Date: Tuesday, December 16, 2025
I’m Kathleen Lis Dean from The Rucks Group, where we help teams connect the dots between data, people, and purpose. Across very different contexts, one lesson stands out: data alone doesn’t create change – people do.
Evaluation is more than gathering and reporting information; what matters is how teams interpret that information together. Organizational theorist Karl Weick called this process sensemaking –the way people interpret what’s happening and decide what it means. For evaluators, understanding sensemaking is essential. It helps us anticipate how findings will be understood, how learning unfolds in groups, and how evaluation can inform – not just document – the initiatives we support. When evaluation incorporates sensemaking, data become a foundation for shared learning, reflection, and action.
Weick described seven properties that shape how people make meaning from information. Each offers insight into how evaluators can support reflection, learning, and decision-making.
Stakeholders interpret findings through their roles and experiences. By inviting multiple perspectives, evaluators reveal a fuller picture of what data means and ensure insights resonate across the system.
Sensemaking happens through dialogue. Evaluators can design spaces – workshops, meetings, and conversations – that surface assumptions and build shared understanding.
People understand the present by connecting it to the past. Reflection tools like timelines or incident maps help teams link past actions to current outcomes and guide future choices.
A few vivid stories or metrics often shape interpretation. Evaluators can help teams notice why these stand out and balance them with other evidence.
The questions we ask influence what becomes meaningful. Thoughtful inquiry allows evaluators to guide learning, not just record results.
People act on findings that feel logical and useful. Evaluators can enhance use by presenting findings clearly and accessibly to support informed action.
Learning continues beyond a report. Regular reflection and check-ins help teams adapt insights to new data and shifting contexts.
Together, these properties remind us that evaluation is about more than producing data—it’s about helping people make meaning and act on it. When evaluators attend to how sensemaking happens, we can better facilitate shared understanding and help teams learn and adapt with purpose.
At The Rucks Group, we integrate sensemaking into evaluation by using tools that foster reflection and collaboration throughout a project’s lifecycle:
When we help teams create shared understanding, evaluation becomes more than a report – it becomes a pathway to learning, connection, and meaningful change. By embedding sensemaking into our evaluation practice, we help move teams from data to dialogue to decisions and, ultimately, toward collective learning that drives improvement.
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