Subscribe for Course Updates

Be the first to know when new training courses are scheduled or dates are updated.

Verification code Click image to refresh

You can unsubscribe at any time • training@fdc-k.org

Chat with our consultants

Results Based Humanitarian Programming Training Course

Online Training Download PDF
Upcoming Training Schedules 14 locations
Location Duration Next Start Date Dates Available Action
Nairobi, Kenya 10 days Jul 13, 2026 104 dates
Accra, Ghana 10 days Jul 13, 2026 31 dates
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 10 days Jul 13, 2026 31 dates
Cape Town, South Africa 10 days Jul 13, 2026 52 dates
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania 10 days Jul 20, 2026 26 dates
Dubai, UAE 10 days Jul 20, 2026 52 dates
Istanbul, Turkey 10 days Jul 20, 2026 16 dates
Kampala, Uganda 10 days Aug 24, 2026 31 dates
Kigali, Rwanda 10 days Jul 20, 2026 52 dates
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 10 days Aug 3, 2026 31 dates
Mombasa, Kenya 10 days Jul 27, 2026 52 dates
Pretoria, South Africa 10 days Jul 13, 2026 52 dates
Singapore 10 days Jul 27, 2026 31 dates
Zanzibar, Tanzania 10 days Jul 13, 2026 16 dates

Results-Based Humanitarian Programming Training Course

Course Overview

The Results-Based Humanitarian Programming Training Course is a comprehensive professional development program designed to strengthen the capacity of humanitarian organizations, government institutions, United Nations agencies, international and local NGOs, donor-funded projects, development partners, and emergency response organizations in designing, implementing, managing, monitoring, and evaluating results-oriented humanitarian programs. The course equips participants with advanced knowledge and practical skills in Results-Based Management (RBM), results-based humanitarian programming, Theory of Change, Logical Framework Approach (Logframe), humanitarian project cycle management, Monitoring, Evaluation, Accountability and Learning (MEAL), performance measurement, indicator development, risk management, humanitarian coordination, evidence-based decision-making, and adaptive programming. Participants develop practical competencies to design and manage humanitarian interventions that deliver measurable outcomes, maximize impact, strengthen accountability, and improve the lives of crisis-affected populations.

As humanitarian crises become increasingly complex due to armed conflict, climate change, natural disasters, forced displacement, food insecurity, and public health emergencies, organizations require results-focused programming approaches that ensure effective utilization of resources and measurable humanitarian outcomes. This training introduces internationally recognized frameworks including Results-Based Management (RBM), the Humanitarian Programme Cycle (HPC), Sphere Humanitarian Standards, Core Humanitarian Standard (CHS), OECD-DAC Evaluation Criteria, Accountability to Affected Populations (AAP), and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Participants learn how to align humanitarian interventions with strategic objectives, develop comprehensive results frameworks, establish performance indicators, manage program risks, monitor implementation, evaluate outcomes, and integrate learning into continuous program improvement.

Throughout the course, participants gain practical experience in situation analysis, stakeholder engagement, humanitarian needs assessment, program design, Theory of Change development, Logical Framework Matrix preparation, indicator selection, baseline and endline studies, digital data collection, humanitarian information management, dashboard development, statistical analysis, performance reporting, evaluation methodologies, and organizational learning. Practical exercises, simulations, and real-world humanitarian case studies enable participants to strengthen program quality, improve resource allocation, enhance coordination, support adaptive management, and promote accountability through data-driven humanitarian programming across sectors such as health, nutrition, food security, WASH, shelter, education, livelihoods, protection, and disaster risk reduction.

Upon successful completion of this course, participants will possess the strategic, managerial, and technical skills required to design, implement, monitor, evaluate, and continuously improve results-based humanitarian programs that deliver measurable and sustainable outcomes. Organizations will benefit from improved program effectiveness, stronger accountability systems, enhanced donor compliance, better monitoring and evaluation practices, increased operational efficiency, evidence-based decision-making, improved stakeholder confidence, and strengthened institutional capacity to deliver high-impact humanitarian assistance in complex and rapidly evolving environments.

