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Impact Report Template: The Data Dictionary in Document Form

An impact report template is the data dictionary in document form. Seven sections, a clear set of rules the report follows, a reproducible report at the end of every cycle. With a worked example from a leading skills-training organization.

Updated
May 18, 2026
360 feedback training evaluation
Use Case

SECTION 01 · DEFINITION

What is an impact report — and what makes a template worth keeping

Two definitions, one section. The first is the document a funder or board reads. The second is the structure that document takes — and the reason most templates do not survive a second cycle.

Answer

An impact report is a document that explains what changed for the people a program reached, with evidence a funder, board, or evaluator can audit. It pairs three things: what the program did, who it reached, and what changed for those people. Each claim ties back to a participant record so a reader can reach the same conclusion the writer did.

An impact report template is the structure that document takes. Seven sections, in the order strong reports use: executive summary, organizational context, methodology, quantitative outcomes, qualitative evidence, visual data, and recommendations.

Most templates fail because they organize the writing without organizing the data. A reusable template is not a Word file with section headings. It is a set of rules the report follows — a data dictionary — that names where each section's content comes from, how it is computed, and how it should appear. Same data plus same dictionary equals same numbers, every time the report runs.

This page documents that template. The seven sections, the dictionary rules behind each, and a worked example from a real reporting cycle showing the full pipeline from 285 raw survey responses to a finished stakeholder report.

Section 03 · Why the dictionary does the work

Three things every dictionary row carries

A Sopact dictionary is not a glossary. It is an executable specification — every row tells the engine what an indicator means, how it is computed, and how it should appear. The dictionary handles quantitative formulas and qualitative theme coding in the same row, which is the difference between a report and a survey export.

1 Raw responses

Mixed types, one cohort

Q23 Career prospects rating   4 / 5 quant
Q24 Program attribution   3 / 3 quant
Q27 "The mentor sessions changed how I prep for interviews."EN qual
Q27 "指導員のおかげで自信がついた"JA qual
Q27 "Le réseau professionnel m'a aidé."FR qual
n = 285 · 9 langs

indicator · career_impact_story

deterministic

One row. Three carriers the engine reads in order — and one of them, computation, holds both halves.

01

Meaning · what it's for

Pillar · Develop  ·  type · Attribution

Bound to a pillar in the framework. Indicators that don't bind aren't computed.

02

Computation · quant + qual, same row

quant avg( Q23 × Q24 / 3 )composite · attributed impact · scale 1–5
qual code( Q27 ) → themes ∈ {mentor, prep, network, confidence}across 9 languages · "Other" recoded by spec

A survey export would hand these to two analysts. The dictionary holds them in one indicator — same denominator rules, same cycle, same row.

03

Presentation · how it appears

Section · Develop / Career outcomes

Rendered as one block: the composite score on a dark tile, then the themes that drive it underneath. Color and contrast bound in the spec.

3 Published report

One block, both halves

Develop · career outcomes

Attributed career impact

Attribution
composite · 1–5 scale
3.4/ 5
from n = 271 · 14 incomplete excluded
What drives the score · open-text themes
Mentor relationships 38%
Interview preparation 27%
Professional network 21%
Confidence 14%

Both halves rendered from the same row — quant on top, qual underneath. No analyst joined the two.

One row holds the number and the story. That's what makes the report reconcile to the survey — and to itself, next cycle, with new data.

SECTION 04 · THE TEMPLATE

The seven sections, redefined

Every section is the result of a query against the dictionary. For each card below: the primary data source that feeds the section, the dictionary rule that computes it, and the final visual that lands in the report.

01 Executive Summary
Source Strongest outcomes pulled from the indicator set, ranked by variance to baseline.
Dictionary rule Top three to five indicators flagged headline = true. Pulled with their final denominators applied.
Final visual Scorecard with headline number, one qualitative finding, one forward commitment. One page maximum. Written last, placed first.
02 Organizational Context
Source Organization profile, configured once. Mission, programs, geographic scope, reporting period.
Dictionary rule Static fields with annual review. Pulled as-is.
Final visual Half-page prose with a small program map. Reviewed and approved each cycle, not rewritten.
03 Methodology
Source Collection configuration — actual sample sizes, response rates, attrition by demographic.
Dictionary rule N at each measurement wave, exclusions applied, limitations declared. Auto-generated from collection config — not placeholder text.
Final visual Methodology table. Most often skipped in weak reports. Fastest way for an evaluator to identify a serious one.
04 Quantitative Outcomes
Source Structured form responses, joined on persistent participant ID across waves.
Dictionary rule Baseline, target, actual, variance — with the correct denominator per indicator. Pre-post pairing on the same person.
Final visual Five to seven core metrics as tables. Cohort breakdowns. Bar charts where comparison is the point. Tables where precision is.
05 Qualitative Evidence
Source Open-text fields, narrative responses, mid-cycle interviews — themed as they arrive.
Dictionary rule Theme codebook with frequency thresholds. Each surfaced theme links back to the participant IDs that contributed to it.
Final visual Theme map ranked by frequency, with two representative quotes per top theme. Curation reviewed by program staff. Not cherry-picked.
06 Visual Data
Source Roll-up queries against the structured response set.
Dictionary rule Chart type per indicator, colors per pillar, contrast rules built in. Yellow and teal fills flip to black text by spec.
Final visual Pre-formatted charts: bar, comparison table, trend line, demographic breakdown. The section a board screenshots for a presentation.
07 Recommendations & Next Steps
Source Variance flags from quantitative outcomes plus program staff input on what the cycle revealed.
Dictionary rule Variance above threshold triggers a flag. Each flag carries an owner and a timeline. Staff reviews and approves before publish.
Final visual Three to five action cards: what changes next cycle, what needs investigation, who owns each item. Turns a backward-looking compliance document into a forward-looking learning tool.

