Need
What issue are people experiencing, and how does it affect daily life, access, participation or outcomes?
Insights / The Needs Assessment Lens
Needs Assessment Framework
A practical framework for understanding community needs, evidence, barriers, assets, readiness and realistic program responses.
Framework summary
A needs assessment should not only list problems. It should clarify the nature of need, the evidence behind it and the conditions required for a useful response.
The framework
Use this section as a practical reference when planning, facilitating or reviewing work with communities and stakeholders.
What issue are people experiencing, and how does it affect daily life, access, participation or outcomes?
What data, stories, observations, service patterns or community input support the assessment?
What prevents people from accessing support, participating or benefiting from available services?
What strengths, networks, relationships, knowledge and existing resources are already present?
Are communities, partners, systems and services ready to respond in a realistic way?
What action is proportionate, practical and aligned with the evidence and context?
When to use it
This page is designed to help professionals apply the framework in practical settings, not just read it as theory.
Use this lens before designing a new program or changing an existing one.
Use it to prepare better questions and identify what information is missing.
Use it to understand why people may not be accessing or benefiting from services.
Use it to identify what partners can contribute and where gaps remain.
Practice note. This framework is most useful when it is adapted to the community, organisation, issue and decision-making context involved.
Practice questions
Use these questions to test whether your planning is clear, respectful and practical.
Common risks
These risks can reduce trust, weaken participation or make the work less useful.
High demand can signal need, but it can also reflect visibility, access or system design.
A deficit-only assessment can overlook community strengths and existing networks.
A preferred solution can distort the assessment if it is chosen before the need is understood.
Apply the framework
This framework can support planning, consultation, needs assessment, facilitation, stakeholder engagement and community-centred program work.
The community, issue, program or event you are working with.
The kind of support you need: advice, facilitation, consultation, needs assessment or engagement planning.
Email:
blaise@itabelo.com
Mobile:
0402 493 675
Insights / The Needs Assessment Lens
Needs Assessment Framework
A practical framework for understanding community needs, evidence, barriers, assets, readiness and realistic program responses.
Framework summary
A needs assessment should not only list problems. It should clarify the nature of need, the evidence behind it and the conditions required for a useful response.
The framework
Use this section as a practical reference when planning, facilitating or reviewing work with communities and stakeholders.
What issue are people experiencing, and how does it affect daily life, access, participation or outcomes?
What data, stories, observations, service patterns or community input support the assessment?
What prevents people from accessing support, participating or benefiting from available services?
What strengths, networks, relationships, knowledge and existing resources are already present?
Are communities, partners, systems and services ready to respond in a realistic way?
What action is proportionate, practical and aligned with the evidence and context?
When to use it
This page is designed to help professionals apply the framework in practical settings, not just read it as theory.
Use this lens before designing a new program or changing an existing one.
Use it to prepare better questions and identify what information is missing.
Use it to understand why people may not be accessing or benefiting from services.
Use it to identify what partners can contribute and where gaps remain.
Practice note. This framework is most useful when it is adapted to the community, organisation, issue and decision-making context involved.
Practice questions
Use these questions to test whether your planning is clear, respectful and practical.
Common risks
These risks can reduce trust, weaken participation or make the work less useful.
High demand can signal need, but it can also reflect visibility, access or system design.
A deficit-only assessment can overlook community strengths and existing networks.
A preferred solution can distort the assessment if it is chosen before the need is understood.
Apply the framework
This framework can support planning, consultation, needs assessment, facilitation, stakeholder engagement and community-centred program work.
The community, issue, program or event you are working with.
The kind of support you need: advice, facilitation, consultation, needs assessment or engagement planning.
Email:
blaise@itabelo.com
Mobile:
0402 493 675