Course Objectives

1.     Understand the principles and frameworks of Results-Based Humanitarian Programming.

2.     Design humanitarian programs using Results-Based Management (RBM) approaches.

3.     Develop Theory of Change models and Logical Framework Matrices.

4.     Establish measurable performance indicators and results frameworks.

5.     Integrate Monitoring, Evaluation, Accountability and Learning (MEAL) into humanitarian programming.

6.     Apply humanitarian standards and accountability principles throughout the program cycle.

7.     Conduct risk analysis and adaptive program management.

8.     Utilize digital technologies for monitoring, reporting, and performance management.

9.     Strengthen evidence-based decision-making through quality data analysis.

10.  Improve organizational effectiveness by delivering measurable humanitarian results.

Organizational Benefits

1.     Enhanced capacity to design and implement results-oriented humanitarian programs.

2.     Improved accountability, transparency, and donor compliance.

3.     Strengthened Monitoring, Evaluation, Accountability and Learning (MEAL) systems.

4.     Better strategic planning and evidence-based decision-making.

5.     Improved program performance monitoring and reporting.

6.     Increased efficiency in resource allocation and humanitarian response.

7.     Enhanced coordination among humanitarian partners and stakeholders.

8.     Stronger organizational learning and adaptive management capacity.

9.     Improved measurement of program outcomes, impact, and sustainability.

10.  Increased organizational credibility through effective delivery of measurable humanitarian results.

Target Participants

This course is designed for Humanitarian Program Managers, Project Managers, MEAL Specialists, Monitoring and Evaluation Officers, NGO Directors, UN Agency Personnel, Government Officials, Humanitarian Coordinators, Development Practitioners, Emergency Response Coordinators, Information Management Officers, Data Analysts, Donor-Funded Project Managers, Public Health Specialists, Food Security Officers, Nutrition Specialists, WASH Coordinators, Shelter Officers, Protection Officers, Livelihood Specialists, Disaster Risk Management Professionals, Community Development Officers, Researchers, Consultants, Policy Analysts, Accountability Officers, Learning and Knowledge Management Specialists, and professionals responsible for humanitarian program planning, implementation, monitoring, evaluation, and performance management.

Course Outline

Module 1: Foundations of Results-Based Humanitarian Programming

·       Principles of Results-Based Management (RBM)

·       Humanitarian Programme Cycle (HPC)

·       Humanitarian programming principles

·       Core Humanitarian Standard (CHS)

·       Sphere Humanitarian Standards

·       Results chains and program logic

General Case Study: Designing a results-based humanitarian response framework for a multi-sector emergency.

Module 2: Situation Analysis and Humanitarian Needs Assessment

·       Context analysis

·       Humanitarian needs assessment

·       Stakeholder analysis

·       Problem analysis

·       Capacity assessment

·       Priority setting

General Case Study: Conducting comprehensive needs analysis to inform humanitarian program design.

Module 3: Results Framework and Theory of Change

·       Results framework development

·       Theory of Change design

·       Outcome mapping

·       Results chains

·       Strategic objectives

·       Assumption analysis

General Case Study: Developing a Theory of Change for a resilience-building humanitarian program.

Module 4: Logical Framework Approach (Logframe)

·       Logframe design

·       Goal, outcome, output formulation

·       Activity planning

·       Indicator development

·       Means of verification

·       Risk and assumption management

General Case Study: Preparing a Logical Framework Matrix for a donor-funded humanitarian project.

Module 5: Monitoring Systems and Performance Measurement

·       Monitoring plans

·       Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)

·       Baseline and endline surveys

·       Routine monitoring

·       Data quality assurance

·       Performance tracking

General Case Study: Designing a performance monitoring system for humanitarian operations.

