InterMedia: Evidence for Decision Making.


InterMedia is a global research and evaluation consulting group. Information – and how people gather, produce, share and use it – is at the heart of what we do. We give clients the data and tools that help them understand, engage and achieve positive/intended impact, often in complex communities. We provide evidence for decision making.

What are clients saying about our work?
"[The evaluation report] was really inspiring to read, as it clearly shows positive results of our training activities, as well as giving us valuable insight into how to further improve our work. It’s rich material that you’ve gathered, and I’m sure that we’ll be able to benefit from it for years to come."
- Agneta Söderberg Jacobsson, The FOJO Media Institute

> Learn more about how we can help you.




Practice Area Highlight


Financial Inclusion & Mobile Money


As mobile devices become nearly ubiquitous, even in the poorest countries of the world, there is an opportunity to provide remote access to instruments for saving and transferring funds, purchasing insurance products, and paying for goods and services.

> Click here to read a recent blog post.
> Click here to read recent reports on mobile money.


Visit Our Knowledge Center


AudienceScapes is an interactive knowledge resource for the international development community. >>Click here to visit AudienceScapes now.



Latest from


Mobile Money Use & Gender: Less Disparity than Might be Expected

Gender often plays a key role in the uptake and use of new technologies in developing countries, with women lagging behind men.  InterMedia’s Tanzania Mobile Money Tracker study however has shown that, while this is true for mobile money in Tanzania to an extent, poverty and urban/rural status are much stronger determinants to uptake and [...]

How Do Embassies Use Twitter?

Jeanette Gaida recently published an interesting blog piece on the use of Twitter among embassies in Washington, D.C.  The piece explores 50 embassies in Washington, D.C., and the interactions among them and among their followers. The post, found on The George Washington University’s Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication (IPDGC) blog, was written in [...]