as well as system features like governance and technical capabilities. The document also describes a tool for assessing community readiness for data sharing developed from a pilot test of communities in the All In initiative. It presents results on collaboration, data infrastructure, resources, data governance, workflows and technical functions from the pilot test to illustrate gaps communities can focus on improving.
Example of Company Profile CONFIDENTIAL Swiss-Asian Chamb.docxgitagrimston
Example of Company Profile CONFIDENTIAL
Swiss-Asian Chamber of Commerce Business and Investment Mission to Thailand and Myanmar, Nov 17 to Nov 27, 2011
Business and Investment Mission to Thailand and Myanmar
COMPANY NAME / ADDRESS
Muster AG
Zeughausstrasse 19
3380 Wangen an der Aare
Telephone: + 41 (0) 32 613 20 73
Facsimile: + 41 (0) 32 613 20 80
E-Mail: [email protected]
Contact Person:
Mr. Fritz Muster
CEO / General Manager:
Mr. Heiri Muster
COMPANY BACKGROUND
Year Established: 1984
Regional presence: in Switzerland, England
and USA
ISO 9002 and TS 16949 certified
CURRENT ACTIVITIES
Supplier of precision turned parts to the
automotive-, medical-, communication-
and automation-industry.
Supplier of subassemblies to various
industries, such as domestic appliances,
house technology etc.
NATURE OF BUSINESS
NEIDA AG supply precision turned parts and
subassemblies. We have an extensive know-
how of manufacturing performances in metal,
especially turning and milling.
MAJOR PRODUCTS/SERVICES
Precision turned parts and Subassemblies
NEIDA choose the best manufacturing
method and machines available.
NEIDA then selects the most effective
location/subcontractors to achieve good
quality at the lowest cost.
NEIDA then monitor and control the order
throughout the entire production to achieve
the best product quality as required by our
customer.
COLLABORATIVE ARRANGEMENT SOUGHT
Close cooperation with Manufacturers in
Thailand to develop business opportunities in
the field of turned parts and subassemblies.
MAIN PURPOSE OF MEETING
PARTICULARLY WITH THAI COMPANIES
Know how transfer?
Looking for a distributor?
Joint Venture Partner?
COMPANY TARGETS
Manufacturing the most applicable parts
in Thailand for the European Market,
especially for the automotive industry.
COMPANY PROFILE
Sales Turnover: US$ 12’000’000
Registered Capital in USD: 100’000
Number of Employees: 20
Facilities:
large range of manufacturing equipment
at the location of our chosen and approved
subcontractors and at our own premises.
Major customers:
TRW, MAHLE, ABB, PARKER, HILTI etc.
Geographical Markets:
Central Europe, England and Asia
Export Markets (Countries):
Central Europe and USA
TYPE OF BUSINESS COOPERATION
NEIDA AG want to place new orders with
reliable and competitive manufacturers
BUSINESS INTEREST IN
NEIDA AG is interested to find competitive
manufacturers in order to increase sales in
Europe.
FORM OF INVESTMENT
NEIDA AG will invest into Know-How-
Transfer and into special technical
equipment to accomplish the specific
orders.
SACC_bms/22.09.2010
mailto:[email protected]
Unit 7: Business Strategy
Unit code: A/601/0796 QCF level: 5
Credit value: 15 ...
This document provides an overview of information, strategy, and strategic management. It defines information as data that has been organized and given context. Information literacy is knowing how to find, evaluate, and use information effectively. The building blocks of information are tool literacy, resource literacy, social-structural literacy, and research literacy. Strategy is defined as the long-term direction and scope of an organization to achieve competitive advantage through its resources. The elements of strategy are direction, scope, advantage, resources, environment, and stakeholders. Strategic management involves understanding customers, identifying critical success factors, envisioning the future, assessing competitors, and analyzing strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats.
The document discusses strategic management, which includes environmental scanning, strategy formulation, strategy implementation, and evaluation and control. It aims to integrate management functions to achieve organizational success. Key aspects covered include performing SWOT and PEST analyses to assess internal/external factors, identifying the organization's mission, objectives, and strategies, and implementing programs and budgets to execute the strategy.
This report documents the collective output of research activities undertaken by the Institute for Employment Studies in response to a request from EU-OSHA to undertake a review of successful OSH benchmarking initiatives. The overarching aim was to review OSH benchmarking schemes that have been set up at sector, Member State or European level in order to assess the benefits that such schemes can deliver, as well as their limitations, and to identify the key factors of and main obstacles to their success.
Workshop proceedings of "Identifying contextualized indicators to measure SDGs"4th Wheel Social Impact
Keeping social impact management at the centre, 4th Wheel Social Impact is committed to strengthening social programs in India by improving the way they are designed, implemented, monitored and evaluated. The organization believes the integration of data, technology and partnerships will enable the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The workshop focussed on Theory of Change, Indicator Development, SDG linkages of indicators.
This workshop was supported by Swedish Institute.
Total Economic Impact of ThoughtWorks Distributed Agile ApproachThoughtworks
- The document is a case study summarizing the findings of an analysis of the potential return on investment (ROI) from using ThoughtWorks' agile development approach on a software project for a US-based insurance and financial services organization.
- Key findings include an estimated ROI of 41-56% over 3 years from using ThoughtWorks, compared to an estimated 4% ROI if they had not used ThoughtWorks. Benefits came from increased efficiency, reduced defects, and delivering business requirements sooner.
- The analysis examined costs of ThoughtWorks' services, estimated at 54% of the total project costs, and potential benefits and savings from things like reduced rework, support staff needs, and accelerated timeline for realizing benefits compared
The document discusses strategic formulation and execution. It emphasizes that while well-formulated strategies are important, most strategies fail due to poor execution. Effective strategy evaluation is critical and includes reviewing strategy foundations, comparing actual and expected results, and taking corrective actions. Strategy evaluation allows organizations to adapt to changing environments and ensure strategic goals are met.
The document discusses developing a research agenda for impact evaluation of development programs. It proposes that the agenda should:
1) Cover different types and purposes of evaluations, questions addressed, users, and those conducting evaluations.
2) Be developed through consultation with various stakeholders and review of existing documentation and examples.
3) Include different types of research like documenting current practices, trials of methods, and longitudinal studies of impact evaluations.
4) Address important questions like how to involve communities and accommodate different views of evidence, and how to represent complex interventions and identify unintended impacts. Support is needed to develop the agenda through legitimate processes and interdisciplinary cooperation.
The document outlines the key steps in the public relations process:
1. Research is conducted to define problems and understand audiences. Various research methods are described.
2. Planning and programming involves setting objectives, budgets, schedules and strategies based on research findings.
3. Actions are taken and communication is implemented to achieve program goals using appropriate tactics.
4. Evaluation assesses program preparation, implementation and results to determine effectiveness and make adjustments.
Whole systems change across a neighbourhood
How can we collaborate with people to help them build their resilience? Get under the skin of the culture and the lives people live. Identify people’s feelings and experiences of community and understand what people think is shaped by different values and by the environment and infrastructure around them. The future of collaboration could bring many opportunities but people find it more difficult to live and act together than before. How can we help people…and communities build their resilience? Understand people’s different situations and capabilities to develop pathways that help them build resilient relationships. Help people experience and practice change together. Help people grow everyday practices into sustainable projects. Turn people’s everyday motivations into design principles. Support infrastructure that connects different cultures of collaboration. Build relationships with people designing in collaboration for the future…now.
This document provides an overview of key concepts and methods for evaluating programs, including:
1. SWOT analysis, the steps in program evaluation, milestone charts, Gantt charts, PERT, critical path method, Bennett's hierarchy of evaluation, and the logical framework approach.
2. It describes each method at a high level - for example, that SWOT analysis identifies strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats, and that the critical path method uses mathematical calculations to schedule project activities.
3. Bennett's hierarchy presents a logic model for educational programs with 7 steps from inputs to end results, showing how the program causes changes in knowledge and practice.
This document discusses the preparation phase of the strategic planning process. It involves organizing and staffing the planning effort through the creation of leadership positions and committees to oversee planning. It also involves training participants to ensure they have the knowledge and skills for effective strategic planning. Examples provided include organizing a university planning council and executive committee, as well as conducting a training program on strategic planning facilitated by a consultant. The goal of preparation is to properly structure the planning process and equip participants for their roles in developing strategic plans.
Similar to ESR Professional Development Training : Facilitator's notes (20)
About Potato, The scientific name of the plant is Solanum tuberosum (L).Christina Parmionova
The potato is a starchy root vegetable native to the Americas that is consumed as a staple food in many parts of the world. Potatoes are tubers of the plant Solanum tuberosum, a perennial in the nightshade family Solanaceae. Wild potato species can be found from the southern United States to southern Chile
Synopsis (short abstract) In December 2023, the UN General Assembly proclaimed 30 May as the International Day of Potato.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Contributi dei parlamentari del PD - Contributi L. 3/2019Partito democratico
DI SEGUITO SONO PUBBLICATI, AI SENSI DELL'ART. 11 DELLA LEGGE N. 3/2019, GLI IMPORTI RICEVUTI DALL'ENTRATA IN VIGORE DELLA SUDDETTA NORMA (31/01/2019) E FINO AL MESE SOLARE ANTECEDENTE QUELLO DELLA PUBBLICAZIONE SUL PRESENTE SITO
Donate to charity during this holiday seasonSERUDS INDIA
For people who have money and are philanthropic, there are infinite opportunities to gift a needy person or child a Merry Christmas. Even if you are living on a shoestring budget, you will be surprised at how much you can do.
