Articles

Leadership and Management Ideas You Can Use

Talking Finances with Your Board

As the COVID-19 pandemic rapidly remakes our world, nonprofits are grappling with the financial turmoil. Unfortunately, many Boards of Directors are poorly positioned to collaborate with staff leadership in guiding their organizations forward. Often, the only time Boards are accustomed to focusing on the future is when they approve a budget. The rest of the year, they look backwards, receiving financial reports for past periods and comparing them to an ever more dated budget. This reinforce a deep divide between what the Board is paying attention to and what is important. Here’s how you can narrow the gap. 

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How Teleworking Can Make You a Better Manager

As a manager, your working relationship with each of your team members strengthen or weaken over time depending on your interactions with each other. Great managers are very deliberate about these interactions, appreciating that their cumulative impact can make the difference between a healthy, effective relationship and a dysfunctional one. The forced teleworking environment may be an opportunity to improve your skills in these  interactions—and to become a better manager. 

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This Isn’t Teleworking

You and your team were not sent home to telework; you were sent home to avoid spreading a virus, to take care of loved ones, to teach children and to physically distance from everyone else in your communities. As a manager, the work that your team is able to accomplish under these circumstances depends primarily on your ability to recognize these challenges and to adapt. Here's what you can do…

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Pandemic Movie Night

There has literally never been a better time to grab a bowl of popcorn and stretch out on the coach to watch your favorite organizational crisis-management movies for some ideas and inspirations you can apply to today’s challenges. Since, I suspect most of you lack a favorite in this particular category, I’m happy to recommend mine…

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The Dark Side of Win-Win

The allure of win-win solutions is obvious—decisions that satisfy everyone are better. Until recently, I never questioned the benefits of win-win thinking. I knew it wasn’t always achievable, but I didn’t doubt its desirability. Anand Giridharadas's brilliant book, Winner Takes All, has recently led me to reconsider.

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Better Financial Decision-Making with a Monthly Cash Flow Projection

Many nonprofit leaders equate financial decision-making with passing an annual budget.  The idea is that once the budget is passed, their job is just to implement. Unfortunately, this breaks down when the expectations and assumptions underlying the budget turn out to be inaccurate or incomplete. Ongoing financial choices requires another tool—the Monthly Cash Flow Projection.  

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Four Types of Restricted Funds

Many nonprofits rely to a significant extent on contributions or grants intended for specific purposes, known as restricted funds. Nonprofit accounting places great importance on distinguishing between restricted and unrestricted funds to ensure that the donor intent embodied by the restrictions is respected. Whether viewed from a legal, ethical or accounting perspective, this is all well and good. 

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The First 90-Days: Goal-oriented Onboarding

Being onboarded into a nonprofit isn’t always pleasant.  Usually it means a gauntlet of briefings, a pile of forms, a bunch of reading.  And lunch.  

If the onboarding was unpleasant but useful, then you could consider it a necessary evil. But all too often, it fails the utility test as well.  How could providing so much information not be useful?  When it’s not in service of accomplishing clear objectives.  The path to better onboarding starts by asking what you are hoping for the new employee to accomplish through it. 

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The Transparency Trap

When staff complain about a lack of transparency, nonprofit leaders commonly respond by promising more.  This rarely works because the perceived lack of transparency is usually obscuring a more significant problem—a lack of trust.  The understandable inclination to increase transparency without confronting the underlying challenge around trust is the essence of the transparency trap.

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The Real Value of Your Budget

The annual budget presents a nonprofit’s financial plan for of an uncertain future by setting both limits and goals.  The limits in a budget are expressed as authorized expenses.  Some budget goals are incorporated into those authorized expenses, either implicitly or explicitly contingent on future events.  Other goals show up as income lines as projections of what amounts of revenue are hoped for from different revenue streams.  The combination is essential but confusing, which is one reason many nonprofits are not able to maximize the value of their budgets.    

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January's Recommended Reading

The annual budget presents a nonprofit’s financial plan for of an uncertain future by setting both limits and goals.  The limits in a budget are expressed as authorized expenses.  Some budget goals are incorporated into those authorized expenses, either implicitly or explicitly contingent on future events.  Other goals show up as income lines as projections of what amounts of revenue are hoped for from different revenue streams.  The combination is essential but confusing, which is one reason many nonprofits are not able to maximize the value of their budgets.    

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Making Change: Lessons from Crisis

Whether you’re preparing for an organizational change project, in the midst of one or still recovering from the last attempt, you know how massive a challenge these can be.  What you may not realize is that you’re set up to fail.  It’s not just you—up to 70% of planned change projects do not meet their objectives.

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December To-Do List

December is a veritable obstacle course for business as usual.  The holidays, vacations, school performances, parties and more all make it nearly impossible to stay on schedule and get things done. 

So don’t fight it.  Lean into the season.  Whether you like it or not, things are slowing down, so you might as well like it.  The change of pace might do everyone some good.  Take advantage of the slower speed to focus on yourself, your team and getting ready for the new year. 

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