| Chairman’s Corner: Toward Fiscal Sustainability Recently, I attended the second annual National Business Plan Competition for Nonprofit Organizations sponsored by Yale School of Management- The Goldman Sachs Foundation Partnership on Nonprofit Ventures, and the Pew Charitable Trusts. The following is an edited version of remarks I made on a panel for funders of nonprofit enterprise. When you boil it all down, the underlying challenge that nonprofits and funders are wrestling with today is how to achieve fiscal sustainability. Having the proper financial resources year in and year out is the key to enable nonprofits to continue to do the vital work they do in our communities and, for those so inclined, to be able to grow their efforts over time. Particularly challenging for nonprofit leadership is moving beyond the more constraining “stove pipes and silos” of what the fields sees as “fund development” toward a more encompassing view of how one finances their organization and, ultimately, attains fiscal sustainability. Fiscal sustainability requires long-term funding and financing strategies. It is integral and fundamental to the organization, must be squarely the responsibility of the lead executive and the board of directors, and cannot and should not be relegated solely to a funds development person or department. One view of fiscal sustainability suggests there are three primary sources:
All three of these sources are important. However, as federal and state budget deficits grow and the donor and charitable funding sources are increasingly challenged, fee-based services and venture enterprises must play a larger role for many nonprofits as well as for the funders that support them. This is not to say the former two areas are not important and should not be aggressively pursued, but rather that the latter may offer a new financing stream and the ability to better diversity one’s funding sources. The reality, however, is that creating earned-income and venture enterprises within the nonprofit sector is very challenging for four reasons:
Of these four, the lack of available capital and the means to distribute it effectively is the compelling factor and limitation. It is what keeps most subsectors of the nonprofit field from developing stable, sustainable organizations and represents THE challenge facing funders and nonprofits alike. The capital challenge is even more pronounced for growth capital, the money that enables organizations to invest in themselves so they can grow, build, improve, and strengthen their organizations, products, and services for greater scale and impact. It has particularly strong implications for those who seek to develop income-earning or venture enterprises that may some day require capital for their growth. The second factor is the lack of an ecosystem to nourish and support innovation that enables the development of nonprofit earned income and venture enterprise. If you look at any of the most prolific for-profit entrepreneurial regions in the world—in Boston, Silicon Valley, London, or Singapore—you’ll see that there exists a “critical mass” of entrepreneurs, larger firms, research, and a myriad of suppliers, e.g., tech firms, recruiters, service providers, etc., that understand and are capable of serving entrepreneurial businesses. The nonprofit world needs to witness an ecosystem evolve along similar lines in which relevant knowledge, funders, resources, and relationships are available, accessible, and within close proximity to social entrepreneurs. No such comparable infrastructure or ecology exists within the nonprofit sector today, although there are the beginnings of such an infrastructure stemming from another of initiatives. Although the nonprofit sector is blessed with remarkable leaders with compelling models for social change, a third factor is the dearth of relevant talent to manage and develop nonprofit organizations, particularly people with the skills necessary to perform in COO, CFO, “product development,” and traditional fund development roles, four of the most critical roles in stabilizing nonprofits or helping them grow. In addition, to develop earned-income and venture enterprise, the sector needs to cultivate a different kind of talent pool, people who in addition to being mission-driven and entrepreneurial are also savvy in “product management,” marketing, and general management aligned to the logistical needs of a particular service. This, unfortunately, is not where social entrepreneurs are most effective, but their willingness to recruit and work with such talent—sometimes as a peer or even a mentor—will be crucial to their success. And finally, attitude and culture are very relevant. They can be highly supportive or work to quash any such earned-income or venture enterprise effort. Organizations pursuing earned-income strategies will have to effectively deal with the inherent tension and perceived conflict of being “mission-driven” and “earning income from services”—which, when not effectively addressed from the outset, may pit “the earned income” against the “mission-driven” members of the staff. Most fundamentally, the field needs to deal with how the sector views “risk.” Many executive directors and their boards are averse to the risk of building a dependency on earned income and the inherent uncertainties due to market ups and downs. No one wants “human life and services” to suffer for the sake of profit gain or loss. And for many executive directors and their staffs, there exists a culture of disdain for the functions of marketing, product management, and sales, which feels at odds with the mission-driven nature of their nonprofit organization. As a nonprofit considers earned-income or venture enterprise, it must do so in a way that recognizes and takes into account their organizational culture and staff attitudes. All of us in and around the nonprofit sector—funders, public policy makers, potential donors, philanthropic thought leaders and nonprofit leaders alike—have heard over and over how we need to think differently about the way we do business. And we do. One such step organizations can take is to do more to bring people who have started and grown businesses, financial experts, and others to the table. We need to break out of our traditional boxes and search for different ways of financing nonprofit enterprises so that effective organizations can not only become stable and sustainable, but, for those so inclined, grow and scale their operations and impact. We need to explore and most certainly create new sources of capital and invent alternative financing mechanisms that would allow the nonprofit sector to achieve its full potential. The social ills we face are great, and the “status quo” is not acceptable as circumstances change around us. The rewards of building a stable and sustainable nonprofit sector will be invaluable for all of us. --Mario Morino | |||
