Nonprofit Harvest

Assisting nonprofits gather financial management resources that will help them build sustainable futures.

February 8, 2010

Getting the Lay of the Land

In my last post I shared some New Year’s Resolutions, and TechSoup had a similar idea with a series of technology resolutions, including #3: This Year, We Will Manage Our Finances Better.  This is a great resource that rounds up available nonprofit financial management and accounting options.  It explains the different products (with links to their TechSoup pages) and even has some resources to help you find the best software to meet your needs. For anyone unfamiliar with TechSoup and their nonprofit discounts, add that to your 2010 to-do list.

Here are a few other things for that to-do list.

Assess Your Hyperlocal Conditions

We can all agree that local conditions vary. I just returned from a brief vacation to sunny Florida, and these words have never felt more true.  Nonprofit Quarterly took used idea as the theme for their Winter 2010 issue.

Local Conditions

There are many factors that impact your nonprofit, such as your funding sources, field of service, and the needs of your constituents.  Let’s think of these as the local conditions. The Minnesota Council of Nonprofits and Minnesota Council on Foundations have updated information on how the economy is affecting funders and Minnesota nonprofits in general. National Organizations such as The Foundation Center, NFF (view information from 2009 or take the 2010 survey), and the National Council of Nonprofits all have good resources that can help you take action.  However, these reports can only take you so far.

Go Hyperlocal

The most useful information is the “hyperlocal” conditions - what is happening on the ground at your nonprofit. As our ED, Kate Barr, says in her article for Nonprofit Quarterly:

“In all forecasts, ‘local conditions vary,’ and the most relevant information is the situation at an individual nonprofit organization. Only by clearly understanding its own financial position, strengths, and risks can a nonprofit develop strategies to respond to the economy and plan for the future.”

How can you get a handle on the conditions at your nonprofit? Our Assessment of Recession Risk and Preparedness for Nonprofit Organizations is a tool designed to help you quickly assess your organization. By answering these 20 questions, you will identify potential risk factors, immediate priorities, and proactive steps to take right away. Keep in mind; this is a first step, not an in-depth organizational assessment.

Whatever is happening on the ground at your organization, the Recession Preparedness Assessment provides useful information to help you better understand what’s happening and develop strategic responses. You can read the full article in Nonprofit Quarterly or download the Assessment from our website.

Re-Set Your Internal Controls

Internal controls are another factor that can impact a nonprofit’s stability. Smaller organizations in particular are often cited for lacking adequate segregation of duties in management letters.  Blue Avocado’s recent article,  Five Internal Controls for the Very Small Nonprofit, is a great starting point to help you strengthen your internal controls.  CPA Carl Ho outlines five main categories that are crucial, and do-able, for even the smallest organizations:

  1. Set the control environment
  2. Assign responsibilities
  3. Physical controls - lock it up
  4. Cash, always have two people count it together
  5. Reconcile the bank statement

Read the whole article for additional suggestions and examples.  For more on this topic, you can participate in our webinar on February 22nd, Financial Policies for Internal Control.  You’ll receive sample board and management policies and learn how to customize them for your organization.

Know Your True Program Costs

More on everyone’s favorite topic - overhead! (If you missed our past blogs about overhead, and why we think it’s an overrated metric, start here.) Last week the Chronicle of Philanthropy hosted a discussion on Making Smart Decisions About Overhead Costs.  What cannot be said enough is the importance of knowing (and then budgeting for) the true, full costs of your programs and operations. As Daniel Stid of The BridgeSpan Group stated:

It goes without saying (but perhaps we should say it!) that having a clear view of the full direct and indirect costs of delivering a program is essential. We often encounter situations in which clients have failed to budget even for their full direct costs let alone so called overhead.

It has to be said, explicitly, because too many organizations do not know the actual costs of delivering their services.  We have a workshop dedicated to this topic, and I encourage any Minnesotans with questions to attend our April training Calculating True Program Costs.  If you don’t live here, or don’t want to wait until April, check out Nonprofit Cost Analysis: Introduction from the BridgeSpan Group.  It’s a thorough introduction and very helpful, although it may not be the most accessible to those without a strong financial foundation.

Update Your Bookmarks!

Intrepid nonprofit accounting guru and friend of the blog Alan Strand has has moved. Not-For-Profit Accounting remains a helpful resource, but for new content from Alan visit Nonprofit Accounting, a resource from the Nonprofit Center in Washington State.

January 22, 2010

New Year, New You?

It’s a new year, a new decade, time to turn over a new leaf. Like many of you, I have New Year’s resolutions to get my life (and notoriously messy office) in better shape.

