 Felly, mae'n dod y Cymru, mae yma'r ysgawdd yw'r gweithio'n gweithio. I fedriw'r gweithio yma ar y dyfodol y maen nhw'n ffordd ym Gŵr Tom Steinberg. Felly, mae'r gweithio ar y cyfnod o'r cyfrannu sosial, a mae gennym am y 12 yr ysgawdd a'n ddifrif i ddweud ymyn mwynd y gweithio. Mae'r cyfrannu digital ar gyfer ei gweithio, ar y dymlwys, ar y dymlwys i, ac ar y gweithio'r cyfrannu better. Over the past 12 years we've built up a really fantastic portfolio of different services which give citizens influence over those with power in each of these three areas. So we use digital channels and digital services to either identify an issue and try and unpack it in a way that makes it easier to understand for the citizen. And we try and develop strategies and tools that allow the citizen to actually maybe change the relationship with that particular issue or maybe get something done, bring some focus that didn't exist previously and actually try and make their community or their relationship with government just improved on a number of different levels. I think trying to determine what impact our work actually has, you really need to start with the citizen and what they're trying to achieve and have you measurably improved your situation? Have you given them more influence over the situation? Have you been able to resolve an issue that was maybe previously difficult to resolve and tractable in some way? Have you given them permission to speak out? A big thing that we find is that there's many groups who are excluded from government who don't feel they have access to be able to raise their hand, ask a question, maybe draw attention to something in their community and demand better. So that's a really big area of emphasis for us, is really trying to understand how can we use digital tools to improve that situation, often in a small way but sometimes in a much bigger extent you have to have tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of people actually achieving a goal they collectively want to see.