Module 6: Evaluation and Learning

·       Evaluation planning

·       Mid-term evaluations

·       Final evaluations

·       Impact assessment

·       Organizational learning

·       Lessons learned documentation

General Case Study: Evaluating humanitarian program effectiveness using OECD-DAC criteria.

Module 7: Accountability to Affected Populations (AAP)

·       Accountability principles

·       Community engagement

·       Feedback and complaint mechanisms

·       Protection mainstreaming

·       Participation strategies

·       Ethical programming

General Case Study: Developing accountability systems for refugee assistance programs.

Module 8: Data Management and Digital Technologies

·       Digital data collection

·       Mobile monitoring tools

·       Humanitarian information systems

·       Dashboard development

·       Data visualization

·       Cloud-based reporting

General Case Study: Implementing digital performance monitoring for emergency response projects.

Module 9: Risk Management and Adaptive Programming

·       Program risk analysis

·       Adaptive management

·       Scenario planning

·       Contingency planning

·       Operational resilience

·       Continuous improvement

General Case Study: Adapting humanitarian programs in response to changing conflict dynamics.

Module 10: Humanitarian Coordination and Partnership Management

·       Cluster coordination

·       Stakeholder collaboration

·       Partnership frameworks

·       Resource mobilization

·       Coordination mechanisms

·       Communication strategies

General Case Study: Strengthening humanitarian coordination for integrated emergency response.

Module 11: Reporting, Compliance and Donor Requirements

·       Donor reporting

·       Results reporting

·       Narrative reporting

·       Financial accountability

·       Compliance monitoring

·       Audit preparedness

General Case Study: Preparing comprehensive donor reports demonstrating measurable humanitarian outcomes.

Module 12: Strategic Leadership and Sustainable Results

·       Strategic leadership

·       Organizational performance management

·       Innovation in humanitarian programming

·       Institutional capacity strengthening

·       Sustainability planning

·       Future trends in results-based programming

General Case Study: Developing an organizational strategy for institutionalizing results-based humanitarian programming across multiple country operations.

General Information

1.     Customized Training: All our courses can be tailored to meet the specific needs of participants.

2.     Language Proficiency: Participants should have a good command of the English language.

3.     Comprehensive Learning: Our training includes well-structured presentations, practical exercises, web-based tutorials, and collaborative group work. Our facilitators are seasoned experts with over a decade of experience.

4.     Certification: Upon successful completion of training, participants will receive a certificate from Foscore Development Center (FDC-K).

5.     Training Locations: Training sessions are conducted at Foscore Development Center (FDC-K) centers. We also offer options for in-house and online training, customized to the client's schedule.

6.     Flexible Duration: Course durations are adaptable, and content can be adjusted to fit the required number of days.

7.     Onsite Training Inclusions: The course fee for onsite training covers facilitation, training materials, two coffee breaks, a buffet lunch, and a Certificate of Successful Completion. Participants are responsible for their travel expenses, airport transfers, visa applications, dinners, health/accident insurance, and personal expenses.

8.     Additional Services: Accommodation, pickup services, freight booking, and visa processing arrangements are available upon request at discounted rates.

9.     Equipment: Tablets and laptops can be provided to participants at an additional cost.

10.  Post-Training Support: We offer one year of free consultation and coaching after the course.

11.  Group Discounts: Register as a group of more than two and enjoy a discount ranging from 10% to 50%.

12.  Payment Terms: Payment should be made before the commencement of the training or as mutually agreed upon, to the Foscore Development Center account. This ensures better preparation for your training.

13.  Contact Us: For any inquiries, please reach out to us at training@fdc-k.org or call us at +254712260031.

14.  Website: Visit our website at www.fdc-k.org for more information.

 

 

Explore:

14 locations — Jump to booking

Ready to advance your career?

Join thousands of professionals from 30+ countries trained by FDC — classroom sessions across Africa, Middle East & Asia.

Enquire

Captcha code Click image to refresh

training@fdc-k.org • +254 712 260 031 • Nairobi, Kenya