SECTION 05 · WORKED EXAMPLE

A leading skills-training organization — start to finish

One real reporting cycle. 285 survey responses from program participants across many language groups. Three program pillars. Three audiences (board, national delegations, sponsors). The dictionary-driven path from raw data to finished stakeholder report.

Reporting context · 285 respondents · annual cycle · multi-country "Mixed quality, multilingual, with the usual debris of real-world survey data. Skip patterns leaving NULLs in conditional questions. Not applicable answers mixed in with No. Open-text responses across many languages. Free-text Other fields that need recoding before they can be counted. This is what most impact teams start with."

What the dictionary handled per stage

Stage Manual hours What the dictionary handled
Data cleaning and normalization 4 – 8 Type, range, and skip-pattern rules declared per column. NULLs handled by spec, not by analyst memory.
Indicator design 8 – 16 The program's goals, outcome type, and the right number to divide by — written per row. Indicators that do not match the program's goals do not get computed.
Quantitative calculations 12 – 20 Formulas applied per the rules. Promotion rate divides by 208, not 285. Attributed-impact is a combined score (career-prospect rating multiplied by an attribution weight) averaged across valid responses.
Multilingual qualitative coding 16 – 24 Theme codebook applied at scale across languages. The usual bottleneck for global programs collapses from days to minutes.
Cross-tab segmentation 6 – 10 Segment variables declared in the spec — medal status, region, employment status, education level. Reproducible across cycles.
Report design and narrative 16 – 24 Colors and structure flow from the spec. Contrast rules built in. Brand palette applied automatically.
QA and revisions 8 – 12 Reproducibility built in. Same data plus same dictionary equals same numbers, every run.
Total 70 – 115 hrs Authored once. Reused across every cycle, cohort, and comparison year.

The visible benefit is time. The deeper benefits show up later.

Reproducibility you can audit

Same data plus same dictionary equals same numbers. When a funder asks how a KPI was calculated, the answer is one row in a dictionary — not an archaeology project across past analysts' workbooks.

The right number to divide by

The most common error in impact reporting is dividing by the wrong number — counting "Not applicable" as "No," or using the full sample when only a subgroup is eligible. The dictionary removes this class of error by spec, not by analyst memory.

Framework discipline

Indicators that do not map to a defined pillar do not get computed. Reports that follow this rule are roughly half the length of reports that do not — and what gets cut is overwhelmingly content no stakeholder asked for.

Year-over-year comparability

Because calculation logic is written down once, the 2025 report computes the same way as 2024. Trends become real trends, not artifacts of analyst turnover.

Multilingual coding at scale

Open-text coding is the usual bottleneck for global programs with many language groups. Automating thematic coding turns a sixteen-to-twenty-four hour task into something measured in minutes, while keeping humans in the loop for the codes that matter most.

Qualitative and quantitative in one frame

The thematic codes from open-text responses sit inside the same framework as the numbers. A reader sees the 68.5 percent figure (combining the top two ratings) alongside the dominant narrative themes — technical skill growth, recognition, mentoring — in one place.

Clients do not really buy faster reports. They buy the ability to act on data inside the decision window — a board meeting in three weeks, a funder report due Friday, a partner review next quarter — instead of always being one cycle behind. The data dictionary is what makes that possible. Capture the analytical intent of the program in a form that can be re-executed at will.

SECTION 06 · WHERE GRANT MANAGEMENT TOOLS STOP

Grant management software tracks the grant. A reporting layer tracks the change.

Foundations running grant management software already have grant lifecycle compliance covered — applications, approvals, payments, closeout, audit trails on every document. What grant management tools do not do — by design — is the work that lands inside the impact report itself. Two layers. They coexist.

