The practice of impact measurement and management (IMM) is crucial to the impact investment field, yet inherently complex. While investors can leverage a growing body of tools and expertise, challenges remain in effectively aggregating, attributing, and analyzing impact. Over the past year, MacArthur’s development of its IMM report on the Catalytic Capital Consortium (C3) investments provided an opportunity to reflect on their approach, process, and lessons learned.
One key challenge is aggregation. Combining quantifiable “units” of impact across a diverse portfolio is difficult, particularly when investments address multiple Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) across sectors like climate solutions, affordable housing, community development, and smallholder farming. Impact metrics, such as job creation, vary significantly in depth and context. For example, a loan that generates 500 retail jobs in a neighborhood cannot be meaningfully compared to an investment supporting 20 jobs for individuals on the autism spectrum, despite the numerical sum being 520 jobs. Each investment’s unique impact thesis must be assessed independently.
Attribution presents a second challenge. Determining how much impact can be credited to a particular investor is complicated when multiple investors contribute to an outcome. For instance, if a social enterprise expands employment from 20 to 100 workers with combined investor support, it is difficult to assign precise impact to each investor. MacArthur acknowledges its contributions without claiming absolute attribution, recognizing that outcomes are often shared among multiple stakeholders.
Analysis is the third challenge. Impact data alone lacks context, making it difficult to assess significance without relevant benchmarks or comparisons. For example, understanding the meaning of 500 jobs created requires knowing the intended target or potential alternative outcomes. While benchmarks for financial performance are well-established, the diversity of impact goals complicates the development of comparable metrics and indices.
To address these challenges, MacArthur applies IMM principles focused on minimizing data collection burden for investees, leveraging industry standards where possible, and prioritizing learning. Three core practices underpin their approach: setting measurable impact targets, tracking capital mobilized, and evaluating financial returns relative to expectations. Measurable targets allow performance assessment across diverse investments, comparing outcomes against initial goals rather than aggregating disparate metrics. Tracking capital mobilized provides insight into the extent to which MacArthur’s investments catalyze additional financing, with estimates showing $128.5 million in C3 investments mobilizing between $1.4 and $3.1 billion in additional capital. Financial performance is evaluated against investment-specific expectations rather than market benchmarks, ensuring alignment between impact and financial results.
Applying these practices, MacArthur combines quantitative and qualitative assessments to monitor impact progress and generate learning. This ongoing approach informs future investments and strengthens the broader field of impact investing. Moving forward, the organization intends to refine its IMM methodologies further, learning from peers to enhance measurement, management, and understanding of impact across complex portfolios.






