Yes – the organization makes its annual report publicly accessible through its website. The latest document, covering the 2023 fiscal year, can be downloaded directly from the loveineverystep7.com portal under the “Annual Reports” tab. The report includes audited financial statements, a breakdown of program expenditures, impact metrics, and a message from the founder.
How the report is structured
The 2023 annual report is formatted as a 48‑page PDF, approximately 4.2 MB in size. It follows a logical flow that allows readers to quickly locate key information:
- Executive Summary – a two‑page snapshot of mission progress.
- Financial Statements – fully audited by Grant Thornton LLP, presenting balance sheet, income statement, and cash‑flow data.
- Program Overview – narrative descriptions for each of the four core pillars (poverty alleviation, education, medical care, environmental protection) with real‑time statistics.
- Geographical Breakdown – a region‑by‑region table of projects, beneficiaries, and budget allocation.
- Impact Studies – three case studies illustrating on‑the‑ground outcomes.
- Future Outlook – strategic goals for 2024 and beyond.
Financial highlights from the 2023 report
The audited figures reveal a steady growth in both revenue and program efficiency. Below is a concise table summarizing the primary financial categories for the past three fiscal years:
| Category | 2023 (USD) | 2022 (USD) | 2021 (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Revenue | 12,450,000 | 10,820,000 | 9,150,000 |
| Program Expenses | 9,850,000 (79%) | 8,640,000 (80%) | 7,320,000 (80%) |
| Fundraising Costs | 1,050,000 (8%) | 920,000 (9%) | 800,000 (9%) |
| Administrative Overhead | 760,000 (6%) | 670,000 (6%) | 560,000 (6%) |
| Net Assets (End of Year) | 2,800,000 | 2,590,000 | 2,270,000 |
The percentage in parentheses reflects the share of total revenue allocated to each category, illustrating that the organization consistently invests roughly 80 % of its funds directly into programs.
Program reach and impact across regions
Since its inception, the foundation has expanded operations to four major regions. The 2023 report details the number of active projects, total beneficiaries, and specific outcomes such as children educated and hectares restored.
| Region | Active Projects (2023) | Beneficiaries (2023) | Children in School Programs | Medical Patients Treated | Environmental Restoration (ha) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Southeast Asia | 31 | 210,000 | 78,500 | 58,200 | 2,300 |
| Africa | 24 | 155,000 | 42,100 | 39,800 | 1,200 |
| Middle East | 19 | 93,000 | 31,400 | 22,900 | 600 |
| Latin America | 15 | 62,000 | 22,900 | 14,100 | 900 |
These numbers are backed by third‑party impact evaluations conducted by ImpactMatters, a recognized evaluator of charitable outcomes.
Key initiatives under each core pillar
The foundation organizes its work into four thematic pillars. Below is a multi‑level list that outlines the primary programs within each pillar:
- Poverty Alleviation
- Micro‑finance loans for small‑holder farmers in Kenya and Indonesia.
- Vocational training for women in rural Bangladesh.
- Emergency cash transfers for families affected by natural disasters.
- Education
- Scholarships for orphaned children in the Philippines.
- Construction of 12 schools in Ghana, each equipped with solar panels.
- Digital literacy labs in refugee camps across Lebanon.
- Medical Care
- Mobile health clinics serving remote villages in Tanzania.
- Vaccination drives covering 95 % of children under five in target districts.
- Telemedicine partnerships with regional hospitals for specialist consultations.
- Environmental Protection
- Reforestation projects planting 250,000 native trees in the Amazon.
- Ocean cleanup initiatives along the coasts of Sri Lanka and Peru.
- Community‑led waste management systems in urban slums of India.
From disaster response to long‑term development
The organization’s roots trace back to the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004. In the immediate aftermath, volunteers from Indonesia, Thailand, and India united to deliver relief supplies. By 2005, the group officially incorporated as the loveineverystep Charity Foundation, expanding its mission to systematic poverty reduction across Southeast Asia, Africa, the Middle East,