Investment Partners Fill
Key Positions Monica Mills comes to Heads Up with more than 15 years of experience with organizations like Defenders of Wildlife, NARAL, and the Peace Corps. She also has state and federal campaign management experience. As chief operating officer at Heads Up, Monica will be responsible for oversight of daily operations in program delivery and development, management information systems and technology, financial management, human resources, and program evaluation and monitoring. “Heads Up has an aggressive plan to serve more children and their families, “ said Executive Director and Co-Founder Darin McKeever. “Monica brings the management savvy, strategic decision making, and human resources and communications experience to help take us to the next level.” Monica has a BS in elementary and special education from Black Hills State University and a law degree from University of Denver. Monica begins her new role on June 21. "I am very much looking forward to bringing my background and experiences to Heads Up as it moves into the implementation stage of their plan for growth. I can't think of a better way to help our community than working with our children and providing such rich experiences for our local college students," she said. Cynthia Robbins joins See Forever with more than 15 years of direct service, advocacy, and legal representation on behalf of low-income children and their families. Most recently, she was vice president of development at Learn Now/Edison Schools and she was formerly a senior program officer at the Meyer Foundation. As managing director at See Forever, Cynthia will be responsible for
refining systems to track and improve school performance and establishing
strategic partnerships with corporations and other organizations willing
to support Maya Angelou Public Charter School in meeting its mission.
Cynthia has a BA from Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges and a law degree
from Stanford. She began her new role on June 1. |
|||
Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Washington's Congressional Dinner a Success |
|||
| Share Our Strength Kicks off 20th
Anniversary Share our Strength,
the innovative anti-hunger organization founded by VPP board member Bill
Shore, kicked off its 20th anniversary on June 2 with a Gourmet Gala to
celebrate the success of its first 20 years. Event co-chairs included
VPP founding investors Katherine Bradley, Kathy Bushkin Calvin, and Mario Morino,
as well as VPP advisor David Bradt. The event featured an elegant seated
dinner with a choice of five-course menus paired with extraordinary wines—each
course created and presented by the area's top chefs, including Galileo's
Roberto Donna, Equinox's Todd Gray, and Citronelle's Michel Richard. The
event raised more than $200,000 to benefit Share our Strength's work to
end child hunger in America over the next 20 years. Congratulations to
Billy and his team! |
|||
| Seleznow Officially Joins VPP Team
as Partner Steven Seleznow has joined VPP as a partner. Since July 2003, Steve has served as a special advisor to VPP, advising the investment team on managing our investment portfolio, and working directly with several of the leaders of our investment partners to help them strengthen their organizations to better serve children from low-income families. As a partner, Steve will continue this work and will also serve as VPP's domain expert in the area of outcomes design and assessment. Steve's deep commitment to improving the lives of children from low-income families brought him to VPP. As Steve explains, "VPP's intense focus and considerable investments in children and the community-based organizations that serve them is simply unmatched. As such, I'm especially excited to join an organization that I'm absolutely convinced will have a major positive impact on children in the metropolitan area for many years to come." Steve brings to the team nearly 30 years of management and educational experience in public education in the National Capital Region; a national reputation for designing innovative education policies; and an in-depth understanding of the issues and learning challenges facing children of low-income families. His extensive background in public education, including his recent posts as deputy superintendent of Montgomery County Schools and chief of staff for DC Public Schools, and his expert knowledge of the network of community-based organizations with which schools in the National Capital Region interact, provides VPP a critical perspective that has already been invaluable to our work on behalf of our investment partners. |
|||
| Annie E. Casey Foundation's Kids
Count The Kids Count 2004 Data Book, released by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, is available online. Users can generate custom graphs, maps, ranked lists, and state-by-state profiles or download the entire data set as delimited text files. The essay "Moving Youth from Risk to Opportunity" advocates four calls to action: getting our goals right so that America’s kids reach adulthood with skills and confidence; acknowledging and addressing the reality that the risk factors facing over 3.8 million youth disproportionately affect poor kids of color; developing better data about youth in transition; and developing the political will to commit national, state, and local resources to improving successful adult transition. |
|||
| Bridgestar on the Nonprofit COO The June issue of Bridgestar's newsletter, Leadership Matters, focuses on the nonprofit chief operating officer (COO) and the recruitment strategies, responsibilities, and keys to success that lead to a successful leadership team. Registration is required, but currently free. |
|||
| Funding Opportunity The Institute for Youth Development posts federal funding requests for proposals (RFPs) on its website three times per year. Most awards are in the $50,000 range and are available to community and faith-based organizations that run local programs for teens, the elderly, and other disadvantaged groups and have never received federal funds. |
|||
If you have questions or comments about VPP News, please direct them to Cheryl Collins. © 2004 Venture Philanthropy Partners Privacy Policy |
|||