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-to-donate-to-charity-during-this-holiday-season/
#charityforchildren, #donateforchildren, #donateclothesforchildren, #donatebooksforchildren, #donatetoysforchildren, #sponsorforchildren, #sponsorclothesforchildren, #sponsorbooksforchildren, #sponsortoysforchildren, #seruds, #kurnool
Combined Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) Vessel List.Christina Parmionova
The best available, up-to-date information on all fishing and related vessels that appear on the illegal, unregulated, and unreported (IUU) fishing vessel lists published by Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) and related organisations. The aim of the site is to improve the effectiveness of the original IUU lists as a tool for a wide variety of stakeholders to better understand and combat illegal fishing and broader fisheries crime.
To date, the following regional organisations maintain or share lists of vessels that have been found to carry out or support IUU fishing within their own or adjacent convention areas and/or species of competence:
Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR)
Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna (CCSBT)
General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM)
Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC)
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT)
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC)
Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (NAFO)
North East Atlantic Fisheries Commission (NEAFC)
North Pacific Fisheries Commission (NPFC)
South East Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (SEAFO)
South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organisation (SPRFMO)
Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement (SIOFA)
Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC)
The Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List merges all these sources into one list that provides a single reference point to identify whether a vessel is currently IUU listed. Vessels that have been IUU listed in the past and subsequently delisted (for example because of a change in ownership, or because the vessel is no longer in service) are also retained on the site, so that the site contains a full historic record of IUU listed fishing vessels.
Unlike the IUU lists published on individual RFMO websites, which may update vessel details infrequently or not at all, the Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List is kept up to date with the best available information regarding changes to vessel identity, flag state, ownership, location, and operations.
Preliminary findings _OECD field visits to ten regions in the TSI EU mining r...OECDregions
Preliminary findings from OECD field visits for the project: Enhancing EU Mining Regional Ecosystems to Support the Green Transition and Secure Mineral Raw Materials Supply.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
This report explores the significance of border towns and spaces for strengthening responses to young people on the move. In particular it explores the linkages of young people to local service centres with the aim of further developing service, protection, and support strategies for migrant children in border areas across the region. The report is based on a small-scale fieldwork study in the border towns of Chipata and Katete in Zambia conducted in July 2023. Border towns and spaces provide a rich source of information about issues related to the informal or irregular movement of young people across borders, including smuggling and trafficking. They can help build a picture of the nature and scope of the type of movement young migrants undertake and also the forms of protection available to them. Border towns and spaces also provide a lens through which we can better understand the vulnerabilities of young people on the move and, critically, the strategies they use to navigate challenges and access support.
The findings in this report highlight some of the key factors shaping the experiences and vulnerabilities of young people on the move – particularly their proximity to border spaces and how this affects the risks that they face. The report describes strategies that young people on the move employ to remain below the radar of visibility to state and non-state actors due to fear of arrest, detention, and deportation while also trying to keep themselves safe and access support in border towns. These strategies of (in)visibility provide a way to protect themselves yet at the same time also heighten some of the risks young people face as their vulnerabilities are not always recognised by those who could offer support.
In this report we show that the realities and challenges of life and migration in this region and in Zambia need to be better understood for support to be strengthened and tuned to meet the specific needs of young people on the move. This includes understanding the role of state and non-state stakeholders, the impact of laws and policies and, critically, the experiences of the young people themselves. We provide recommendations for immediate action, recommendations for programming to support young people on the move in the two towns that would reduce risk for young people in this area, and recommendations for longer term policy advocacy.
2. 2
Intended audience
Civil society groups, members of the media, political parties, security forces, development partners/donor organizations,
EMB staff, and other election-related bodies
Standard professional training agenda
Welcome and Key Understandings
DAY 1: Basic concepts and elements in an ESR:
• The electoral cycle events, traditional election observation and ESR
• Stakeholders in the electoral process
• Political/electoral analysis; ESR environment scanning
• Possible dysfunctions in an electoral process; and solutions
DAY 2: Planning and preparation for an ESR
• Key task involved in planning and implementing ESR
• General logistics requirements for ESR
• ESR partner identification, resource mobilization and coalition-building strategies
DAY 3: Implementation design of an ESR
• The architecture for operationalization of an ESR
• Formalization of civil society relations and coordination
• Establishing an ESR data management system
DAY 4: Dynamics in an ESR
• Basic steps in implementing an ESR
• Ground rules for ESR operations
• ESR communication strategies
• Electoral violence monitoring
• Media monitoring process
• Appreciating gender and diversity in ESR
DAY 5: ESRsimulationand evaluation methods
• ESR data collection,transmission, processing and analysisProduction of reports and statements (alerts,
preliminary statement, press statements)
• ESR evaluation methods
Standard train the facilitator course agenda
4. 4
Election Situation Room Training Module
Explanation of Key Understanding, Learning Outcome and Assessment Criteria
By the end of this training, your participants should have a grasp of the key understandings and learning outcomes that
this module has been based on.
Key Understandings
What you want your participants to know before they finish the course.
Learning Outcomes
Generic strategies through which the participants can show you that they have understood the key understandings
Assessment Criteria
Specific activities that will allow you to measure the participants’ understanding.
Note: It is not necessary to cover every Assessment Criteria to achieve Key Understandings and Learning
Outcomes. Facilitators may add their own Learning Outcomes and Assessment Criteria where appropriate.
5. Facilitator Notes 5
ESR Professional Development Training
Key Understanding # 1
The ESR is a platform for collecting and sharing information between civil society organizations (CSOs) so that those
in charge of the electoral process may provide quick answers and correct any errors in the process, as well as
strengthen the collaboration and advocacy of its members.
Expected Learning Outcomes Assessment Criteria
1. The ability to explain the difference between an ESR
and a traditional election observation
2. The ability to explain the purpose of synergy among
CSOs to implement an ESR
3. The ability to identify the right time to implement an
ESR
4. The ability to explain the choice of CSOs to
participate in an ESR
5. The ability to build a strong coalition of CSOs
6. The ability to advocate effectively
1. Discuss the goals of a situation room
2. Discuss what distinguishes an ESR from what
NGOs / CSOs are already doing in the field of civic
education, awareness, and election observation
3. Discuss the conditions under which an ESR should
not be recommended
4. Conduct a mapping of which CSOs could be
associated with an ESR project
5. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of
combining several CSOs in the planning and
management of a situation room
6. Discuss strategies involved in building a sustainable
CSO coalition
7. Discuss the relevance of having a legal status for an
ESR
8. Discuss the formalization of CSO partnerships for
the better coordination of an ESR
9. List the preparatory activities in building a coalition
of CSOs to participate in an ESR
10. List the fundamental differences between a short-
term versus long-term ESR model
11. List the key tasks for the implementation of each
type of ESR: short/long-term micro-ESR, short/long
term-macro-ESR
12. Describe various advocacy strategies for creating
ESRs
1
1
6. 6
Key Understanding # 2
The ESR uses an online-based software called OpenESR to help with data collection and the production of reports
Expected Learning Outcomes Assessment Criteria
1. The ability to explain real-time data-collection
methods used by the situation room
2. The ability to explain the OpenESR’s mode of
operation and the different products that the
OpenESR can help generate
1. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of the
various data-collection methods
2. Explain how OpenESR works
3. Explain the steps of data processing
4. List the different types of reports generated by
OpenESR
5. Explain the most common errors in the processing
of data and how to avoid them
6. Interpret data obtained through ICT
Key Understanding # 3
The implementation of an ESR calls for competencies in project management, pooling of resources, and
fundraising.
Expected Learning Outcomes Assessment Criteria
1. The ability to explain the process of planning and
managing an effective situation room
2. The ability to develop a project proposal and
budget in order to raise the necessary funds to
implement a successful ESR
3. The ability to offer opportunities for sharing
resources between CSO partners
4. The ability to develop an operational plan for the
coordination of election observers
1. Discuss the development of an ESR budget and
fundraising strategies
2. Discuss the possibility of pooling resources
between CSO partners
3. Develop an effective system, including
alternatives, for the transmission of reports
4. Explain how good management on the part of the
observers impacts the success of an ESR
5. Develop basic rules for the operationalization of an
ESR
2
3
7. Facilitator Notes 7
ESR Professional Development Training
Key Understanding # 4
Creating scenarios to allow for rapid and adequate responses to unexpected situations relating to an ESR’s
operation, and proposing solutions to threats that jeopardize a country’s stability
Expected Learning Outcomes Assessment Criteria
1. The ability to create scenarios in order to anticipate
and promptly manage eventual problems related to
ESR operations
2. The ability to create scenarios in order that those
in charge of the electoral process may promptly
handle unexpected situations in a way that is best
for its citizens
1. Define scenarios depending on the available
parameters
2. Define what participants would do in a worst-case
scenario
3. Define how participants would implement such a
solution, and which people/organizations would be
responsible for this implementation
Key Understanding # 5
The quality of reports produced by an ESR depends on the participants’ success at political and electoral analysis
Expected Learning Outcomes Assessment Criteria
1. The ability to analyze information and produce
reports in order to influence electoral reform
2. The ability to have people in an ESR provide
credible resources for information analysis
3. The ability to organize the work of an ESR
(centralized reporting of information) that facilitates
efficiency
1. Discuss relevant policies/ electoral analysis before
the implementation of an ESR
2. Discuss the reforms to be proposed after the
elections based on the analysis of an ESR
3. Discuss the method of organizing an ESR into
chambers and the complementarity between them
4
5
8. 8
Key Understanding # 6
A successful ESR requires a good relationship with key stakeholders in the electoral process
Expected Learning Outcomes Assessment Criteria
1. The ability to analyze the formal and informal
relationships between stakeholders in the electoral
process
2. The ability to develop a clear communication
strategy to manage relationships with stakeholders
1. List the key stakeholders throughout the process
of preparation and implementation of the situation
room
2. Explain the importance of building a good
relationship with stakeholders for a successful
ESR
3. Discuss the best practices for building a strong
partnership with government authorities, technical
and financial partners, election commissioners,
members of government security forces, and the
establishment of a system to facilitate this
partnership
4. List the potential roles and responsibilities of
government authorities, technical and financial
partners, election commissioners, members of the
government, and security forces in managing
relationships with an ESR.
