Balancing the Mission Checkbook

Kate Barr shares her thoughts and insights on nonprofit management and finance

February 23, 2010

Ready, Set, Innovate

Filed under: Current Trends, Leadership, Social Enterprise, guest post — admin @ 8:00 am

This guest post was written by Judy Alnes, Executive Director of MAP for Nonprofits.

I was glad to be asked to fill Kate Barr’s blog shoes while she is on sabbatical. I often write pithy blogs, if only in my mind. This assignment forced me to round up some of those loose ideas and put pen to paper; or rather, fingers to keys.

It’s Time to Innovate

Social innovation is on the tip of a lot of tongues these days. Most of us in the nonprofit sector are facing the fact that financial resources will remain tight for several years. Many of us have tried to do “more with less.” We’re now awakening to the fact that it is time to do things differently. In other words, it is time to innovate.

So what is social innovation? I especially like the definition used by Andrew Wolk of Root Cause in a recent speech he gave to the Texas Governor’s Nonprofit Leadership Conference:

Social innovation is the process of developing, testing, honing, and spreading transformative approaches to pressing social issues. It is finding ways to do things better and utilize resources more wisely.

Just as important is what social innovation is not! It is not only the purview of those who are leaders of social enterprises. It’s not just for Ashoka Fellows; though they are a remarkably innovative group. In fact, innovation is a discipline that each and every nonprofit and institution needs to incorporate in its work.

Getting Started

Where do we start?

We start by nurturing the seeds of discontent most of us share that we’re not making the progress we want to make on the issues facing our communities and our world.

Next, we arm ourselves with information about innovative processes. I highly recommend two books: The Medici Effect and Blue Ocean Strategy. Then add a daily Google Alert on social innovation or on the innovations in your particular field. It is okay to copy other nonprofits’ innovations in your own organization. Take a look at www.ideaencore.com - an online marketplace of other nonprofit organization’s best practices and resources.

Inside our organizations we can form teams that work on “developing, testing, and honing” advancements in our fields. We can charge individuals with responsibility to work on the next improvements in our processes, products, and services. We can start to admire the breakthroughs being achieved in other fields and think through how those breakthroughs might translate to our own challenges.

Innovating won’t be easy. Many organizations have stretched their people thin in an effort to keep delivering services at a pre-recession level despite a decline in resources. It’s not hard to predict what will happen if we don’t get around to innovation. Our results will look a lot like they do today. As the great inventor Thomas Edison said, “there is a way to do it better - find it.”

February 3, 2010

The Case for Sabbaticals

Filed under: Leadership, Management, Recommendations — Tags: , , — kate barr @ 11:15 am

How many of you have wanted to take a break from the pace and pressure of work and decompress? I have been given this gift in the form of a one-month sabbatical during February. After seeing the positive effects of a similar break on a friend of mine, I made the request and our board quickly agreed. While I didn’t do any other research about sabbaticals, it made instinctive sense that time away would be a good idea for both me and for Nonprofits Assistance Fund. In the year since my request, two other professional colleagues have taken one-month sabbaticals and had very positive experiences for themselves and the staff of their organizations.

Now, just in time for my break, CompassPoint released a study titled Creative Disruption about sabbaticals at nonprofit organizations. This summary of the report is affirming for my own sabbatical and for any of you who’ve been thinking about it.

This study exposes the myth that an executive sabbatical will be a chaotic disruption, finding instead that the creative disruption of a well-planned sabbatical can be productive for the entire leadership of an organization.

Organizational capacity is increased as the second tier of leadership takes on new responsibilities. Governance is strengthened as a result of the planning and learning that goes with a sabbatical process. Executive directors come back rejuvenated, with a fresh vision and innovative ideas, and tend to extend their tenure with the organization. And funders gain a deeper perspective on community needs from the feedback, networking, and innovative ideas that sabbatical alumni bring.

The report is an interesting read, including the results of surveys of executives who took sabbaticals and the interim directors who took on a new role. The subjects of the study were all recipients of funding to support sabbaticals, usually for three months.

I’m eager to see what kinds of experiences and ideas I have during the month. I’ll be kicking back for some of the time and using some of it for reading and discussions about the big issues and ideas for nonprofits in the future. (Although I can promise I will not spend all four weeks of February in Minnesota.) I started this weekend by reading an advance copy of the book Switch How to Change Things When Change is Hard by Chip and Dan Heath. The book addresses the reasons why change is so hard with a well-formed framework that makes the concepts accessible and actionable. They offer three essential components needed for change to happen:

  1. Direct the Rider - clarity and direction
  2. Motivate the Elephant - emotions and energy
  3. Shape the Path - plan and influence the situation

The book will be released on February 16th, but you can read an extensive excerpt in Fast Company.

More reading and thinking to come, but you probably won’t hear much from me this month. We’d love to hear any comments about sabbaticals from other nonprofits - what have you done, or wished you could do?