Layer 01 · Grant lifecycle

Grant management software (GMS)

Tracks the grant

  • Workflow from intake through approval, payment, and closeout
  • Sanctions screening and grantee due-diligence checks
  • Uniform Guidance (2 CFR Part 200) tracking for federal pass-through grants
  • Audit trails on every document and decision
  • Reporting reminders, deadline routing, grantee portals
  • Dashboards on structured grant data — amounts, dates, status

Layer 02 · Impact evidence

Sopact reporting layer

Tracks the change

  • The same participant ID kept across intake, pre, post, and follow-up surveys
  • Open-ended responses and structured ratings joined on one participant record
  • Themes pulled from open responses as they arrive — not at year-end
  • Year-over-year comparison through a stable dictionary, same rules every cycle
  • Outcomes broken down by demographic and program segment
  • Every number in the report traces back to a participant ID and a survey response

SECTION 07 · FIVE EVIDENCE REQUIREMENTS

What grantmakers actually ask for

Five evidence requirements come up at every renewal conversation a serious foundation has with a grantee. Each one sits inside the impact report, not the grant agreement. Each one falls apart without primary data joined to a participant record that holds across surveys and years.

Outcomes broken down by group

Primary data Demographic fields captured at intake, same participant ID kept across every survey.
Secondary data Census ACS for the population denominator the program is reaching against.
Where it lands Outcomes section, equity breakdown.

Year-over-year comparability

Primary data Same dictionary applied to the next cohort, same numbers to divide by.
Secondary data Prior-year archived report and indicator set.
Where it lands Trend section, multi-year tables, renewal narrative.

Stories paired with numbers

Primary data Open responses themed at collection, attached to the participant ID the metric describes.
Secondary data Ready-made measurement tools (brief mental-health screeners, standard satisfaction scales) for benchmark.
Where it lands Qualitative evidence section, narrative arc.

Cross-grant portfolio roll-up

Primary data Same IRIS+ or custom indicator set across every grantee.
Secondary data Candid 990 for grantee operational context.
Where it lands Foundation-wide impact thesis, board update.

Every number traces back to a response

Primary data Every roll-up clicks back to a participant ID, a response, a timestamp. The three-click test: a number on page one, the cohort it summarizes, the source response that produced it.
Secondary data Methodology section auto-generated from the actual collection setup. Sample sizes and limitations are factual, not inferred.
Where it lands Methodology section, appendix, and the answer to every evaluator question that begins "how did you calculate…"

Primary data plus secondary data is the formula. Primary data gives the program-specific evidence — who actually moved, by how much, with what attribution. Secondary data gives the benchmark, the denominator, the reference frame. The report holds up when both are in the same dictionary.

SECTION 08 · ADAPTATIONS

Four lengths. Three audience cuts. One evidence base.

Most teams build separate reports for separate readers and lose six weeks reconciling numbers across them. A dictionary-driven template generates length variants and audience cuts from the same evidence base. Numbers stay consistent across versions.

Length variants

One-page

Section 01 only

Executive summary on its own. Three to five headline metrics, one qualitative finding, one forward commitment. Companion to a full report, not a replacement.

Quarterly

Sections 01 – 04

Three to five pages. Year-to-date metrics, emerging themes, mid-cycle adjustments. Shares metric definitions with the annual so quarterly feels like an installment of one story.

Annual

Full 7 sections

Ten to fifteen pages. Full methodology, year-over-year comparison, strategic recommendations. The artifact most foundation officers use for renewal decisions.

Board

Sections 01, 04, 07

Executive summary, outcomes, recommendations. Governance ribbon. Strategic implications and risk flags. Built for the thirty-minute board read, not the three-hour audit.

Audience versions

For the board

Governance cut

Strategic implications, risk flags, renewal posture. Sections 01, 04, 07 expanded. Methodology summarized into a single line; full methodology lives in the appendix.

What changesLead with risk and renewal. Emphasis on what the program will change.

For the funder

Outcomes cut

Methodology rigor up front. Outcomes against baseline and target. Year-over-year comparison if multi-cycle. Two pages on what underperformed and what changed in response.

What changesLead with methodology. Failure section before success section.

For the community

Stories cut

Accessible language. Participant voices at the center. Quantitative findings paired with the people they describe. No frameworks, no sample sizes in the body.

What changesLead with people. Numbers in service of the story.

Sector-specific guides

This page covers the universal template. For sector-specific structure, examples, and language, work from the dedicated guides below — each carries adaptations, examples, and framework alignment for one reader.

SECTION 09 · QUESTIONS

Impact report template questions, answered directly

Eleven questions that come up most often from people building their first or third impact report. Each answer leads with the headline, then qualifies. Each tracks a real search query so the page can serve as the answer surface for visiting readers.