5. Discuss potential problems related to managing
relationships with government authorities,
technical and financial partners, election
commissioners, members of the government, and
security forces that may arise at any time.
6
9. Facilitator Notes 9
ESR Professional Development Training
Key Understanding # 7
Monitoring the media as well as electoral violence is important even though there is not a perfect system of
monitoring an ESR’s activities
Expected Learning Outcomes Assessment Criteria
1. The ability to analyze the different ways of
monitoring the media
2. The ability to analyze the different ways of
monitoring electoral violence
1. Explain the concept of media monitoring
2. List the advantages and disadvantages of the
different ways of monitoring the media
3. Explain the concept of monitoring electoral
violence
4. List the advantages and disadvantages of the
different ways of monitoring electoral violence
Key Understanding # 8
The establishment of a reliable and credible system for real-time alerts is at the heart of a successful ESR.
Expected Learning Outcomes Assessment Criteria
1. The ability to evaluate key elements of a warning
system for ESR
2. The mastery of technical operations that affect the
availability of real -time information and reliability
3. The ability to provide a verification system for the
responses made to the problems noted
1. Discuss the key parts to implementing the alert
system of an ESR
2. Explain the alert system of an ESR
3. Explain the system for verifying the effectiveness
of a reply to a malfunction identified by an ESR to
the relevant authorities.
7
8
10. 10
Key Understanding # 9
A clear communication strategy is crucial to the credibility and effectiveness of an ESR project
Expected Learning Outcomes Assessment Criteria
1. The ability to develop strategies which facilitate
constructive communication
2. The ability to harmonize reporting as to collect
relevant information for an ESR
1. Develop a communication strategy and a business
plan with specific levels of intervention
2. Develop methodologies for the transmission of
information between technical observers and ESR
operators
3. List the advantages and disadvantages of each
methodology
4. Develop canvas statements (statements of arrival,,
opening statements, closing statements); media
monitoring; monitoring of electoral violence; press
releases; development scenarios; warning sheets
and canvas for observation, monitoring of the
media and monitoring of electoral violence
Key Understanding # 10
The establishment of a monitoring and evaluation system to track and evaluate, at regular intervals, the
performance of the situation room
Expected Learning Outcomes Assessment Criteria
1. The ability to develop a monitoring plan based on
tracking the activities and results of an ESR
2. The ability to assess the contribution of activities
3. The ability to understand the challenges and
propose risk- management strategies
4. The ability to learn from experience
1. Develop a logical framework and matrix for
monitoring activities
2. Explain the activity evaluation methods
3. Develop a risk management matrix
4. Periodically explain the system of evaluation
9
10
0
11. Facilitator Notes 11
ESR Professional Development Training
Resources required for the training
✓ LCD projector
✓ Post-it Notes
✓ Flip Charts
✓ Flip Charts papers
✓ Markers – Multiple colours
✓ Colour A4 papers – multiple colours
✓ Laptop
✓ Camera
✓ Clock
✓ Scissors
✓ Empty box
✓ Paper glue
✓ Pens, pencils & erasers
✓ Notepads
✓ Blu-tack (Patafix)
✓ USB sticks
✓ Candies and Chocolates
✓
12. 12
Pre-course tasks
Activity and Time Description Resources
Time and be order are
indicative: pragmatic
and adjust to suit
participants learning
requirements as the
training progresses
Adequate preparation is required by facilitators to deliver
this module. This includes:
1. Tailor agenda: this is a five-day agenda, which
could be delivered, in a shorter period depending on
the exigencies of the audience and organizers.
2. Participants Workbook: this contains some key
knowledge and practical exercises for participants.
3. Participants Notes: these are reading materials
needed during various sessions of the workshop as
well as to serve as post training reference material.
It includes Case Studies which could serve as
handouts.
4. Facilitator Resources: As much as possible
resources (power point, short videos, role play
scripts, etc.) for this training has been provided
nonetheless facilitators could include any relevant
audio-visual materials and training props that would
enhance the delivery of the various sessions.
5. Monitoring and Evaluation: A daily evaluation
sheet has been designed. For the purposes of
flexibility, facilitators should fill in only the topics
treated on a particular day and ask participants to
respond based on the content as well as facilitation
technique.
6. Cross-cutting themes: Facilitators need to
mainstream the following themes in discussions in
the various topics in this module. These cross-
cutting themes include: gender, integrity, conflict
management, environment, sustainability and
access.
13. Facilitator Notes 13
ESR Professional Development Training
Welcome and Key Understandings
Activity and Time Description Resources
SR Stimulus Video Show short video: – Election Situation Room AV as
participants are arriving on the first day. This video is
intended to stimulate participants on some of the past
ESR initiatives. At this stage it is not an activity for
participants’ discussion. Inform participants that a session
would be dedicated to ESR case studies in a number of
countries at a later stage.
Short Video
Welcome and Course
Administration
35mins
Facilitators should invite representatives of key
stakeholder institutions especially the leadership of the
EMB and a representative of the funding organizations to
make short speeches in solidarity. Their speech could
include:
• A successful ESR requires persons with the right
attitude, knowledge and skills.
• Achieving free and fair elections is a shared
responsibility of all stakeholders. Neither the
EMB nor civil society alone can single handedly
safeguard the integrity of the electoral process.
• Recognition of the funding partners of the ESR
Project.
Housekeeping: During this session facilitators should get
participants to familiarize themselves with the venue of
the event and invite a representative from the host
organization to discuss issues related to accommodation,
transportation, meals and any other important matters.
Agenda: Display and discuss daily agenda, PPT 0.2
Circulate: Contact List – After all participants have
completed the contact list and checked their details, take
a digital photo of the group and distribute it to all
participants at the end of the training.
Contact List
14. 14
Aims, Objectives and
Agenda
Key
Display PPT 0.1 on the objectives of the course, and PPT
0.2 on the 5-day agenda.
Make the point: the main objectives of this course are to:
1. Build professionalism (skills, knowledge and attitude)
related to standards, principles, practices and
processes involved in ESR.
2. Analyze challenges and prospects of ESR as an
accountability enhancing mechanism
3. Enhance leadership competencies in sustainable
election situation room management.
4. Enhance knowledge on logistics requirement in
planning and implementation of an ESR.
5. Introduce ESR course as a capacity enhancing tool.
6. To give insights into the principles, skills and
challenges involved in the conduct of a properly
implemented ESR.
PPT 0.1
PPT 0.2
Understandings,
Learning Outcomes
15mins
Refer to Day 1 Slide
Make the Point: KU - what you want your participants to
know before they finish the course
LO – Generic Strategies through which the participants
can show you that they understand
AC – Specific activities that would allow you to measure
the participant’s understanding
Note: It is not always necessary to cover every
assessment criteria to achieve KUs and LOs. Facilitators
may add their own LOs and ACs where appropriate.
Emphasis The objectives of the course are directly
related to the KUs and the LOs and the facilitator at the
beginning of each day’s activities must explain these.
Code of Conduct
30mins
Make the Point: Even in the jungle there are rules of
nature and in the human society a set of rules enable us
to illicit the expected behaviour conducive for the
successful conduct of the workshop
Ask Participants: to list five behaviour expectations for
the workshop on a stick note pad.
Some of the suggestions that facilitator should expect are:
• Punctuality
Post-it Note pads
Flip chart
15. Facilitator Notes 15
ESR Professional Development Training
• Respect each others’ views
• Active participation in all activities
• All phones on silent
• Only speak when asked by the facilitator
Collate all views and write them down on a flip chart.
Keep it posted on the wall for the duration of the training.
Knowing me, knowing
you
25mins
Make the point that it is important for participants to
familiarize themselves with each other and feel
comfortable in order to have an effective learning
community.
Facilitator should prepare a number of pieces of paper,
enough for the number of participants. E.g. If you have 24
participants, prepare 24 pieces of paper. Divide the total
number of participants by 2. Write 1 – 12 for example on 2
pieces of paper such that each number appears twice.
Fold the pieces of paper and place in a box.
Ask participants to pick a piece of paper and look for
another participant with the same number, sit and assume
they are on a date and find out as much as possible from
each other in 2 minutes. The questioning should include
election-related experience and the silliest thing they had
ever done.
Participants Contact
List
Colour A4 Sheets
A pair of Scissors
A box
16. 16
DAY 1:
Basic concepts and elements of an ESR
Activity and Time Description Resources
1.1
ESR and the electoral
cycle – elements,
events, activities and
processes
15mins
Divide participants into 3 groups, with each group
representing one period of the electoral cycle: Pre,
During and Post.
