Research, Data Analytics, and Business Intelligence Cyprus

Quantitative and Qualitative Research Methods in NGO Programs Course

When donors ask for proof of impact, can you provide credible evidence that goes beyond anecdotal stories? NGO professionals worldwide face increasing pressure to demonstrate program effectiveness through rigorous research methods, yet many rely on weak data collection approaches that fail to capture real change. The gap between good intentions and measurable outcomes is costing organizations funding, credibility, and the ability to scale successful interventions.

This course transforms your approach to program research by providing systematic methods for designing studies, collecting reliable data, and analyzing results that stakeholders trust. Whether you manage health initiatives, education programs, or community development projects, you'll learn to apply both quantitative and qualitative research techniques that generate actionable insights. Can you confidently defend your methodology when funders challenge your findings or regulatory bodies audit your impact claims?

Duration
5 Days
Duration
Certificate
Certificate
Included
Delivery
Instructor-Led
Delivery
Level
Intermediate
Level
Download Brochure

Choose Your Preferred Training Format

Training Options

Reserve Your Spot Today — Pay When You're Ready!

Live Online Training

Join from anywhere with interactive virtual sessions

Starts
Ends
Weekend (4 Wks)
USD 850
Starts
Ends
Mon - Fri (5 Days)
USD 850
Starts
Ends
Weekend (4 Wks)
USD 850
Starts
Ends
Mon - Fri (5 Days)
USD 850
Starts
Ends
Weekend (4 Wks)
USD 850
Starts
Ends
Mon - Fri (5 Days)
USD 850
Starts
Ends
Weekend (4 Wks)
USD 850

Classroom Training

In-person sessions at premier locations

Nairobi Kenya
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 1,600
Kigali Rwanda
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 1,900
Dubai United Arab Emirates (UAE)
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 4,100
Zanzibar Tanzania
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 2,400
Customized Content
Team Training
Flexible Dates

In-person training at our premier venues — pick a city and date that works for you.

Location Duration Fee Language
Nairobi, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,600 English See dates & reserve →
Kigali, Rwanda Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,900 English See dates & reserve →
Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE) Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 4,100 English See dates & reserve →
Zanzibar, Tanzania Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,400 English See dates & reserve →
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,400 English See dates & reserve →
Abuja, Nigeria Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,800 English See dates & reserve →
Mombasa, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,700 English See dates & reserve →
Cape Town, South Africa Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,900 English See dates & reserve →
Johannesburg, South Africa Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,500 English See dates & reserve →
Pretoria, South Africa Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,300 English See dates & reserve →
Kampala, Uganda Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,900 English See dates & reserve →
Lagos, Nigeria Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,500 English See dates & reserve →
Arusha, Tanzania Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,000 English See dates & reserve →
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,900 English See dates & reserve →
Naivasha, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,700 English See dates & reserve →

Live, instructor-led sessions you can join from anywhere — pick the next start date below.

Code Start Date End Date Duration Fee
QQR-01 Weekend (4 Weeks) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Reserve team seats →
QQR-01 Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Reserve team seats →
QQR-01 Weekend (4 Weeks) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Reserve team seats →
QQR-01 Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Reserve team seats →
QQR-01 Weekend (4 Weeks) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Reserve team seats →
QQR-01 Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Reserve team seats →
QQR-01 Weekend (4 Weeks) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Reserve team seats →

Our instructor comes to your office — same curriculum and accredited certificate, with case studies built around the work your team actually does.

Team Training

Train your entire team together in a familiar environment for better collaboration

Fully Customized

Content tailored to your industry, tools, and specific business challenges

Cost Effective

Save on travel & accommodation costs when training multiple employees

Flexible Scheduling

Choose dates that work best for your team's availability and projects

How It Works
1
Request a Quote

Tell us about your team size, preferred dates, and training goals

2
Get a Custom Proposal

Receive a tailored training plan and competitive pricing within 24 hours

3
We Come to You

Our certified trainer arrives ready to deliver impactful, hands-on training

Ready to upskill your team on Quantitative and Qualitative Research Methods in NGO Programs?

