Nonprofit Harvest

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

May 4, 2010

Stay Tax Exempt

Filed under: 990, Accounting, Financial Management Resources, News — Tags: , — ashley @ 2:02 pm

News Flash

Every nonprofit organization must file an annual 990.

The change happened a few years ago, but may not have received adequate attention.  All nonprofits, not just organizations with revenues of $25,000 or more, must file a tax return. Any organization that does not file a 990 for three consecutive years will lose their tax exempt status. The federal law requiring this change was passed in 2006, and the first three-year window closes May 15th, 2010.

If you work for a nonprofit, hopefully you already know this and are aware of the upcoming May 15th deadline – the date when organizations with a December 31st year end must file their 990 with the IRS.

Although this change could negatively impact thousands of organizations, there is still time to meet your filing deadline.

(Update: The Star Tribune has published an excellent article on these changes.)

Steps to Staying Tax Exempt

Visit the IRS Website

Financial activity Filing requirement
Gross receipts normally ≤ $25,000
Note: Organizations eligible to file the e-Postcard may choose to file a full return.
990-N (e-Postcard)
Gross receipts < $ 500,000 and
Total assets < $1.25 million
990-EZ or 990
Gross receipts ≥ $500,000, or
Total assets ≥ $1.25 million
990
Private foundation (regardless of financial activity) 990-P

Prepare Your Form

Not sure if your organization is at risk?

Find Out More

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

October 15, 2009

Doing Something Risky

I’m doing something risky by linking to Seth Godin, but his recent blog on the difference between apparent risk and actual risk got me thinking…

What Is Risk Management?

According to the Nonprofit Risk Management Center:

Risk management — A discipline for dealing with the possibility that the future may be surprisingly different from what we expect (see Strategic risk management).

Strategic risk management — A discipline that counters downside risks by reducing the likelihood, magnitude, and unpredictability of losses and financing recovery from these losses; and seizes upside risks by searching for opportunities to more fully, more certainly, and more efficiently achieve an organization’s nonprofit goals, and developing plans to act on these opportunities when the future presents them.

So, how does this impact nonprofits?  Writing globally, Seth commented:

When things get interesting is when the apparently risky is demonstrably [less safe] than the actually risky. That’s when we sometimes become uncomfortable enough with our reliance on the apparent to focus on the actual.

In other words, sometimes it is safer to take a risk.

And the Risk Management Center agrees.  Check out their Hallmarks of a Risk-Aware Nonprofit – best practices for strategic risk management (not strategic risk avoidance).  The very first hallmark is Takes More Risks than It Avoids:

A nonprofit cannot go about its daily work of mission fulfillment without taking risks. Risk-taking may lead an organization into uncharted territory when it expands its services to a new category of beneficiaries, or brings its programs to foreign countries, or adds an on-line “donate here!” button to its web site.

Avoiding risk, while not child’s play, is much easier than knowing which risks are imperative for the nonprofit to take. It is hard work to evaluate whether to take a risk or avoid it. Nevertheless, for nonprofits that take more risks than they avoid, the work of evaluating risks pays off. An excellent risk management program will enable the nonprofit to achieve a proper balance between prudent risk taking and the paralysis of trying to avoid all or most risks (and in the process, necessarily avoiding some, or even all opportunities.)

Peter Drucker said, “People who don’t take risks generally make about two big mistakes a year. People who do take risks generally make about two big mistakes a year.” A nonprofit that takes more risks than it avoids can innovate and explore uncharted paths to accomplish its mission, while remaining alert to emerging threats that must be avoided in order to protect critical assets.

These are uncertain times.  The safe things, the tested things, may not help your organization deliver services in a sustainable way.

Help your nonprofit do something risky. Check out these risk taking tools or read more from the Risk Management Center.

Go ahead, embrace the possible.

Nonprofit Harvest

Update on the Minnesota Economy

GiveMN

990 Updates

Other Resources

September 30, 2009

All You Need is Love – And the Right Tools

Generally I’m a skeptic when it comes to applying business advice to nonprofits.  Although nonprofits are businesses, we also operate under a different greater restrictions.  However, recently there have been two interesting articles I wanted to share.

Dealing with Uncertainty

McKinsey Quarterly’s article, How managers should approach a fragile economy cautioned business managers that the economic uncertainty is far from over. Uncertainly is something that nonprofit financial managers are well acquainted with. McKinsey continued with some suggestions for managing in this environment:

What else must companies do these days to survive and thrive? First, they must drop the pretense that they can predict the future. Second, they must continue adapting their management processes and capabilities with an eye to making better decisions under uncertainty—for example, by abandoning the fixed calendar and planning schedules typical of annual budgeting and operating processes. This change will require a shift to monitoring macroeconomic indicators in real time, something akin to “just in time” manufacturing approaches applied to decision making. It also means building greater flexibility into strategic activity by putting a greater focus on acquiring options, contingency planning, and the use of stage-gating techniques for committing resources.