In their groups, participants brainstorm as many
activities, events and processes for their period as they
can, and write one per post-it note
Display the blank Electoral bycle PPT 1.1.1.
Invite participants to post their notes onto the blank
diagram in the appropriate place.
Make the point that there is no agreement amongst
election professionals as to when one period ends and
another begins.
Ask participants if anyone thinks an event does not
actually belong to a particular period.
Display the filled-in Electoral Cycle PPT 1.1.2, and
discuss the activities/events/processes in the 3 periods
of the Electoral Cycle in terms of:
• Legalframework governing electoral processes
• Election Management Bodies
• Planning and material resource management
• Implementation of electoral operations
(boundary delimitation; voter registration,
training, polling, counting and results)
• Sustainability of all essential elements in the
electoral process
• Standards and principles guiding the
management of the electoral process
Make the point that knowing about these
activities/events/processe and their guiding principles is
useful for determining the credibility of a country’s
electoral process.
PPT 1.1.1
PPT 1.1.2
ESR Workbook 1.1
Blocks of post-it notes
1.2
ESR scenario
building
Display PPT 1.2.1
Make the point that scenario building is important for
anticipating problems and unexpected situations, and
having effective responses to counter or mitigate them.
PPT 1.2.1
PPT 1.2.2
Post-it notes
ESR Workbook 1.2.
17. Facilitator Notes 17
ESR Professional Development Training
15mins
Discuss the meaning of scenario building.
Exercise: Instruct participants to look at 1.2.1 in their
workbooks and write one sentence explaining what
he/she understands by scenario building.
Make the point that scenario building is essential for
developing rapid and adequate strategies to mitigate
any uncertainties, risks and constraints to the electoral
process which could be encountered.
Display PPT 1.2.2
Divide participants into 4 groups, each one
representing one of the following categories:
1. Security
2. Logistics
3. Natural disaster
4. Legal/political changes
Ask participants to discuss and present different
scenarios that might destabilize the election cycle for
their category with regards to:
• A description of the scenario
• An impact assessment
• Strategies to counter/mitigate the scenario
They can make notes in their workbooks in 1.2.2.
Ask participants to present their group work.
Discuss your (the Facilitator’s) suggested solutions to
each group’s Scenario.
Ask participants to discuss the similarities/differences
of the Facilitator & Group strategies and then, as a
class, discuss the convergence and divergence between
the different solutions and harmonize all the common
and pragmatic solutions.
1.3
Traditional election
observation
35mins
Display PPT 1.3.1
Ask participants to discuss the following in pairs:
1. What is the meaning of election observation?
2. What are the main activities involved?
3. Explain the various types of election observation
4. What are some of the benefits of traditional election
observation?
5. What are some of the drawbacks of traditional
election observation?
Discuss their answers as a group.
Display PPT 1.3.2 to guide the discussion.
Expected response include:
PPT 1.3.1
PPT 1.3.2
ESR Workbook 1.3
18. 18
1. It is the purposeful gathering of information on an
electoral process and making a sound judgment on
the basis of the information gathered (IDEA)
2. Deployment, observing, report writing
3. Domestic, international, long-term and short-term –
Explain
4. ‘The presence of observers at the polling and the
count have a calming effect on the election
atmosphere and is believed to promote the
transparency of both the polling and counting of the
ballots’ (Carl Dundas)
5. Election observation has attracted too many groups,
many of whom do amateurish work.
Ask participants to make notes in their ESR
Workbook1.3
1.4
Defining ESR: What it
is and what it is not
and why?
30Mins
Refer participants to ESR Workbook Exercise 1.4. for a
list of questions on ESR.
Ask participants to individually fill in the answers
without consulting anybody.
Participants should put their individual definitions and
responses together and come up with a definition and
responses that have been agreed upon in the group.
Make the point that an ESR is a platform for analysis
and sharing of information collected in real time on an
electoral process, so as to enable a rapid response to
malfunctions in the management of the process,
strengthen collaboration and make advocacy more
effective.
It integrates traditional electoral observation, but goes
beyond it by providing stakeholders with timely
information that enables them to rapidly improve the
regulation of the process.
Display PPT 1.4 on the meaning of ESR
Discuss with reference to key issues like :
• It is an information sharing platform
• Collaboration and advocacy
• Provide rapid response to correct electoral
dysfunctions
Refer participants to the NOTES in ESR Workbook
1.4.2 while undertaking the exercise.
PPT 1.4
ESR Workbook 1.4.
Exercise and Notes
19. Facilitator Notes 19
ESR Professional Development Training
1.5
Traditional election
observation
vs.
ESR
35mins
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 1.5 Exercise and
Notes to respond to the set of questions.
Divide participants into 2 groups: one for ESR and the
other for traditional election observation.
Ask each group to draw a sketch illustrating a process
of classic/traditional Election Observation Missions
(EOM) or an ESR.
Display the 2 sketches showing the differences in the 2
scenes.
Debate using the advantages and disadvantages of
EOM and ESR.
Make the point that the ESR arrangement fills some of
the gaps of traditional modes of intervention of EOM.
Indeed, the observation of elections in the classical
model is basically just meant to document events related
to elections and submit a report with recommendations
to improve future electoral processes.
Display PPT 1.5. to guide this discussion and refer
participants to the Notes in ESR Workbook 1.5
PPT 1.5
ESR Workbook 1.5
Exercise and Notes
1.6
Different types of
ESR initiatives
30mins
Make the point that depending on the context, means
and available time, one can opt for a Micro-ESR or a
Macro-ESR.
Ask participants to discuss in pairs their understanding
of Micro-ESR and Macro-ESR.
Display PPT 1.6 to guide and summarize the discussion.
Ask participants to:
1. create 2 scenarios to illustrate their
understanding of the types of ESR initiatives;
and
2. Then give reasons why one is preferable to the
other in a particular scenario.
Display PPT 1.6.2 to guide and summarize the
discussion
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 1.6 Notes for
more information on the fundamental differences
between Micro & Macro ESR.
PPT 1.6.1
PPT 1.6.2
ESR Workbook 1.6
20. 20
1.7
Stakeholders in the
electoral process:
their expectations,
roles &
responsibilities
45mins
Make the point that in an electoral process there are
institutions and individuals whose actions or inactions
directly or indirectly affect the outcome of an electoral
process. Primary stakeholders are those whose
actions or inactions directly affect the outcome of the
electoral process and secondary stakeholders are
those whose actions or inactions indirectly affect
outcome of an electoral process.
Activity
Ask participants to list primary and secondary
stakeholders who are relevant to an electoral process
and state their various roles and responsibilities and
expectations.
Emphasize that the ‘expectations’ are usually how their
interests would be safeguarded by the activities of
others.
Assign at least a primary stakeholder to each table
group and ask them to list their own roles and
responsibilities (internal) as well as the expectations of
other primary stakeholders.
Allow time for group discussions and presentation of
group work.
After each presentation, find out if any roles,
responsibilities and expectations are misplaced.
Make the point that the stakeholders in an electoral
process are the same as the stakeholders of an ESR
conducted by a civil society group. The modalities for
relating to a civil society group in an ESR could be
determined by peculiarities on the ground and this would
be explored further in subsequent days.
ALTERNATIVE ACTIVITY
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 1.7 for an
exercise on the role/responsibilities of and relations
among the various electoral stakeholders.
Divide participants into 4 groups and assign 2
stakeholders in the ESR Workbook 1.7 to each of the
groups.
Ask participants to discuss and respond to the
questions.
Allow time for presentation of group responses.
PPT 1.7
ESR Workbook 1.7
21. Facilitator Notes 21
ESR Professional Development Training
Make the point that the action of each of the
stakeholders could have either a positive or negative
effect on the electoral process.
Emphasize that the inaction of these stakeholders
always has a negative effect.
If there is time, discuss the importance of maintaining
good relationships with stakeholders.
Ask participants to think of behaviours important for
maintaining these good relationships.
Display PPT 1.7 to summarize the discussion.
1.8
Political/electoral
analysis:
ESR environment
scanning indicators
35mins
Learning outcome: the ability to assess a conducive
environment to undertake an ESR
Make the point that knowledge of the political and
electoral environment may be undertaken through
various analytical frameworks. For an ESR initiative the
following 4 pillars would be useful in understanding the
political and electoral landscape in a particular country.
Display PPT 1.8 on Political/electoral analysis:
Pillar 1: The state of political institutions and power
relations
Pillar 2: The state of political actors – their roles and
expectations
Pillar 3: The state of socio-cultural environment –
ethnicity and religion, gender, youth, etc.
Pillar 4: The state of electoral integrity
Form 4 groups and allocate each group a Pillar to
outline how a particular pillar would enhance the
understanding of the political and electoral landscape
necessary for conducting an ESR.
Ask participants to present and discuss each pillar.
Refer participations to ESR Workbook 1.8. Notes
In the discussion of each pillar, include:
Pillar 1 – Political independence of institutions like the
judiciary, the legislature; and power of incumbency of
the executive
PPT 1.8
ESR Workbook 1.8
Notes
22. 22
Pillar 2 – Vibrancy and political neutrality of civil society,
independence of the media
Pillar 3 – Ethnicity, religion, gender, youth and minorities
Pillar 4 –
• Consensus on legislation – set of fair laws,
rules and regulations;
• Trust in the EMB – non-partisan and
functionally independent;
• Adequacy of funding – the readiness of the
EMB to conduct the elections;
• Adequacy of voter education and training – well
informed citizenry to make well informed
decisions at the poll;
• Positive attributes of the voter register
• Accuracy;
• Comprehensive;
• Currency;
• Pacific party campaign – ability to offer
formidable alternative;
• Peacefulness of the voting process – general
atmosphere of safety and security;
• Effective management of results and appeal
processes.