01 What is an impact report?

An impact report is a document that explains what changed for the people a program reached, with evidence a funder, board, or evaluator can audit. It pairs three things: what the program did, who it reached, and what changed for those people. Each claim ties back to a participant record so a reader can reach the same conclusion the writer did. Most cover one cycle — a fiscal year, a cohort, or a grant period. The strongest also name what did not work and what the program changed in response.

02 What sections should an impact report template include?

Seven sections, in this order: executive summary, organizational context, methodology, quantitative outcomes, qualitative evidence, visual data, and recommendations. The executive summary is written last but placed first. The methodology section is the one most often skipped and the fastest way for an evaluator to spot a weak report. The recommendations section is the one most often invented without evidence grounding by Gen AI outputs. Both are non-negotiable in a serious report.

03 What is a one-page impact report template?

A one-page impact report template is the executive summary section of a full report, formatted to stand on its own. Three to five headline metrics, one qualitative finding, one forward-looking statement. It works as a companion to a full report, not as a replacement for one. Numbers stay consistent with the full document when both are generated from the same data dictionary. Common audiences: board members, individual donors, and community stakeholders who will not read a fifteen-page document.

04 What is a quarterly impact report template?

A quarterly impact report is a three-to-five page progress update covering year-to-date metrics, emerging qualitative themes, and any mid-cycle program adjustments. Quarterly reports serve a different function from annual reports — they demonstrate active program management, not just end-of-year compliance. The strongest quarterly reports share the same metric definitions and methodology as the annual, so quarterly updates feel like installments of one coherent evidence story rather than separate documents.

05 What is an annual impact report template?

An annual impact report template covers a full fiscal or program year and typically runs ten to fifteen pages. It includes a full methodology section, year-over-year comparison data, and a strategic recommendations section that demonstrates organizational learning across the cycle. The executive summary runs one full page because the annual report is the primary artifact most foundation officers use for renewal decisions. Year-over-year comparison generates automatically when archived cycles share the same dictionary.

06 What is the purpose of creating an impact report?

An impact report serves three purposes at once. It accounts to funders, regulators, or LPs for resources spent. It informs the program team about what is working and what is not. It builds external trust by showing the work to a wider audience. A report that serves only the first purpose reads as compliance. A report that serves all three becomes a planning instrument the team uses to decide what to do next cycle.

07 How do you write an impact report?

Start with the decision the primary reader needs to make, then work backward. Define five to seven outcome metrics with baselines and post-measures aligned to your theory of change. Collect baseline at intake, not at report time. Pair every quantitative claim with one qualitative observation from the same participants. Disclose what underperformed alongside what outperformed. Write the executive summary last from your strongest findings. The dictionary-driven path skips the manual assembly steps — the reporting work becomes review and strategic framing, not document construction.

08 What three elements appear in an executive summary of an impact report?

Three elements: a headline finding (the strongest outcome stated in plain numbers), a one-sentence methodology statement (sample size and collection period), and a forward-looking commitment (what the program will change or continue next cycle). Most executive summaries miss the third — which is what turns a backward-looking compliance document into a forward-looking learning tool. Strong executive summaries are written last, after the rest of the report is built, because that is when the headline finding has earned its place.

09 What does an impact report sample look like?

A strong impact report sample opens with a one-paragraph executive summary stating the headline outcome — for example, 71 percent of participants gained a credential within six months against a baseline of 45 percent. It presents five core metrics in a table with baseline, target, and actual columns. Two participant stories follow, one showing a typical pathway and one showing a setback that led to a program change. It closes with three specific commitments for the next cycle. The seven-section template on this page is the structure that sample follows.

10 Can I make an impact report template in Word?

Yes — the seven-section structure works in Word, Google Docs, or PowerPoint. The limitation is that every data point requires manual entry, charts require manual update each cycle, and year-over-year comparison requires reconciling separate documents. Organizations using a Word template typically spend 40 to 60 hours per reporting cycle on assembly. A dictionary-driven approach generates the same seven-section structure automatically from connected data, and reduces assembly to two to four hours of review.

11 What is the difference between an impact report template and an impact measurement framework template?

An impact report template structures how you present evidence. An impact measurement framework template structures how you plan to collect evidence — theory of change, indicator selection, data sources, and collection schedule. You need both, in sequence: the framework first to define what you will track and why, the report template second to organize what you found. Organizations that skip the framework and jump straight to a template typically fill it with output counts (workshops held, dollars deployed) rather than outcome evidence, because they never defined what outcomes to measure before collecting.

Make the impact report the byproduct of clean data, not a project of its own.

The strongest reports come out of data that was bound from the moment of intake — one participant ID across every form, every survey, every follow-up. Open responses themed as they arrive. One source feeds the board version, the funder version, and the community version with no reconciliation between them.