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Archive for the ‘Consulting & Turnaround Services’ Category

Thank You Support Center Ambassadors

Recently, two of our strongest ambassadors provided the opportunity for 250 nonprofit professionals to engage in dynamic conversations with funders about their priorities and goals.

Marie smith

For the sixth consecutive year Marie Smith, Support Center Board Member and Director of Strategic Partnerships at Con Edison, hosted and moderated Meet the Corporate Grantmakers on September 21, 2010.

And for the third year Joanne Heyman, former Support Center Vice Chair and founder of Heyman & Partners, moderated Meet the Grantmakers: Funding for Women’s Programs on October October 15, 2010.  Joanne will be speaking at the NextGen: Charity conference on November 18th.

 

 

“The panel assembled by the Support Center was truly top-notch, comprised of veterans in the field of corporate philanthropy and sponsorship, each of whom was eager and willing to share their expertise and advice on how to move our organization forward.”
Michael Gary, VP for Corporate & Foundation Relations,
New York Botanical Garden

12 Keys to Successful Nonprofit Turnarounds

By Don Crocker, CEO/Executive Director

Don Crocker

Unfortunately, in the recent challenges posed by a difficult economic environment, many organizations find themselves in difficult, sometimes “crisis” situations where they need to decide a course of action designed to “turn around” the organization.

Many people ask, “What are the key elements needed to move the organization in a better, more sustainable, more practical direction?” Here are some thoughts:

  1. Someone must lead
  2. The leader must have a plan and a “team”
  3. The leadership team must engage with the plan
  4. You must focus on today and tomorrow, not yesterday
  5. You cannot exclusively “save” your way to organizational health
  6. Tough decisions must be made quickly, but with respect and thoughtfulness
  7. Marketing at this stage is about relationships and communication, not just brochures and advertisements
  8. There must be a lead spokesperson, all must be “on message,” and the message must be positive
  9. Fund raising must be focused, realistic, and targeted to the larger donors and/or grantmakers
  10. The board must allow itself to be restructured
  11. Organization restructuring must be an option
  12. The organization must have the discipline to follow each of these rules

The Support Center helps nonprofit organization in a turnaround situations.

>>> Turnaround Services

Technical Assistance: Urban Justice Center

Urban JusticeUrban Justice Center, a Support Center client, experienced great results from our work together, receiving kudos from one of their principal funders.

 

 

Over a six month period, Urban Justice staff responsible for an educational program that moves women from public assistance to gainful employment through post-secondary education worked with a Support Center consultant to accomplish a number of things:

  • Strengthen program design and outcomes
  • Improve proposals to foundations and corporations
  • Develop a prospect list of new potential funders

After a recent meeting between Urban Justice and New York Women’s Foundation (who funded the work with the Support Center), the Interim Project Director, Gerni Oster, shared this comment with us:

“I wanted to let you know that we had our renewal meeting with New York Women’s Foundation and it went really well. The reason I wanted to update you was because not only did they love our program but they LOVED the proposal…..the committee said that they want to use the proposal as a model for how proposals should be done!!!! Your skills have helped us so much. Thank you for your dedication to the nonprofit world and the community we serve.”

>>> Consulting

Client Update: Strategic Plan

LiteracyPartnersOver the past six months the Support Center worked with Literacy Partners to develop a three-year strategic plan to set priorities, build commitment, and guide resource acquisition.

The plan is organized into five essential areas:

  1. Mission
  2. Partnerships
  3. Infrastructure
  4. Board Leadership
  5. Financial Sustainability

A committee of staff and board leaders drove the process over a series of ten meetings.

Literacy Partners Board of Directors unanimously approved the strategic plan, which will guide the organization to even higher levels of mission impact.

The board chairman, Mark Jackson, said: “This was a time-consuming and labor-intensive process.  But it was not a thankless one – the members of the Board obviously appreciate our efforts and fully support our plan.  I thought the presentation to the Board went remarkably well.  A special thanks to Pat Richter (Support Center consultant) for guiding us through this process in a determined, yet cheerful, manner.”

>>> Consulting

Free Agent Board Members

By Don Crocker, CEO/Executive Director, Support Center

How to keep your best board members motivated and engaged

Board members are really free agents, aren’t they?

After all, they can sign with another team instead of yours.

They can perform badly and just move on to another board opportunity.
They will probably be sought after by others if they perform well for your team.

So how do you keep the best engaged with you?

Don Crocker

Don Crocker

I’ve taken the liberty of adapting an article written by Marshall Goldsmith, Iain Somerville, and Cathy Greenberg-Walt called “Coaching Free Agents,” (Anderson Consulting and Marshall Goldsmith, 1999) to help you think about ways you can best keep your best board members motivated and engaged.

What follows are our Five Keys to Leading and Coaching Your Free Agent Nonprofit Board Members.

  1. Work to develop close partnerships with each board member.
  2. Board members who feel that they are valued for working with you as a partner in the organization’s efforts will be the board members that are most likely to be effective and the most likely to have high performance.  In partnerships, each person’s time and their efforts need to be respected and recognized.

  3. Recognize and deal directly with each board member’s self-interests.
  4. What, “self-interest”????  To work effectively, each side of any partnership needs to know the self-interest of the other partner.  Be candid about the reasons you recruit a board member and your expectations of her/him.

    Let each board member be candid about what they want to get out board participation and why they would want to be a board member of your organization.  We often think that “self-interest” should not be a part of the game, but we all want to get something out of our efforts.  As long as these self-interests are not “conflicts of interest” we are on the right track.

  5. Work to create collaboration and teamwork.
  6. While an organization should identify self-interests, it is a mistake to assume that your free agent board member cannot work collaboratively.  The best board members desire the chance to work with others.

    Plan strategies to build board member/board member and board member/staff member relationships based upon a shared vision and mutually agreed upon goals.  Retreats focused on refining the organization’s case statement or value proposition can help an organization in numerous ways and bring board members together around a common theme.

  7. Build your own flexibility.
  8. Treating everyone the same way does not work in our free agent universe.  Spend time identifying how board members want to work for and support your organization and what is meaningful to them in terms of responsibility and recognition. Be flexible in your thinking about how to accommodate these individual preferences.

  9. Create honest and open communication.
  10. While the boardroom may still carry a “heaviness” of pomp and politics, there is a real need to let in some light by creating more openness and honesty in relationships with and between board members.

    Build opportunities to allow board members to share their goals and expectations and find ways to share your goals and expectations with them.  Seek to maintain “win-win relationships with all board members.

    Our changing environment demands a new level of board engagement, focus, and energy.

    We need to go beyond the basic understanding of board roles and responsibilities to create new ways of working together to support the development of healthy, vibrant individuals, families, and neighborhoods.

    Tell us what you think and how you are working with your “free agent” board members to create a winning team to benefit the communities you care about.

Grantmaker Partnership: Building Your Board


The Support Center provides training for BoardServeNYC, a United Way of New York City initiative that connects nonprofits to a talented pool of New Yorkers who are passionate about service and are ready, willing and able to serve as board members.

Michael Davidson

Affiliate consultant and long-time volunteer workshop facilitator Michael Davidson is leading the BoardServe training program.

BoardServeNYC:

  • Is free to nonprofits located in NYC
  • Matches nonprofits with candidates who have undergone governance training
  • Provides guidance in how to effectively engage candidates and utilize new board members
>>> Consulting
>>> http://www.michaeldavidson.biz/

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