Ask participants to form country groups of not more
than 5 persons and conduct a political/electoral
assessment using the 4 pillars stated above.
Allow time for group discussion, presentation and
general discussion.
Make the point that this environmental scanning could
be undertaken at any stage in the electoral cycle. The
freeness and the fairness of an electoral process, to a
certain extent, could be determined by conducting
political/electoral analysis prior to an election.
1.9
When conducting an
ESR is not advisable
15mins
Make the point that the decision to conduct an ESR
should be based undertaken only after a thorough
analysis of a country situation, as well as a review of
various options/approaches.
Display PPT 1.9.1 and ask participants to read the
scenario in ESR Workbook 1.9
Debate whether in the given circumstances, an ESR
initiative is advisable and why.
PPT 1.9.1
ESR Workbook 1.9.1
ESR Workbook 1.9.2
ESR Workbook 1.9.3
23. Facilitator Notes 23
ESR Professional Development Training
Ask participants to refer to ESR Workbook 1.9.2
Display PPT 1.9.3 and discuss the myths and realities
about ESR in Workbook 1.9.3
Conclude that ESR is not always the best instrument for
addressing all election-related issues.
1.10
Possible dysfunctions
in the management of
an electoral process
and solutions
20mins
Make the point no matter how well-intended election
managers are, an electoral process might have genuine
dysfunctions however, some dysfunctions may be
premeditated or orchestrated to achieve a particular
outcome.
Divide participants into 4 groups.
Refer participants to Workbook 1.10 indicating eight
activities. Ask group of participants to provide responses
to the challenges, propose solutions and outcome
expected.
Allow time for presentation and discussion of group
work.
Display PPT Slides on Challenges/Dysfunctions in an
Electoral Process for some of the expected
responses/solutions.
Make the point that some suggested solutions would be
universally applicable but some would be more case
specific. For instance you will need to use the true
instrument to train operational staff close to an electoral
event. This suggestion is universally applicable. On the
other hand the design of a civic education strategy
would require to be tailor-made to suit a particular
situation.
ESR Workbook 1.10
PPT on
Challenges/Dysfunctions
in an Electoral Process
24. 24
DAY 2:
Planning and preparation for an ESR
Activity and Time Description Resources
2.1
Key tasks involved in
planning and
implementing an ESR
25mins
Make the point that just as the electoral cycle has
‘periods’, the ESR has ‘phases’, namely:
• Scheming Phase
• Scheduling Phase
• Realization Phase
• Review Phase
•
Display PPT 2.1.1 and refer participants to ESR
Workbook 2.1
Display PPT 2.1.2 of the empty ESR Cycle
Ask participants to think of activities or events that
could take place in each of the phases of the ESR
Cycle. Divide participants into 4 groups, so each
group can work on a phase of the ESR cycle.
Participants should write down each of their ideas
(activities or events) on a post-it note. One
participant from each group sticks their activities in
the right phase of the cycle on the screen.
Each group presents their ideas to the class.
To extend the discussion, display PPT 2.1.2
showing the principal events in setting up and
operationalizing an ESR:
1. Develop terms of reference or a guide/manual
and share them with potential member
organizations
2. Establish a steering committee
3. Prepare and submit funding proposal
4. Prepare an election observation checklist in the
field
5. Organize meeting(s) to finalize modalities to kick-
start the ESR
6. Set up a situation room central coordination
center
7. Publicize extensively the ESR initiative
8. Develop and disseminate a ‘statement of arrival’
and organize coordination meetings in situ
9. Develop and launch an early warning system
(polling day)
10. Identify and implement timely and appropriate
responses to dysfunction / irregularities
11. Prepare and disseminate a ‘preliminary
statement’
PPT 2.1.1
PPT 2.1.2
PPT 2.1.3
ESR Workbook 2.1
ESR Workbook 2.2
Post-it Notes
25. Facilitator Notes 25
ESR Professional Development Training
12. Make public the findings and highlights
13. Prepare, publish and disseminate the final report
14. Undertake an evaluation of the ESR
Ask participants to discuss these events in their
groups and construct an ESR Cycle by placing each
item in the appropriate phase of the Cycle in
Workbook 2.1.
Display PPT 2.1.3 of the completed ESR Cycle with
the 14 activities/events. Participants can refer to the
second part of Workbook 2.1 to consolidate their
understanding.
Inform participants that the ESR curriculum is all
about enhancing participants’ knowledge of the
various events/activities in the ESR Cycle.
ALTERNATIVE ACTIVITY: Debate
Make the point that thorough advocacy and building
synergies create an environment conducive to
undertaking an ESR.
Brainstorm the potential advantages and
disadvantages of having many CSOs plan and
manage an ESR. Note the responses on a flip chart.
Divide participants into 2 debating groups: ‘for’ or
‘against’. Display PPT 2.1.4 showing the debate
topic and refer participants to Workbook 2.1.2, where
they can make notes.
Make the point that it is not necessary to get a
winner or a loser but to emphasize the point that, by
building synergy, each organization brings a
particular asset to the ESR, ranging from the
following:
• Grassroots outreach
• Access to government, security structures
and other primary stakeholders
• Pool resources like technical skills such as
information and communication
technologies (ICT)
• Credibility of the ESR process is enhanced
Make the point that the ESR is more effective when
it is able to mobilize intervention from key
stakeholders and respected personalities, as well as
maintain a cordial relationship with government and
the national EMB.
PPT 2.1.4
PPT 2.1.5
26. 26
Inform the participants that advocacy and public
outreach:
• Involves seeking active support for an idea
or a cause.
• Helps to increase the understanding of
stakeholders about the contribution of the
ESR to the integrity of the elections.
• Expands the scope of state and non-state
support and protection for the ESR initiative.
Display PPT 2.1.5 on the ‘Steps for effective ESR
advocacy and public outreach’
Ask participants to reorder the steps in a logical
sequence. Expected responses should be as below:
Steps for effective ESR Advocacy and Public
Outreach
1. Identify the issues that can be improved
upon through an ESR initiative
2. Define the advocacy goal or the intended
outcome after the advocacy
3. Consult on content and approach
4. Define the strategy to undertake
5. Establish credibility as an advocate – Does
the host CSO have issues about its own
reputation?
6. Identify the target audience, allies and
opponents
7. Identify the key messages
8. Prepare a plan of action
9. Budget and identify resources
10. Assess potential risks
11. Get the message across (using the relevant
media, channel/protocol)
12. Monitor and evaluate
Form groups and ask each to follow the steps and
design an advocacy and public outreach for an ESR.
Allow time for preparation and role-play.
Make the point that the success of an ESR is partly
shaped by the environment in which it is conducted.
This environment can be ascertained by pre-ESR
assessment, and enhanced by advocacy and public
outreach.
2.2 Make the point that planning and scenario building
is key to the success of an ESR. A detailed
PPT 2.2.1
27. Facilitator Notes 27
ESR Professional Development Training
Planning of ESR:
general logistic
requirements
KU 3
45mins
operational plan with budget indicating appropriate
resources is a prerequisite for the implementation.
Display PPT 2.2.1 and ask participants to
undertake the following:
• List the preparatory activities to be
undertaken by an organiser to facilitate a
situation room in the ESR Workbook 2.2.1
scenario in order to create an operational
plan.
• List logistics that would be required to
undertake the activities in the operational
plan.
• Use the list logistics to develop a logistics
plan.
Refer to ESR Workbook 2.2.1 for a template of a
logistics plan.
Ask participants whether the plan takes care of (i)
observers needs (personal and security), and (ii)
communication and contingency.
Emphasize that for communication and data
transmission, it is always important to have an
alternative plan.
ESR Workbook 2.2.1
2.3
Budgeting for an ESR
45mins
Make the point that to undertake an ESR, skills in
project management like proposal writing, which
includes budgeting, are required.
Inform participants that knowledge that has been
acquired in previous sessions will have to be applied
in subsequent ones.
Refer participants to the scenario in ESR Workbook
2.2.1 and assume that a decision has been taken to
undertake an ESR.
Refer to logistics plan developed in the previous
session to prepare a budget.
Display PPT 2.3.1 and refer participants to ESR
Workbook 2.3.1 for information on the development
of an ESR budget and fundraising strategy and ESR
Workbook 2.3.2 for a model format for ESR
budgeting.
Allow time for preparation and presentations.
PPT 2.3
Workbook 2.2.1 (from
previous lesson)
Workbook 2.3.1
28. 28
Conclude that a good budget depends on good an
operational plan and logistics plan.
2.4
ESR partner
identification
60mins
Make the point that while it is important to have a
broad group of CSOs to undertake an ESR, it is also
important to ensure that partners/members are
genuinely committed to ensuring the success of the
election situation room.
Display PPT 2.4. Select a country that participants
are familiar with, preferably their own country.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 2.4 to
complete the matrix.
Allow time for preparation and presentations.
Ask participants to list the kind of CSOs to be
avoided in a partnership to undertake an ESR.