No commitment required · Response within 24 hours

About the Course

NGO programs succeed when they can prove what works, why it works, and for whom it works. This requires moving beyond basic monitoring and evaluation to employ rigorous research methods that capture complex social change. You need to demonstrate impact through statistical analysis while also understanding the human stories behind the numbers. Your stakeholders - from community members to international donors - demand evidence that your interventions create lasting change, reduce suffering, and justify continued investment.

This course provides a systematic approach to research design that integrates quantitative measurement with qualitative understanding. You'll master survey design and statistical analysis while also learning ethnographic methods, focus group facilitation, and narrative analysis. The curriculum covers randomized controlled trials, quasi-experimental designs, participatory action research, and mixed-methods approaches specifically adapted for NGO contexts where perfect experimental conditions rarely exist.

Real NGO work involves resource constraints, political sensitivities, and complex stakeholder dynamics. This course acknowledges these realities and teaches research methods that generate credible evidence within typical organizational limitations - limited budgets, short timeframes, diverse communities, and competing programmatic priorities.


Target Audience

This course serves NGO professionals who must design, implement, and evaluate research studies that demonstrate program impact and inform strategic decisions.

This course is designed for:

  • Program Managers responsible for measuring intervention outcomes and reporting to donors
  • Monitoring and Evaluation Specialists designing data collection systems and impact assessments
  • Research Coordinators conducting studies to evaluate program effectiveness and inform scaling decisions
  • Project Directors accountable for demonstrating results to boards, funders, and regulatory bodies
  • Field Operations Managers collecting data from beneficiaries and community stakeholders
  • Grant Writers requiring evidence-based program descriptions and outcome projections
  • Program Officers at foundations evaluating NGO proposals and monitoring grantee performance
  • Community Development Specialists engaging local populations in participatory research processes
  • Policy Advocates using research findings to influence government decisions and public opinion
  • Anyone in NGO leadership accountable for program effectiveness and organizational learning

Course Objectives

This course equips you to design rigorous research studies, execute data collection protocols, and analyze findings that demonstrate NGO program impact, inform strategic decisions, and satisfy stakeholder accountability requirements.

By the end of this course, you'll be able to:

  • Assess program contexts to determine appropriate research designs that balance methodological rigor with practical constraints
  • Design quantitative data collection instruments including surveys, questionnaires, and measurement protocols
  • Implement qualitative research methods including interviews, focus groups, and ethnographic observation techniques
  • Apply statistical analysis techniques to interpret quantitative data and identify significant program effects
  • Analyze qualitative data using coding frameworks and thematic analysis to extract meaningful insights
  • Evaluate research quality using validity, reliability, and bias assessment criteria appropriate for NGO contexts
  • Synthesize mixed-methods findings into compelling evidence narratives that demonstrate program impact
  • Create research reports and presentations that communicate findings effectively to diverse stakeholder audiences

Requirements & Prerequisites

Participants should have basic experience with NGO programming and familiarity with monitoring and evaluation concepts. Previous exposure to data collection or analysis is helpful but not required. Access to a computer with internet connectivity for hands-on exercises is necessary.


Local Application and Business Return

How participants can apply the training in local operating conditions, and the return their organisation can plan for.

How participants apply this

Participants apply this course by designing evaluation questions that match program objectives, then choosing the right mix of surveys, interviews, focus groups, and administrative records to answer them. In Cyprus, that means tailoring methods to the realities of small organizational teams, multilingual stakeholders, and projects that often need clear donor-ready reporting. They learn how to define indicators, reduce bias in data collection, and organize evidence so it can be used for grant renewals, board reporting, and program improvement. The course also helps staff interpret qualitative findings alongside numbers, so they can explain not only whether change happened, but why it happened. That makes the evidence more useful for both internal learning and external accountability.

Expected ROI

Within 6–12 months, trained staff usually produce stronger monitoring and evaluation plans, cleaner datasets, and reports that are easier for funders to trust. Organizations can expect fewer ad hoc surveys, better alignment between activities and outcomes, and more usable lessons for redesigning programs. The practical payoff is better grant competitiveness, faster internal decision-making, and less risk of overstating impact. Over time, this can improve renewal prospects because leaders can show consistent evidence rather than isolated success stories.

