12 Nov, 2025

Ask Nicole: Why Theories of Change and Logic Models Aren’t Useful

By |2025-11-10T15:25:13-05:00November 12th, 2025|Categories: Program, Service, & Campaign Design|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

Square graphic with a purple border featuring the title “Ask Nicole” at the top. Below is a photo of Nicole Clark smiling, wearing a yellow top and gold earrings. Across the lower part of the image is a purple banner with white text that reads: “Why Theories of Change and Logic Models Aren’t Useful.” At the bottom, the Nicole Clark Consulting logo appears with the tagline “Raise Your Voice for Women & Girls of Color.”
Have a question you’d like to be featured? Let me know.

Several years ago, I worked on a proposal for a collaborative project. The RFP asked for a narrative and a logic model for the process we were proposing. We spent time crafting both, but I remember thinking: What’s the point of requiring both, especially if you’re still going to come back with additional questions? 

If the narrative is clear and if we can articulate what we’re trying to do, isn’t that enough?

I’ve also had nonprofit clients tell me they only create logic models funding, and never revisit them after submitting their proposal.. Or that they only build ToCs when funders require them, not because they find them useful. But the most striking moment was during a funder ToC session I facilitated, where program officers openly questioned whether they themselves would use the tool once it was built.

Theories of change (ToCs) and logic models are treated as standard tools. For some funders, they’re a default request to understand a grantee’s vision, approach, and impact. For some nonprofits, they’re just another part of the proposal process.

But they aren’t useful.

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17 Apr, 2024

Ask Nicole: Managing Nonprofit Mission & Funder Demands

By |2024-04-17T11:01:37-04:00April 17th, 2024|Categories: Strategic Planning & Sustainability|Tags: , , |0 Comments

Have a question you’d like to be featured? Let me know.

I’ve been fortunate to work with a variety of client organizations, including philantrophy.

Navigating grantee-funder relationships while staying true to your mission is complex. It’s a landscape where aspirations to create meaningful change often intersect with the practicalities of securing funding.

However, amidst the pursuit of financial support, I’ve observed how nonprofits, in their eagerness to access resources, may place themselves in funding relationships that run counter to their organizational mission.

Ideally, grantees should be able to leverage a grantee-funder relationship while also feeling confident to push back against unreasonable demands and not lose sight of their mission. This delicate balancing act underscores the complexity and importance of navigating the grantee-funder relationship with confidence and integrity.

Here are five tips for maintaining your organizational mission while engaging building relationships with funders:

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