Expected response should include the following:
• Avoid organizations that are politically
partisan to protect the integrity of the
situation room
• Avoid organizations with questionable
reputation or a reputation for not working
well with others
Make the point that it is important to target groups
with expertise, integrity and skills.
PPT 2.4.1
ESR Workbook 2.4
2.5
Development of ESR
resource mobilization
strategy
60mins
Make the point that types of resources required for
an ESR are human, material and financial.
Display questions on PPT 2.5 and divide
participants into 3 groups.
Assign each to discuss one of the types of
resources required for conducting an ESR, using the
questions:
1. Explain the nature of the type of resource.
2. How can the resource be mobilized?
3. What are the challenges in mobilizing the
resource?
4. How can the challenge be surmounted?
Ask participants to be guided by the actual political,
social and economic context in particular country.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 2.5 for a
guide.
PPT 2.5
ESR Workbook 2.5
29. Facilitator Notes 29
ESR Professional Development Training
Allow time for preparation, presentation and
discussion.
Ask participants to put together the presentations
from the 3 groups to come up with a consolidated
resource mobilization strategy.
Allow time for presentation of highlights of the final
strategy.
Advise that building synergies and voluntarism will
always be a useful way to mobilize resources for an
ESR initiative.
2.6
Strategies for building
a CSO coalition for an
ESR
45mins
Make the point that a key to a successful, effective,
efficient and sustainable CSO coalition is when only
committed groups endowed with expertise, integrity
and competence are targeted and selected.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 2.6.1 and ESR
Workbook 2.6.2 for information on strategies for CSO
coalition building for ESR.
Ask participants to form 3 groups and to distil from
ESR Workbook 2.6.1, 5 ways they will advise any
ESR project on building a sustainable CSO coalition.
Consolidate the feedback to produce a set of
strategies.
Display PPT 2.6 on the questions below.
Ask participants to explain how the following could
enhance CSO working relations:
• Focus and build on needed relations only
• Plan on how you would do the ESR work –
clear role distribution
• Identify and discuss risks using local
knowledge
• Agree on strategies for intervention
• Gain commitment
• Conduct regular feedback and assessment
Make the point that the diverse composition of an
ESR membership with clear roles provides a varied
information source, networking and skills to ensure
an objective and balanced output, and enhance the
quality and authority of a civil society voice. No
matter how good an organization is, it should not run
a situation room without building a coalition or
PPT 2.6
ESR Workbook 2.6.1
ESR Workbook 2.6.2
31. Facilitator Notes 31
ESR Professional Development Training
DAY 3:
Implementation design of an ESR
Activity and Time Description Resources
3.1
Architecture to
operationalize an ESR
60mins
Make the point that an ESR is composed of 3 rooms
whose responsibilities and roles are different, but are
integrated.
Display PPT 3.1.1 and divide participants into 4
groups. Assign 3 the description and function of
each team/room. The fourth to be field observers,
who should need information to the technical room.
Make the point that the situation room architecture
has distinct structures/teams. These
structures/teams are also called ‘rooms’ and
‘chambers’. There is the Technical Room, the
Intermediate Room and the Political Room.
Refer participants to the ESR Workbook 3.1 for the
description of roles in the various rooms of the
situation room.
Inform participants there will be a role-play where
each group will follow the roles described in the
workbook.
Allow time for preparation for the role-play.
Allow time for acting out the role-paly.
Display PPT 3.1.2 and debrief with the following
questions:
1. What is the role/function of each of the rooms?
2. How does the team in each room undertake its
work?
3. What is the nature of the interrelationship
between the various rooms
4. How can the work of each of the rooms be
enhanced?
Conclude responsibilities and roles of the 3 rooms
are integrated into an alert, analysis, and response
mechanism for the monitoring of an electoral
process.
PPT 3.1.1
PPT 3.1.2
ESR Workbook 3.1
32. 32
3.2
Establishing
structures/teams
within an ESR
architecture
45mins
Make the point that specific sets of expertise are
needed to suit the roles and responsibilities of the
various rooms/ chambers.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 3.2 structures
within each ESR room.
Divide participants into 3 groups.
Ask participants to develop a matrix of expertise to
match specific roles/responsibilities within each room
based on information from the workbook.
Ask participants to write boldly on an A4 sheet the
expertise and corresponding roles/responsibility.
Cut to separate each role/responsibility from the
expertise.
Place the pieces of paper in a box and teams to
exchange boxes. For instance Group1 gives group 2
and Group 3 gives for Group 2 and Group 2 gives to
group 1.
Ask each group to come forward and try to match
the skills and the roles/responsibilities in the box.
Use a timer to determine which group makes more
correct matching in less time.
Display PPT 3.2 and discuss whether the matching
is correct and give a token prize.
Make the point the point that an ESR needs to have
a technical support team.
Refer to ESR Workbook 3.2 and ask participants
what expertise is required of the persons in the
Technical Support team?
Expected responses:
• Logistics management skills
• Accounting skills
• Security and safety skills
• Human resource management skills
• Computer technician skills
PPT 3.2
ESR Workbook 3.2
Pair of scissors
A box/carton
A clock/timer
A token prize
3.3 Make the point that managing a situation room
requires a good sense of direction and a lot of
credibility. This requires appointing a facilitator who
PPT 3.3.1
PPT 3.3.2
PPT 3.3.3
PPT 3.3.4
33. Facilitator Notes 33
ESR Professional Development Training
ESR leadership
selection, criteria and
roles
60mins
may be an individual or a host organization with the
capacity and the capability to drive the process.
Inform participants that the next exercise will
enable us to discuss the qualities of the leadership of
the situation room.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 3.3 on
leadership selection, criteria and roles.
Ask participants to complete the questions in the
workbook according to what they think should be the
main qualities of the leadership of each of the ESR
chambers.
Discuss their answers as a group and display
PPTs 3.3.1, 3.3.2, 3.3.3
Make the point that all the leaders in each room are
important but there should be additional
considerations in selecting the leadership of the
Political Room because that automatically becomes
embodiment of the reputation of the entire ESR
initiative.
Display PPT 3.3.4 and ask participants to rank the
following personality from most to the least preferred
to be chosen as a chairperson for the ESR.
• A retired seasoned diplomat in an opposition
party
• A reputable university vice chancellor who is
affiliated to the ruling government.
• A former head of state of a military regime
• A current chairperson of a religious organization
• The head of a donor organization
• A popular local musician
• A member of the supreme court
• A youth leader for a network for peace
• A sports person who had just won an Olympic
medal
• A serving army general
Allow time for the dilemma exercise.
Ask each participant to mention his/her most
preferred and least preferred.
What were their criteria for the ranking?
Make the point that due to the dynamics involved in
seeking a rapid response to dysfunctions identified
on the field; there is need for the chair to have the
ESR Workbook 3.3.1
ESR Workbook 3.3.2
Choosing a Leader,
Leadership video
34. 34
needed political cloud and integrity. A joint leader
could also be considered.
The main qualities of the leader of the technical and
intermediate rooms would be discussed later after
the video.
3.4
Formalization of CSO
relations for ESR
coordination
60mins
Make the point that diversity in the membership of
the coalition or platform of civil society actors is an
opportunity for achieving a successful ESR initiative.
A steering committee is usually needed to kick start
the formalization of relations in an ESR.
Enhance participants understanding of the qualities
of a representative/member to a steering committee
by asking them to rank the following qualities in order
of importance:
• A representative with authority0
• Strong personality
• Honest and respected individuals
Expected response: All qualities are equally
important. (Laugh)
Display PPT 3.4 and ask participants to form any
convenient number of groups (say 2 to 3 groups to
serve as steering committees) and to read ESR
Workbook 3.4 and then develop a Terms of
Reference, with special consideration of the
following:
• Mutual knowledge and conviviality
• Information sharing
• Communication
• Visibility
• Cohesion
• Expected code of conduct
• Clear roles/responsibility sharing
Assign Group 1: Terms of Reference; Group 2:
Code of Conduct; Group 3: Memorandum of
Understanding.
Allow time for group work, presentation and then
discussion.
Make the point: A sound agreement among
participating CSOs is important to manage significant
challenge associated with diversity in the
membership of an ESR platform.
PPT 3.4
ESR Workbook 3.4
35. Facilitator Notes 35
ESR Professional Development Training
3.5
ESR legal and non-
legal framework
agreement with state
institutions
60mins
Make the point achieving free and fair election is a
shared responsibility of all stakeholders. The ability
of the CSOs to develop a mechanism to ensure
stakeholder accountability would go a long way to
enhance the freeness and fairness of an election
Display PPT 3.5.1 and make the point that CSOs
need to formalize their relationship with the primary
electoral stakeholders to
• Enhance effective communication
• Engender responsiveness
• Establish feedback mechanism
• Foster joint ownership
The next activity will encourage participants to design
framework agreement with a number of primary
stakeholders.
Display PPT 3.5.2 and divide participants into 4
groups. Each group would work on an accountability
mechanism for one of the following stakeholders:
Group 1: Design an MOU with an EMB to accept an
ESR initiative as a 2-way feedback mechanism to
support the electoral process.
Group 2: Develop a framework agreement between
CSO and political parties indicating the need to
respect a set of Code of Conduct for political parties.
Group 3: Develop a Professional Code for media
reporting during election
Group 4: Develop a Term of Reference for
collaboration and indicating the expected role of the
security service for an ESR and an upcoming
electoral event.