If you want to employ some of these suggestions at your nonprofit, we have resources that can help.

Cash Flow

Scenario Planning

Additional Resources

Nonprofits are Awesome

The Harvard Business Review’s The Awesomeness Manifesto questions the constant calls for innovation.  Instead of innovating, it suggests that businesses should focus on what is awesome about their product or service:

Love. You know what’s funny about walking into an Apple Store? The people working there care. They don’t just “work at the Apple store” — they love Apple…the goal of Apple Store employees is simply to show off their awesomeness, and let you share it [rather than sell a product]. Love for what we do is the basis of all real value creation.

Reading this, I was struck by how much love exists in the nonprofit sector. We are here because of the mission.  How can we better tap into this love, the awesomeness of what we do?

Some more food for thought at the Nonprofit Quarterly’s article, Nonprofits: We Must Start Beating the Drum and the v3 campaign’s efforts to raise the profile of our sector.

Nonprofit HarvestUpdates on the 990

September 11, 2009

Webinar Launch (Houston, we have liftoff!)

Training for Minnesota Nonprofits, And Beyond

This is an exciting time at Nonprofits Assistance Fund. This week we unveiled our new webinar trainings, which have been in the works all summer.

Blue Skies

Photo Credit: jurvetson on flickr

We’re looking forward to having our trainings available to nonprofit leaders across the state of Minnesota, as well as our friends all over the country.

If you have been hoping your friendly nonprofit finance geeks (that’s us!) would visit your neighborhood, the wait is over.  Participate in our webinars and share any thoughts you have about the experience.  We are very excited about this expansion of our training program and want it to be as helpful as possible.  Your participation and feedback will make it a stronger service.

As online learning and communications tools continue to evolve, we’ll do our best to take advantage of new ways to serve the nonprofit community. We’ll continue to ask how technology can enhance our work and deliver services to nonprofits in and outside of the Twin Cities metro area.  If you have ideas for us, share them here, on our facebook page, or contact @NAFund on twitter.

Additional Online Training Opportunities

There are many other online learning options for nonprofit staff and board members.  Here are some interesting opportunities that you can explore to take your work to the next level:

Reconsidering Your Budget

Last week, Jeanne Bell wrote an excellent article for Blue Avocado, Focus on the Destination, Not the Route (Budget)!   In a nutshell, she is arguing that, especially in an uncertain economic climate, rolling projections and organizational goals are more valuable than an annual budget.

She offers great rationale for why this shift in focus matters, as well as some practical steps to get started, included:

Do a revised projection at the end of the current quarter, and have the management team and the board discuss it. Consider these questions:

  • What are the key discrepancies between what’s in the budget and what we now believe is going to happen?
  • Given this information, do we need to expect a different financial outcome for the year than what the budget was meant to achieve?
  • What changes need to be made in the management of any revenue or expense items?
  • What implications are there for the next fiscal year, given the projected financial result of this year?

Nonprofit Harvest: Employee Benefits

This week’s Chronicle of Philanthropy Live Discussion was on Employee Benefits at Nonprofit Groups.  It was a timely discussion, especially given a recent report by the Johns Hopkins Listening Post Project (a summary is available on MCF’s Philanthropy Potluck blog).

The discussion pointed out some useful resources to help nonprofits consider ways to limit costs while still providing benefits and professional development opportunities to their employees:

August 20, 2009

Transparency is a Two Way Street

Transparency as a Planning Tool

National Council of Nonprofits has produced a series of Special Reports on the economy.  Their most recent update, Strategies Being Used by Nonprofit Leaders To Cope with the Nation’s Economic Crisis, summarizes findings from a range of reports and provides some key takeaways.  I found the first tip is particularly interesting:

[B]eing transparent about financial challenges and “staying close to funders” emerged as an essential strategy for many organizations. Savvy nonprofits are asking grantmakers to be transparent – because nonprofits need to know how much to expect, and within what timeframe, in order to conduct realistic financial planning. For instance, asking foundations to expedite payments,  in these times when “cash flow” for many nonprofits feels like “cash drip,” is a fair thing to ask.  Likewise, it is better to hear bad news – that a grant will be smaller, or delayed, or even discontinued – earlier rather than later so that adjustments can be made immediately.

Until you have information about the likelihood and timing of grants and other sources of revenue, it’s hard to engage in realistic contingency planning.  The Minnesota Council of Foundations is doing their best to gather and aggregate data on how Minnesota grantmakers are responding to economy.

Nonprofits Assistance Fund has also created materials to help organizations manage cash flow and make informed financial management decisions.

To see all of our financial management tools and articles, visit the Resources section of our website.

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