Number of client organizations as of the end of the reporting period in which half or more of the lead founder(s) represent a specific group (for example, women).
Number of client organizations as of the end of the reporting period in which half or more of the lead founder(s) represent a specific group (for example, women).
Organizations should footnote all assumptions used, including source of data. Organizations should also footnote the types of enterprises that were clients, using Client Type (PD7993).
This metric is intended to capture the number of client organizations founded by individuals representing a particular group through use in combination with Target Stakeholder Demographic (PD5752) to first define the group of interest (for example, women, historically marginalized or excluded groups, or persons with disabilities). Then, this metric can be used to capture the number of investee companies within a portfolio who were founded by that group.
Founder(s) counted must retain an active role in the organization as of the end of the reporting period. An active role may include acting in an advisory capacity for key decisions. It need not necessarily require a full-time role at the organization.
Client organizations are synonymous with investees for impact investors.
If using this metric to capture the number of women-founded investees, practitioners may refer to specific gender benchmarks and application guidance as needed, such as those specified by the 2X Challenge (www.2xchallenge.org).
This metric may help describe the HOW MUCH Scale dimension, which helps estimate the number of the targeted stakeholders experiencing the outcome. For more on the alignment of IRIS metrics to the five dimensions of impact, see IRIS+ and the Five Dimensions of Impact (https://iris.thegiin.org/document/iris-and-the-five-dimensions/). No single metric is sufficient to understand an impact; rather, metrics are selected as a set across all dimensions of impact. The selection of metrics to measure and describe the five dimensions should be based on best practice and evidence.
Metrics identified as "cross-category" are those that are relevant to any IRIS+ Impact Category or Impact Theme (i.e., these metrics are not specific to any particular industry/category or theme).