Many nonprofit and social enterprise bloggers have the same idea.  My favorite was Nell Edgington’s ideas about Social Impact Finance:

It’s a new year and a new decade, and both hold tremendous promise for creating real social change.  And key to significant social change is a fundamental restructuring of how we finance that change.  I think (hope) that in the next decade we will see the emergence of a new Social Impact Finance.  And I imagine it will look something like this…

  • Nonprofits Understand the Power of Finance. Nonprofit organizations understand and become successful at financing their overall operations, instead of fundraising for them.  And they begin to think bigger about their work, the overall outcomes they are trying to achieve and how finance fits into that (The GiveWell blog did a great series on the “Room for More Funding Question.”)

Another one of her predictions, Individual Donors Become a Powerhouse, echoes Kate’s post, The Year For “Right-Sized” Donations and the outpouring of support we have seen in response to the tragic earthquake in Haiti.

(For more on Haiti, I suggest visiting Philanthropy.com and PhilanTopic, which have done a great job covering this story from a nonprofit and philanthropic perspective.)

2010, The Year of the Board?

Is 2010 the year of the board?  Two blogs I read regularly are focusing on  governance to start the new year:

Are you looking for ways to help your board of directors take their leadership to the next level? Check out our webinar Financial Clarity for Nonprofit Boards next Friday, January 29th at 2pm CT (3pm EST). This training is a great way to prepare boards to assess and pursue new financial strategies, as well as shore up their understanding of nonprofit financial reports, terminology, and responsibilities.

We offer a range of financial trainings throughout the year.  They are an easy and affordable way to enhance your nonprofit’s financial management. For more information you can visit our website or sign up to receive training updates.

New Year, New Rules

We know there’s a new 990. Since organizations operate with different fiscal years (our Fiscal New Year is also April Fool’s Day) how do you know which form to use? Not-For-Profit Accounting has a short explanation to help you:

When do we file the new 990? Read below or click here for a PDF of a general overview of the instructions.

Calendar year – Use the 2008 Form 990 to report on the 2008 calendar year accounting period. A calendar year accounting period begins on January 1 and ends on December 31.

Fiscal year – If the organization has established a fiscal year accounting period, use the 2008 Form 990 to report on the organization’s fiscal year that began in 2008 and ended 12 months later. A fiscal year accounting period should normally coincide with the natural operating cycle of the organization. Be certain to indicate in the heading of Form 990 the date the organization’s fiscal year began in 2008 and the date the fiscal year ended in 2009.

The Nitty Gritty

There have been many useful guides to the new 990. Here are some of my favorites:

In case you want to go directly to the source, these are updates and resources from the IRS:

This is also a good time to review the Top 5 Compliance Problems for 501(c)(3) Organizations.

For folks interested in taking their analysis to the next level, check out The Door Has Opened: New Form 990 Creates Strategic Opportunities and Risks for Nonprofit Organizations.

Nonprofit Harvest

July 31, 2009

Dashboards and Due Diligence

Dashboards

A few weeks ago, Blue Avocado published a great post about the value of Dashboard reports:

Imagine getting a dashboard like this at every board meeting. With a glance, board members could see how the organization is doing and start asking the important questions. The board would also be able to discuss what indicators should be added to the dashboard and which might not be necessary…

It’s hard to imagine driving a car without quick, ongoing access to a speedometer, fuel gauge, or gear position. An organizational Dashboard can be the same, fast way to check in on basics . . . so you can pay more attention to where you’re going.

It was a timely article, because we had just revamped our own dashboards.  We wanted to make sure we were giving the board and staff the most useful metrics about our finances, programs, and other work.  The end result is more useful dashboard for board and staff, but just was useful was a by-product of the process.  It forced all of us to take a step back and consider what information we’re sharing and why.

As the Blue Avocado article states, it doesn’t tell us where we’re going, but it provides critical information that allows us to focus on our work and the road ahead.  A tool that helps you cut through the noise and focus is a great asset.

For more on dashboards, read What Gauges Belong on Your Dashboard? or Seth Godin’s post, Dashboards.

Overhead

There is an interesting debate swirling about nonprofit overhead expenses.  Are they an investment in infrastructure,  money that could be better spent on programs, or something in between? Do donors care?  Should they?  This is Kate’s take:

Here’s my soapbox

I agree that it’s wise to “Do the same due diligence on your donations that you would your investments or your business.” But when I review an investment opportunity, I review based on the expected criteria for a successful business - profitability, market share, and returns. I don’t review their overhead and management costs. So why would overhead be the criteria for a charity?

…Do some due diligence on charities before you donate, just as you would for an investment or business opportunity. Pay especially close attention to how successful the nonprofit has been at achieving its mission. Do they provide information about how effective their programs are and what impact they have on the people and communities that they serve? Do they have a way to measure and communicate progress and/or success?

Join the conversation at Balancing the Mission Checkbook, facebook, or follow the example of Rich Cowles from Charities Review Council and blog about your position.