Training Methodology

This is a practical, outcome-driven course designed to turn research aspirations into systematic data collection and credible evidence generation for NGO program impact.

Methodology includes:

  • Statistical analysis exercises using real NGO datasets to practice hypothesis testing and effect size calculation
  • Simulated field research scenarios where you navigate ethical dilemmas and methodological challenges common in development work
  • Research design audit tools that help you evaluate the quality and credibility of existing program evaluations
  • Stakeholder mapping frameworks that identify information needs and communication preferences of different audience segments
  • Industry case studies from health, education, microfinance, and community development sectors across multiple regions
  • Collaborative research planning sessions where teams design studies under realistic budget and timeline constraints
  • Critical reflection prompts that challenge assumptions about program logic and measurement approaches

Upcoming Sessions

Next available dates worldwide

Virtual

(Zoom) Training
USD 850
22nd Jun-26th Jun 2026

Nairobi

Kenya
USD 1,600
6th Jul-10th Jul 2026

Kigali

Rwanda
USD 1,900
13th Jul-17th Jul 2026

Dubai

United Arab Emirates (UAE)
USD 4,100
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Addis Ababa

Ethiopia
USD 2,400
22nd Jun-26th Jun 2026

Zanzibar

Tanzania
USD 2,400
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Abuja

Nigeria
USD 2,800
20th Jul-24th Jul 2026

Mombasa

Kenya
USD 1,700
22nd Jun-26th Jun 2026

Cape Town

South Africa
USD 3,900
13th Jul-17th Jul 2026

Johannesburg

South Africa
USD 3,800
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Kampala

Uganda
USD 1,900
22nd Jun-26th Jun 2026

Pretoria

South Africa
USD 3,300
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Lagos

Nigeria
USD 2,500
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Certification

Recognized credentials that advance your career

Participants who complete the Quantitative and Qualitative Research Methods in NGO Programs Program earn a Trainingcred Certificate of Achievement, demonstrating professional competence and alignment with global standards in learning and development.

NITA Accredited

Accredited by the National Industrial Training Authority, ensuring programs meet nationally recognized standards of quality and relevance.

CPD Certified

Recognized by the CPD Certification Service, ensuring every program meets internationally benchmarked standards of professional excellence.

Why this course earns its place on your CV

Accredited training, practitioner trainers, and peers on the same career track — the three things real expertise is built on.

Expert-Led Instruction

  • Learn from industry-leading researchers in both quantitative and qualitative methods.
  • Gain insider knowledge from experts currently active in global NGO projects.
  • Benefit from real-world insights that bridge theory with practical NGO needs.

Career Advancement

  • Equip yourself with dual research skills that top NGOs demand.
  • Boost your professional profile and become a prime candidate for leadership roles.
  • Master versatile research techniques that increase your employability across sectors.

Practical Application

  • Apply your skills in a capstone project with a real NGO, mentored by experts.
  • Transform raw data into compelling narratives that drive policy change.
  • Learn to design studies that deliver actionable insights for program improvement.

Tools and platforms relevant to this field

Examples Cyprus teams may encounter, and that may be featured in training where they support the confirmed course scope.

4

These are field-relevant examples, not a promise that every tool will be covered. Exact coverage depends on the confirmed course scope, participant needs, and delivery format.

  • Microsoft Excel Microsoft
    Commonly used by NGO teams for survey cleaning, basic descriptive analysis, budget-linked monitoring, and quick reporting to donors.
  • Power BI Microsoft
    Used to turn program and survey data into dashboards for management reporting, outcome tracking, and donor presentations.
  • Qualtrics Qualtrics
    Useful for structured surveys, pre/post assessments, and beneficiary feedback collection when an NGO needs a controlled digital data-collection workflow.
  • SurveyMonkey SurveyMonkey
    Used for rapid field surveys, stakeholder feedback, and simple online questionnaires when teams need a lightweight data-collection tool.

