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Lab Tool

Theory of Change Workbench

Build a structured Theory of Change step by step. Define your causal pathway from problem to impact, complete with assumptions and indicators.

i Start by clearly defining the problem your programme or intervention addresses. A well-defined problem grounds the entire Theory of Change. Be specific about who is affected, where, and why existing conditions persist.
Describe the core problem or need your intervention addresses.
Who are the primary beneficiaries or affected communities?
Where does the intervention take place?
i Your long-term goal is the ultimate impact you aim to achieve. It should be aspirational but realistic, and clearly linked to the problem statement. Think 5-10 years ahead.
What is the ultimate change you want to see? This sits at the top of your Theory of Change.
i Outcomes are the intermediate changes (in behaviour, knowledge, practice, or conditions) that must occur for your long-term goal to be achieved. Aim for 3-5 outcomes. Order them from most immediate to most distal.
i Outputs are the tangible products, services, or activities your programme delivers. Each output should logically contribute to at least one outcome. Link each output to its parent outcome.
i Assumptions are the conditions that must hold true for each causal link to work. Good assumptions are specific, testable, and linked to a particular step in the chain. Ask: "What else needs to be true for this output to lead to this outcome?"
! Common mistake: listing assumptions that are too vague (e.g., "political will exists"). Be specific: "District health officers allocate at least 20% of budget to community health workers during the project period."
i Indicators define how you will measure whether each outcome has been achieved. Use SMART criteria: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound. Each outcome should have at least one indicator.
i Good indicator: "Percentage of target households with a dietary diversity score of 5+ (out of 10 food groups) by end of Year 3." Bad indicator: "Food security improves."
Goal Outcomes Outputs Assumptions Indicators

Your Theory of Change diagram will appear here as you fill in the steps above.

Understanding Theory of Change

What is a Theory of Change?

A Theory of Change (ToC) is a comprehensive description and illustration of how and why a desired change is expected to happen in a particular context. It maps the causal logic from activities and outputs through intermediate outcomes to long-term impact.

Unlike a logframe, a ToC makes explicit the assumptions underlying each causal step, enabling more rigorous programme design and evaluation.

Why Build a ToC?

A well-articulated ToC helps teams align on programme logic, identify gaps in reasoning, design meaningful M&E frameworks, communicate with stakeholders and donors, and adapt programming when assumptions prove wrong.

Writing Good Outcomes

Outcomes should describe changes in people's lives, behaviours, or conditions -- not what the programme delivers (those are outputs). Use active language: "Farmers adopt drought-resistant crop varieties" rather than "Drought-resistant seeds distributed."

Good: "Women in target communities report increased decision-making power over household finances." Bad: "Gender training conducted."

Crafting Testable Assumptions

Assumptions should be specific enough to monitor. Instead of "communities participate," try "At least 60% of invited households send a representative to monthly farmer field school sessions." This lets you track whether your theory holds during implementation.

SMART Indicators

Each indicator should be Specific (precisely defined), Measurable (quantifiable or verifiable), Achievable (realistically collectible), Relevant (connected to the outcome), and Time-bound (with a target date or frequency).

Example: "% of target households consuming 3+ meals per day, measured quarterly via household survey, target: 75% by Month 36."

Common ToC Mistakes

Watch out for these pitfalls: confusing outputs with outcomes, missing causal links (logical gaps), unstated assumptions, indicators that measure activity not change, overly linear thinking (ignoring feedback loops), and building the ToC after the programme is designed rather than before.

Rules of Thumb

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