impact-report
GitHub用于撰写非营利组织影响力或年度报告,将活动转化为成果数据与受益人故事。提供结构化模板,涵盖使命、成果、财务及募捐呼吁,强调透明度和信任建立,辅助向捐赠者展示资金成效。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add mohitagw15856/pm-claude-skills --skill impact-report -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "impact-report",
"description": "Write a compelling nonprofit impact or annual report that shows donors what their money achieved. Use when asked to write an impact report, an annual report, a grant outcomes report, or to report results to funders\/donors. Produces a structured report — mission and year in brief, outcomes with real numbers and a beneficiary story, financials at a glance, and a forward ask — that builds trust and renews giving."
}
Impact Report Skill
Donors give again when they can see what their last gift did. An impact report turns activity into outcomes — not "we ran 40 workshops" but "320 people found work, here's one of them" — and pairs the numbers with a human story and honest financials. This skill structures that report so it earns trust and the next gift.
Working from a brief
Given "write our annual impact report" with a few stats, produce the full report anyway — structure it around the outcomes provided, and mark any figure or story you invent as (example — replace with real data) so the org swaps in true numbers. Never fabricate results as if real; never withhold for missing detail.
Required Inputs
Ask for these only if they aren't already provided (else infer and label for replacement):
- Organisation & mission — who you are and the change you exist to create.
- The period & programs — what you did this year, for whom.
- Outcomes & numbers — results achieved (people served, outcomes, before/after), with real figures.
- A story — a beneficiary or moment that makes the impact concrete.
- Financials & audience — income/spend at a high level, and who's reading (donors, funders, board).
Output Format
[Organisation] Impact Report — [period]
- Opening / letter — a short, warm note from leadership: the year in one paragraph and a thank-you to supporters.
- Mission & the need — the problem you address, briefly, so impact has context.
- Impact by the numbers — the headline outcomes, as outcomes not activities, with real figures (and trend vs. last year where possible).
- Story of change — one concrete beneficiary story that humanises the numbers.
- Programs in brief — what each program achieved (kept tight).
- Financials at a glance — income and how funds were used (a simple breakdown; donors want to see efficiency and honesty).
- Thanks & forward look — gratitude, what's next, and a clear, warm ask to keep supporting.
Mark invented numbers/stories as (example — replace with real data).
Quality Checks
- Reports outcomes (change achieved), not just activities (things done)
- Real numbers are used, with year-over-year context where possible — invented ones clearly marked
- At least one concrete beneficiary story humanises the data
- Financials are shown honestly and simply (where the money went)
- Donors are thanked and given a clear forward ask
- Tone is warm and credible, not corporate or self-congratulatory
Anti-Patterns
- Do not list activities as if they were impact — tie everything to outcomes
- Do not present invented figures as real — mark placeholders for the org to replace
- Do not hide or omit financials — transparency is what earns repeat giving
- Do not drown the human story in statistics — pair numbers with one real face
- Do not forget the ask — an impact report is also a fundraising moment
Based On
Nonprofit reporting and donor-stewardship practice — outcomes over activities, evidence plus story, transparent financials, and a stewardship ask.
Version History
- a38bc30 Current 2026-07-05 11:36


