The power of impact statements: how to prove your research matters
Every funding body—from ARC to NHMRC—wants more than good science. They want impact. Yet the “Impact Statement” remains one of the most misunderstood sections in a proposal.
Strong impact statements don’t just describe what might happen if the research succeeds—they prove that change is likely, measurable, and aligned with national priorities.
Here’s how to write one that reviewers remember.
1. Show clear alignment with funder priorities
ARC and NHMRC guidelines both frame impact as the “benefit to Australia beyond academic outputs.” (ARC Assessor Handbook 2024).
Connect your research directly to government strategies—Future Made in Australia, National Health Priorities, Net Zero 2050, or Closing the Gap.
💡 Example:
“This project contributes to sovereign capability by establishing domestic manufacturing pathways for rare-earth magnets, reducing reliance on imports and strengthening national supply chains.”
2. Define who benefits—and how
Generic claims like “benefits the community” don’t cut it. Reviewers want specificity: who gains, how soon, and by what mechanism.
- Economic impact: cost savings, productivity gains, jobs created.
- Social impact: improved health, equity, or quality of life.
- Environmental impact: reduced emissions, circular-economy outcomes.
Fact: NHMRC peer-review summaries (2023) show that proposals with quantified beneficiary outcomes scored up to 0.4 points higher on average for “Significance and Innovation.”
3. Prove feasibility of translation
An impact statement is only credible if the pathway feels achievable.
Outline the steps between discovery and adoption—partners, pilots, trials, or policy interfaces.
Example:
“Working with South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, the intervention will be trialled across three regional hospitals before national rollout.”
This shows a realistic mechanism for translation, not wishful thinking.
4. Measure what matters
Impact isn’t about listing KPIs—it’s about choosing meaningful indicators.
|
Impact Type |
Possible Metric |
Source |
|
Health |
Reduction in readmissions (%) |
NHMRC Impact Framework 2023 |
|
Industry |
Increase in domestic production value ($) |
DISR Manufacturing Stats 2024 |
|
Environment |
Tonnes CO₂-e saved annually |
Clean Energy Regulator 2024 |
5. Close with the “so what”
End with a single, strong statement linking back to Australia’s goals:
“This research will enhance national resilience by providing evidence-based solutions to future energy security challenges.”
Impact statements aren’t an afterthought—they’re the heart of a proposal’s value story. When done well, they answer the reviewer’s ultimate question: Why should this be funded now, by us, for Australia?
Need help translating outcomes into impact? Talk to Straight Up —we help researchers frame value, alignment, and feasibility so reviewers can see your project’s real-world potential.
