This article explores evaluation as a critical component of communication strategies in faith-based organizations. By setting clear goals, selecting meaningful indicators, and integrating stakeholder feedback, organizations ensure their communication remains impactful, credible, and aligned with mission and values. Evaluation is especially vital in resource-constrained contexts, where systematic assessment maximizes the effectiveness of limited resources. Drawing on case studies from Compassion International, World Vision, Islamic Relief Worldwide, BRAC, and Caritas Internationalis, the article demonstrates diverse strategies for embedding evaluation into communication practice. It highlights both quantitative tools — analytics, engagement metrics, conversion rates — and qualitative mechanisms — surveys, interviews, and focus groups — as essential for comprehensive assessment. For scholars, the article situates communication evaluation within nonprofit accountability and effectiveness debates. For practitioners, it provides actionable methods to refine outreach, strengthen trust, and sustain mission-driven impact.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.