Make the point that the framework agreement
should include how the CSO intends to work with
these stakeholders on a rapid response basis and to
ensure stakeholder accountability.
Allow time for preparation and presentation of group
work.
Conclude that primary stakeholder accountability is
necessary for the success of an ESR initiative.
PPT 3.5.1
PPT 3.5.2
ESR Workbook 3.5
3.6 Make the point that an ESR is mainly about data
management.
PPT 3.6.1
PPT 3.6.2
36. 36
Establishing an ESR
data management
system
KU 1
60mins
Ask participants to define data in one sentence.
Expected response: Facts collected together for
reference or analysis.
Discuss types of data collected that are relevant to
an ESR.
Categorize types of data using examples that would
be relevant in ESR and why.
Emphasize that data needs will vary.
Ask participants to define data management in one
sentence.
Expected response: It is how data is collected,
processed, transmitted, stored and retrieved.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 3.6.1 on
establishing data management system for an ESR.
Ask participants to recollect a previous exercise
(role-play on ESR architecture, specifically on the
nature of the interrelationship between the various
rooms and the field observers.
Ask participants to explain the difference between
the following:
• Data and information
• Information and knowledge
• Knowledge and Intelligence
Inform participants that there will be another role-
play which is a continuation of the earlier one.
1. Ask participants to reconstitute themselves into
the groups for the previous role-play for the ESR
architecture namely:
• Field observers
• Technical Room
• Intermediate Room
• Political Room
2. Ask the field observers to develop a list of data
on dysfunctions as well as positive occurrences
in the field.
PPT 3.6.3
ESR Workbook 3.6.1
37. Facilitator Notes 37
ESR Professional Development Training
3. Ask the Technical Room to process the data into
information and set-up the database for the
simulation on day
4. Ask the Intermediate Room to analyze the
information to produce specialized knowledge
5. Ask the Political Room to discuss the knowledge
and to produce ‘intelligence’, (a precise input
for final decision-making for relevant authority to
remedy any dysfunctions in the electoral
process). Ask them to prepare an arrival
statement for the situation room
Inform participants that they will be asked to
reconvene in these groups on day 5 for the
simulation
38. 38
DAY 4:
Implementation dynamics of an ESR
Activity and Time Description Resources
4.1
Basic steps for
implementing an ESR
KU 3
40mins
Make the point that this session will look into details
of events/elements in the Scheduling and Realization
Phases of the ESR Cycle.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 4.1 for the
basic steps in implementing an ESR.
Ask participants to look at the list of activities and
decide which activity is part of the scheduling phase
or the Realization Phase. Participants should work
individually at first.
Form 4 groups of participants and assign 2 groups
with a phase (Scheduling and Realization) of the
ESR.
Ask each group to share their individual thoughts on
which activity belongs to the phase of the ESR cycle
that the group has been assigned to.
Allow time for group work and presentation of their
lists.
Display PPT 4.1 on Instructions for Talent Contest
Ask participants to remain in their group for a talent
contest using the following instructions:
Group 1 & 2: Scheduling Phase to compose a song
using the rhythm of a popular song with the words of
the activities in the Scheduling Phase as lyrics. (For
example use the activities to sing the Christmas carol
‘Oh Come All Ye Faithful’)
Groups 3 & 4: Realization Phase to compose a rap
with the activities in the Realization Phase as lyrics.
Allow time for preparation and presentation of talent
contest. Use level of applause to judge the winner of
contest.
Inform participants: the first set of activities are for
Micro-ESR (short-term ESR) and that the second set
PPT 4.1
ESR Workbook 4.1
39. Facilitator Notes 39
ESR Professional Development Training
of activities will need to be added if a Macro-ESR
(long-term ESR) will be conducted.
4.2
Convening an ESR:
procedural
considerations
KU 3
60mins
Make the point that convening an ESR after the
preparation involves several activities.
Display PPT 4.2.1 of the mixed-up list of activities.
Ask participants to attempt to reorder the activities
into a logical sequence.
Allow time for group discussion and presentation.
Display PPT 4.2.2 1–7and PPT 4.2.3 8–13 to show
and discuss the correct logical sequence.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 4.2 for a
sample implementation plan to illustrate a rational
order of activity for convening an ESR.
Discuss the order of activities for convening an ESR.
Invite a few participants to justify the order of
activities.
Divide participants into 2 or more groups and ask
each group to use the sample implementation plan to
develop a Gantt chart.
Allow time for preparation and presentation.
Verify if the dates on the Gantt chart correspond with
the dates on the table in ESR Workbook 4.1
Summarize that, broadly speaking, the activities for
convening an ESR is about personnel (field
observers and members of various ESR rooms)
management and communication.
PPT 4.2.1
PPT 4.2.2 1–7
PPT 4.1.3 8–13
ESR Workbook 4.2 sample
implementation plan
4.3
Operationalization of
an ESR: on-site & in-
house
KU 1
30mins
Make the point: After developing a concept note and
funding requests, setting up a steering committee,
mobilizing financial resources and preparing for
electoral activities in the field, the operationalization
of the ESR is key.
Inform participants that a number of important
issues need attention.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 4.3
Display PPT 4.3 and ask participants to discuss the
following:
PPT 4.3
ESR Workbook 4.3
40. 40
• Structure the ESR desks dedicated to
collection of the data, analysis and
interpretation, the definition and
implementation of rapid response;
• Setting up the ESR at its headquarters;
• Information on the results and highlights;
• Manage internal and external relationships;
and
• Provide documentation, monitor and track
the initiative.
Allow time for group work and presentation.
Summarize and the highlight main issues that
determine the professionalism and integrity of the
ESR initiative.
4.4
Importance of
observer management
to ESR success
KU 4
40mins
Display PPT 4.4.1 and make the point observers
are the primary source of data to the ESR, without
whom there could possibly be no ESR. It is there
important to manage observers in order to achieve
appropriate input for an ESR.
Display PPT 4.4.2 and ask participants to form 2
groups to undertake the following activities:
Group 1: Develop a checklist for observers at a voter
registration, exhibition of voters Roll and campaign
period.
Group 2: Develop a checklist for observers at Voting,
counting and election result management and
declaration.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 4.4 to read the
sample checklist.
Allow time for preparation, presentation and
discussion.
Inform participants that it is important to test the
means of data transmission and to have contingency
plan for eventualities.
Conclude that observers need to have proper
training on the type of data that is relevant and how it
must be transmitted to an ESR.
PPT 4.4.1
PPT 4.4.2
ESR Workbook 4.4
4.5
ESR
Determine the stakeholders who will be sharing &
receiving information from the ESR during elections.
PPT 4.5
ESR Workbook 4.5
41. Facilitator Notes 41
ESR Professional Development Training
communication
strategies
KU 8
35mins
Make the point that communication is at the heart of
an ESR. However, different stakeholders will share
and receive information in different ways.
Information is received by the ESR, verified
(authenticated) and disseminated to relevant
stakeholders.
Give examples of how information from the ESR has
helped shaped specific moments in an election –
Nigeria’s press releases; interface with security
agencies, etc.
Ask participants to suggest who the stakeholders
for an ESR are. Write their suggestions on the flip
chart. Facilitate a conversation and agree on a final
list:
Stakeholders include: field observers, citizens, the
EMB, media, security agencies, and political parties.
Ask the participants to determine what types of
communication channels the ESR itself needs: e.g.
easy to remember numbers (e.g. 555), social media
handles & an email address that’s well publicized.
Determine communication channels for each
stakeholder and the strengths and weaknesses.
Make the point that each stakeholder group would
have different methods of sharing and receiving
information. For example, for the press, it would be
mostly press releases shared via email or a press
conference.
Ask the participants to take a number based on the
number of stakeholder groups.
Group work: Divide the participants into groups
based on the number of stakeholder groups and
display PPT 4.5.
Each group will have to determine the most relevant
modes of communication for their stakeholder and
their strength & weakness.
Modes of communication would include: radio, TV,
telephone, text messages, emails, social media,
press releases & press conferences.
They would also have to determine what types of
resources the ESR needs to communicate with each
42. 42
stakeholder group – e.g. contact lists of names &
numbers for security agencies.
Walk through a few scenarios through role-playing.
Make the point that there would sometimes be
challenges and an ESR must have a back-up plan.
Ask the participants to suggest possible challenges
that could occur during an election.
These could include:
• Power outage & telecommunications
network failure
• Sabotage & telecommunications network
failure
• Security breach of the ESR
Ask the participants to think through possible
solutions and share via role-playing.
Refer participants to Workbook 4.5 Notes
4.6
Electoral violence
monitoring
KU 5
60mins
Show a video on Electoral Violence in Papua New
Guinea
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 4.6 guideline
for planning and monitoring violence.
Display PPT 4.6 and ask participants to note
incidents in the video using the following the
guidelines:
• Identifying the group’s target;
• Evaluating the underlying causes of
tensions and violence in the country;
• Identifying potential triggering mechanisms
or hotbeds of tension during the election
cycle;
• Defining specific indicators of violence
warning signs as well as acts of violence to
be monitored;
• Identifying high-risk geographical areas; and
• Developing a monitoring strategy and
methodology as well as how a monitoring
unit will be deployed.
Debrief after watching the video.
Ask participants to share their responses to the
questions above.
Video: PNG Electoral
Violence
PPT 4.6
ESR Workbook 4.6
43. Facilitator Notes 43
ESR Professional Development Training
Divide participants into 2 groups and ask each
group to develop a monitoring strategy and
methodology.
