Business Today

Number Cruncher

HER COMPANY IS GATHERING PRIMARY DATA TO BOOST SOCIAL SECTOR DEVELOPMEN­T AND BUILDING A TECH PLATFORM TO MEASURE NGO IMPACT.

- By SANGHAMITR­A MANDAL

EVERY NUMBER TELLS a story, and researcher­s, policymake­rs and enablers must understand it to jump-start the social developmen­t sector. Prerna Mukharya, an MA in Economics from Boston University, is a firm believer in that vision.

So, she took a leap of faith seven years ago and set up Outline India (OI), a for-profit social data enterprise. Think of it as a Big Data firm with three big difference­s. First, Mukharya and her team conduct on-field surveys across Indian hinterland to gather primary data. “This is vast, considerin­g 66 per cent people live in rural India and very little data is available regarding their quality of life, needs and expectatio­ns,” she says. So, OI gathers loads of micro datasets covering key segments such as health, education, water, gender, sanitation and even agricultur­e. “We do a lot more, but health and education are the pillars of policymaki­ng,” she says. Next, OI analyses the data and shares it with ministries, think tanks, NGOs, CSR clients, Ivy League universiti­es – every entity that has the power to ensure greater social good. The company has worked across 26 states and UTs, 8,000-plus villages and held five million interactio­ns to build its social sector database.

All these are big achievemen­ts for a company that runs out of a rented place in Gurgaon and is bootstrapp­ed. The founder put in ` 2 lakh and initially worked with interns and part-timers (at present, OI is a 22-member team with a field staff varying between 20-80).

Mukharya is now developing Track Your Metrics (TYM), a tech platform that will help NGOs measure the impact they are having and enable CSR bodies to track their fund spend at zero unit cost. “A lot of aid is coming to India and a lot of philanthro­pic work is going on. But again, we have a data black hole here,” says Mukharya. She says TYM can automate survey formulatio­n, but “the best part is it can connect donors with NGOs, making fundraisin­g hassle-free”.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH BY SHEKHAR GHOSH ??
PHOTOGRAPH BY SHEKHAR GHOSH

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