Real Results from Real Professionals

Thousands of professionals have transformed their careers through our training programs. Now, it's your turn.

Local market advisory

Course relevance for Cyprus

A country-specific view of market pressure, regulatory context, and practical business return behind this training.

  • Market context
  • Regulatory fit
  • Business application

Why this course matters in Cyprus

A market-specific advisory on the operating pressures this course helps teams address.

In Cyprus, this course matters because NGO teams are expected to demonstrate results credibly to donors, boards, and public partners, especially when programs touch health, education, social inclusion, or community development. Strong quantitative and qualitative methods help organizations move from activity reporting to evidence of outcomes, which improves funding decisions, program design, and accountability. The teams that benefit most are program managers, MEAL/M&E staff, grant writers, field officers, and senior leaders who must defend impact claims and choose what to scale.
Donor confidence depends on evidence

For Cypriot NGOs competing for grants and partnerships, rigorous research methods strengthen proposals, reduce reliance on anecdotal success stories, and make impact claims easier to defend.

Mixed methods improve decision quality

Combining surveys, administrative data, interviews, and focus groups helps organizations in Cyprus understand both measurable outcomes and the reasons behind them, which is especially useful in community-facing programs.

Better evaluation supports scaling

When a program’s results are backed by credible data, NGO leaders in Cyprus can decide whether to expand, adapt, or stop an intervention with more confidence and less reputational risk.

This training is timely because NGOs operating in Cyprus face the same global pressure to justify impact with credible evidence rather than narratives alone. As funders and partners increasingly expect defensible results, organizations that lack sound research design risk weaker proposals, less persuasive reporting, and poorer learning from implementation.

Regulatory context in Cyprus

The local regulators, laws, and frameworks shaping this discipline, with the curriculum mapped to what teams need to know.

2

Regulators

  • CYSTAT Provides official national statistics that NGOs and evaluators may use as contextual baseline data when designing or benchmarking research in Cyprus.
  • ODPCP Relevant because NGO research often collects beneficiary and staff data, making lawful handling, consent, and privacy safeguards essential.

Frameworks the course aligns with

  • 01 The Processing of Personal Data (Protection of the Individual) Law · 2001
  • 02 Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation) · 2016

Frequently Asked Questions

Got questions? We've gathered the answers to common queries to help you feel confident and informed.

Yes. Quantitative methods show how much change occurred, while qualitative methods explain why it happened and how beneficiaries experienced it. Using both gives NGO leaders stronger evidence for donors and better information for improving programs.

Yes. The course helps participants choose indicators, collect data consistently, and present results in a way that is easier for funders to assess. That usually improves the credibility of progress reports and final evaluations.

No. Smaller organizations often benefit the most because they need efficient, defensible methods that do not require large research teams. Good design helps them collect useful evidence without wasting limited time and resources.

Yes. The same research principles apply to health, education, livelihoods, social services, and community development projects. What changes is the sampling approach, the indicators, and the data-collection tools used in each program.

Trusted by 100+ organizations across 40+ countries

Premier Bank
Amnesty International
UNDT SACCO
UNFPA
USAID
AMREF Health Africa
KENTRADE
CPF
UFIA
UNICEF
Central Bank of Kenya
UNDP
GIZ
Premier Bank
Amnesty International
UNDT SACCO
UNFPA
USAID
AMREF Health Africa
KENTRADE
CPF
UFIA
UNICEF
Central Bank of Kenya
UNDP
GIZ
Barbours
Bank of Rwanda
RFA
Dahabshil Bank
Dorcas Aid
Finn Church Aid
KCB Foundation
Ministry of Education Saudi Arabia
NSSF Uganda
RBA
Reserve Bank of Malawi
WASREB Kenya
Virginia Commonwealth University
Barbours
Bank of Rwanda
RFA
Dahabshil Bank
Dorcas Aid
Finn Church Aid
KCB Foundation
Ministry of Education Saudi Arabia
NSSF Uganda
RBA
Reserve Bank of Malawi
WASREB Kenya
Virginia Commonwealth University