Late July Harvest

Mergers

IRS Updates

Other Resources

Crowdsourcing: What’s Working, What’s Not

A few weeks ago, Kate issued a call for “stories of change and transformation” and in the comments we talked a little bit about how we could leverage the power of our online community and crowd source this. I’ve had a few conversations about tools and tags, but before we jump into tactics, I wanted to ask:

  • Is this happening elsewhere?
  • Is anyone interested is collaborating on this kind of project?

Let me know in the comments.

May 22, 2009

What’s Admin Got to Do with Effectiveness?

The administrative cost ratio, always the topic of heated discussion, is in the news again. Not-For Profit Accounting blogged on the topic this week, unpacking the accounting jargon and rules:

A nonprofit’s expenses are classified by what they were used for within the three broad categories / functional areas of administration, program and fundraising.  Program costs are considered direct expenses, expenses that have a direct effect on fulfilling the mission of the nonprofit organization.  Administrative costs are indirect expenses, they affect the mission of the organization indirectly.  The organization can’t get by without those expenses but, according to the IRS and others, they have no direct effect on the mission.

This point, of course, can be argued and I think it is where much of the confusion resides when talking about classifying nonprofit expenses.  But this is the world we operate in and those are the rules, so it is best to make sure we understand the rules so we can present our numbers in the most honest fashion to show what it costs to do the work we do.

He also contributed his take on what the ratio really means:

One financial ratio used in isolation is no true measure of any organization.  Only by looking at both the numbers and the program outcomes can we judge whether an organization is effective or not.

There’s too much at stake right now to use this ratio alone to measure effectiveness, let alone as a way to compete with one another for already diminished resources.  Kate brought up a similar question last year in her post, Irrelevant Ratios:

We need a two-step retirement plan. First is to jointly stop using the ratio as a way to distinguish our organizations from others, in an unhealthy type of competition, as in “our administrative ratio only is 5%, so your donated dollar will go farther with us.” The second is to find a better way to convey the quality and effectiveness of the work that you do, which requires a real method of evaluating and communicating the programs and impact on clients.

Administrative costs are part of doing business.  It takes time and money to run an effective organization, and being efficient with those dollars is not the same as being effective with them.

End of Session Resources

This Week’s Harvest

April 24, 2009

It’s National Volunteer Week

Serve America Act

National Volunteer Week honors the important work of volunteers in our communities.  It seems fitting that President Obama signed the Serve America Act during this time.

In addition to encouraging service, the legislation includes capacity building resources specifically designed for small to mid-sized organizations. For more information, read Kate’s thoughts or learn more about the Serve America Act.

Volunteer Management Resources

We know that volunteers provide a great boost to nonprofits, but they also require specific management resources.  Here are some tools to help nonprofits get the most value out of their volunteers:

Nonprofit Accounting

Speaking of accounting systems, Alan at Not-For-Profit Accounting makes an excellent case for their importance:

We go into the sector because we care about the mission, making a difference, building community, or any other number of reasons.  Not so we can crunch numbers.

But some people are shocked when they realize just how much regulation, filing and paperwork comes with a tax exempt status…The more time it takes to hammer those reports together, the less time you have to do other things like mission and fundraising work.  The harder it is to compile good financial information, the greater the likelihood of it not being as accurate as it should be.  As has been stated more than a few times,  you can’t figure out what you are going to do financially if you don’t know where you stand right now.  Good cash flow planning and budgeting can only be done if you have a system in place that can get you usable information in a timely fashion.

His post, Why You Need an Accounting System also provides resources to help you get you started.  For more ideas on what questions to ask if you need to develop your own system, read Help! We need an accounting system!

This Week’s Harvest

If you are looking for volunteer opportunities in the Twin Cities metro area, I suggest visiting HandsOn Twin Cities or MAP for Nonprofits.

April 3, 2009

A Silver Lining?

Alan at Not-For-Profit Accounting sees a silver lining in the recession - a greater focus on nonprofit operations:

I have read more articles about not-for-profit operations, administration and finance recently than I think I have in the last ten years. And they have been positive. They have spoken of the need for organizations to look at how their finances and operations are handled, to make sure they have the systems in place to be able to figure a) out exactly where they stand financially and b) what to do going forward as far as budgeting, cash flow and capacity.

While I’m not happy about the pain that will be felt by many organizations and the populations they serve I am pleased that these discussions are taking place and that we will end up with a stronger sector once this crisis passes.

Check out his post,  Money Managing in Challenging Times, for a collection of tools and resources to help your organization.

HR Resources

COBRA Updates

Ask Rita

A regular Blue Avocado feature is Ask Rita in HR:

Rita in HR is actually two HR attorneys in one: Ellen Aldridge and Pamela Fyfe, both of the Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group. They advise nonprofits on wrongful termination, wage & hour, discrimination, harassment, and other employment issues.

Recent topics include: 

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