In our demonstrated impact assessment, as I mentioned before, we go through every program the charity offers and look at the results that they have reported. We then clarify with the charity if there are additional results that they have not publicly reported so that we can get as deep an understanding as possible of what the programs do.
When it comes to WE Charity in particular, we looked at their international programs, and the level of reporting is weak when it comes to understanding what impact they've had. They talk about how over the last 20 years, since they've been in business, they've built 1,500 schools and they've helped a million people get access to water. These are all very vague statements that provide very little demonstrated impact over what happened in the last year.
When we look at their domestic programs, we see that they supplied 10.8 million pounds of food collected and they raised $8.3 million in funds, so there's more specific data from last year. If it was just based on their international programs, they would have been in the “low” category, because the demonstrated data was of very poor quality. It was their domestic programs that had somewhat better-quality data, with more specific, actionable, understandable metrics that we could actually value.