Allow time for preparation, presentation and
discussions.
Make the point that as part of electoral violence
prevention/ management, the ESR should also
inform and educate citizens about their rights and
responsibilities within the electoral process.
4.7
Media monitoring
KU 5
45mins
Make the point that the media is a primary
stakeholder whose actions or inactions can have
major consequence on the integrity of the electoral
process and outcome.
Display PPT 4.7.2 and ask each participant to
answer the following questions and note their
responses on an A4 sheet.
• What are the types of media?
• What are the types of ownership that exist
in your country?
• What are professional media standards?
(Provide examples)?
• How does the type of ownership generally
influence the performance of the media?
• How can the performance of the media be
improved?
• What is media monitoring and what does it
intend to achieved during and electoral
event?
Form any convenient number of groups of
participants.
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 4.7 on media
monitoring.
Ask participants to develop a set of professional
media standards for an electoral event.
Allow time for preparation and presentation.
Merge group response to have a consolidated set of
professional media standards for elections.
Compare (similarities and differences) the media
standards to the following guiding principles for
election managers:
PPT 4.7.1
PPT 4.7.2
PPT 4.7.3
ESR Workbook 4.7
44. 44
• National service-mindedness
• Neutrality, impartiality, integrity
• Transparency (right to information)
• Respect for the law
• Professionalism
Display PPT 4.7.3 on the guiding principles of
election management.
Make the point that media, especially public/state-
owned media, by and large need to respect similar
guiding principles for election managers.
4.8
Appreciating gender
equity in an ESR
KU 5
30mins
Display PPT 4.8.1 and make the point that for
elections to be free and fair, the systems and
procedures should enhance the political participation
and representation of women. Similarly, the planning
implementation and interventions of the situation
room should take into consideration challenges that
women face in accessing their electoral rights.
Ask the question what are the electoral rights of
women?
Expected response:
1. The rights of women to be able to present
themselves as candidates.
2. The right to have unfettered access to be
registered and to vote in an election.
3. The right of a woman to have the requisite
information needed to make an informed
decision at an election.
Brainstorm some of the challenges women face in
the electoral process and how this could be
addressed by CSOs. Note on a flip chart, collate and
categorize responses into social, political and
economic.
Make the point apart from women there are other
segments of society who may be marginalized in the
electoral process on the basis of ethnicity, physical
disability and age.
Ask participants how the issue on gender and
diversity can be mainstreamed in the situation room
scenario.
Expected responses: it could be included in the
composition of the Technical Room, Intermediary
Room and the Political Room. It could also be an
PPT 4.8.1
ESR Workbook 4.8
45. Facilitator Notes 45
ESR Professional Development Training
item on the checklist for the observers in the field. It
would also be thematic issue for discussion and
analysis in the Intermediary room.
4.9
Appreciating diversity
in an ESR
KU 5
30mins
Refer participants to ESR Workbook 4.9 on ESR
Diversity Questions
Display PPT 4.9.1 and PPT 4.9.2 on the ESR
diversity questions.
Brainstorm, using the following ESR diversity
question:
1. What is the meaning of diversity, with reference
to the composition of a population?
2. What advantages are there to recruit both men
and women, disabled people or people from
different age groups in the conduct of an
election?
3. Are there any roles that could not be done by a
disabled person, a woman, or someone who
speaks a minority language in an ESR?
4. What might prevent an EMB from recruiting a
cross-section of society?
5. How a can the issues of diversity (political,
ethnic, religious, ages, economic, sex, etc.) be
addressed in the electoral process with regards
to:
A. Design of electoral system
B. Civic & voter education
C. Voter registration
D. Candidate selection
E. Polling
F. Electoral security
PPT 4.9.1
PPT 4.9.2
ESR Workbook 4.9
46. 46
Expected response to Question 5.
A. An electoral system should be engineered to
give fair representation and participation of the
various political parties, ethnicity, sexes, adult
ages, etc. A proportional representation electoral
system with a quota is usually preferable.
B. A civic and voter education programme should
take into consideration variety of languages,
learning abilities, media, etc. of the voter
population.
C. A voter registration process should respect the
principles of inclusiveness and
comprehensiveness.
D. There may be positive discrimination in selecting
candidates to provide political opportunities for
marginalised groups.
E. The siting of polling stations should take into
consideration proximity and accessibility; and
the actual polling should provide for people with
special needs.
F. The safety of voters of every political
persuasion, age and sex, ethnicity, race, caste,
etc. should be equally ensured.
1. What might prevent an ESR from hiring a
cross-section of society?
2. What strategies could be used to
compensate for a lack of skills by some of the
groups above?
Note the responses from participants
Conclude with a summary of participant responses
that respect diversity
47. Facilitator Notes 47
ESR Professional Development Training
DAY 5:
ESR simulation and Evaluation methods
Activity and Time Description Resources
5.1
ESR simulation
KU 2
240mins
Make the point that the quality of the data collected
in an ESR affects the integrity of the whole project.
Ask participants to reconvene in their DAY 3 groups
(observers, technical chamber, analytical chamber,
political chamber)
Read scenario and instruction to participants
Invite participants to give their feedback at the end of
the simulation
SMS Gateway for SMS
conversion into data
Local Sim Cards for SMS
Gateway
1 Android phone
Operational database
ESR Agenda
Simulation scenario
5.2
ESR data
transmission
modalities
KU 7
35mins
Make the point that the reliability of the means to
send data from field observers to the technical room
is a lifeline to an ESR.
Display PPT 5.2.1 and ask each participant to list
the channels for sharing information in the current
world.
Expected responses: courier (paper form), telephone
(fixed and mobile), fax, emails, social media, etc.
Make the point that the same tools can be used for
data transmission in an ESR.
Display PPT 5.2.2 and refer participants to ESR
Workbook 5.2.2 for some of the advantages and
drawbacks of each data transmission method
between observers and technical operators.
Group 1: Courier (paper form)
Group 2: Fixed telephone
Group 3: Mobile phone
Group 4: Email
Group 5: Social media
Conclude that every data transmission tool has an
advantage and disadvantage, which have to be
explored within a specific national context (availability
of infrastructure and politics) and for specific efforts
PPT 5.2.1
PPT 5.2.2
48. 48
to work towards having a reliable and secured data
transmission mechanism.
5.3 Make the point: The situation room uses an online-
based software called OpenESR to help with data
collection and the production of reports
1.
OpenESR platform (for
5.4 PPT 5.4.
5.5 Make the point that according to project
management principles, which are also a
requirement for donors, there should be an
evaluation of an ESR initiative.
Explain the importance of recognizing the ESR can
be confronted with internal challenges and problems.
Inform participants that there is internal evaluation
and external evaluation.
Propose practical examples of internal problems and
challenges the ESR can be confronted with.
Ask participants to list other internal problems or
challenges the ESR can be confronted with.
Display PPT 5.5.1 and make the point that is
crucial to regularly analyze the internal functioning of
the ESR for various reasons, including:
• Monitoring activities
• Preventive purposes: Identify critical issues
timeously (before these issues become
more serious problems)
• Preferred strategic solutions
• Monitor the effectiveness of the solutions
Inform participants that ‘Monitoring the
effectiveness of a solutions’ is referred to as a
Cyclical Approach: Monitor-Solution-Monitor.
Display PPT 5.5.2 and divide participants into 2
groups.
Assign Group 1 to develop an internal evaluation
form for an assessment of the progress of an ESR
initiative.
PPT 5.5.1
PPT 5.5.2
PPT 5.5.3
PPT 5.5.4
ESR Workbook 5.5
49. Facilitator Notes 49
ESR Professional Development Training
Assign Group 2 to develop an interview guide for an
external assessment of an ESR initiative.
Display PPT 5.5.3 on the ESR Cycle to guide group
work and refer participants to ESR Workbook 5.5
on ESR evaluation methods.
Allow time for preparation and presentation of group
work.
Display PPT 5.5.4 and discuss the sample
assessment tool and invite participants for
contributions to enrich the tool.
Brainstorm on some of the possible challenges that
could be encountered in an ESR and suggest
solutions.
Conclude that an evaluation is main to ascertain
whether the objectives of the ESR initiative achieved
its intended objectives and to provide information to
ESR stakeholders on ‘what worked well’ and ‘what
could be improved upon’
5.7
ESR facilitator
accreditation process
20mins
Display PPT 5.7.1 and inform participants that for
the purpose of ensuring quality of facilitation skills at
ESR training courses, 2 levels of ESR facilitator have
been established, namely
• Semi accreditation after taking part
successfully in an ESR facilitator training
course.
• Full accreditation after conducting
successfully a modular ESR training as a
semi-accreditation.
• A participant is awarded a ‘Certificate of
Participation’ after successfully completing a
modular ESR training course.
Ask if participants have questions and/or need
further clarification.
PPT 5.7.1
5.8 Make the point: An end of course evaluation
provides information to ascertain whether the key
PPT 5.8
Final evaluation form
50. 50
Course evaluation and
certification
understandings have been assimilated by
participants.
Display PPT 5.8 and provide an overview of the
thematic areas of the 5-day course.
Give highlights of the activities that were
undertaken during the course.
Distribute the final evaluation form
Go through the evaluation form with participants.
Finally ask participants to complete the evaluation
form.
For the certification ceremony, a person of high
social repute may be invited to the certification
ceremony.