Information is valuable and can be powerful. In many crisis-affected communities, people often lack critical information and need to know when, what, and how aid will be provided in order to make critical decisions affecting their lives. Indeed, valuable information is something crisis-affected people are used to providing to those who come to help. They patiently answer surveys, questionnaires, needs assessments, sit through verification missions and provide feedback–solicited and unsolicited–when channels exist. So is it not a fair question to ask, where does all their information go? How is it used? Who uses it? And when will they get a response? These are some of the questions we heard during listening conversations with 6,000 people in aid recipient countries across the globe.