Tag Archives: cash flow

Nonprofit Radio for November 10, 2025: What We Can Learn From For-Profits

 

Stephen Halasnik: What We Can Learn From For-Profits

Let’s not fawn over for-profit companies. Not everything they do carries over to our nonprofit community. But some things do. Like building systems and processes; diversifying revenue; knowing KPIs cold; relentless customer focus; and, more. Plus, let’s look at what nonprofits do better. Stephen Halasnik walks us through the best of both. He’s co-founder of Financing Solutions.

 

Listen to the podcast

Audio Player

Get Nonprofit Radio insider alerts

Apple Podcast button

 

 

 

We’re the #1 Podcast for Nonprofits, With 13,000+ Weekly Listeners

Board relations. Fundraising. Volunteer management. Prospect research. Legal compliance. Accounting. Finance. Investments. Donor relations. Public relations. Marketing. Technology. Social media.

Every nonprofit struggles with these issues. Big nonprofits hire experts. The other 95% listen to Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio. Trusted experts and leading thinkers join me each week to tackle the tough issues. If you have big dreams but a small budget, you have a home at Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio.
View Full Transcript

Welcome to Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio, big nonprofit ideas for the other 95%. I’m your aptly named host and the podfather of your favorite hebdominal podcast. We have a listener of the week. Rusty stall in Beacon, New York. On LinkedIn, Rusty asked me for an old, very old show going back to 2010, the year we started the show. And we had some comments back and forth and uh in one of his comments, he said that he loves that I do nonprofit radio for the other 95%, and he had other all caps. Obviously avid listener, says the tagline of the show correctly in, in, in print. Uh, oh, and also that, uh, nonprofit radio had inspired his own podcast, Fund the People. So we have spinoffs, we’ve got, uh, uh, loyal listeners, and one of those loyal listeners is our listener of the week. Thank you very much, Rusty. I’m glad that the show really inspired you to launch your own podcast and, um, that I’m glad I helped you out some time ago. Our listener of the week, Rusty Stahl. Oh, I’m glad you’re with us. I’d get slapped with a diagnosis of broncho candidiasis. If I had to breathe in the idea that you missed this week’s show. Here’s our associate producer, Kate, with what’s going on. Hey, Rusty. And Tony. This week it’s what we can learn from for-profits. Let’s not fawn over for-profit companies. Not everything they do carries over to our nonprofit community, but some things do, like building systems and processes, diversifying revenue, knowing KPI’s cold, relentless customer focus, and more. Plus, let’s look at what nonprofits do better. Stephen Halaznik walks us through the best of both. He’s co-founder of Financing Solutions. On Tony’s take 2. Hails from the gym, the Halloween parade. Here is what we can learn from for-profits. It’s a pleasure to welcome Stephen Halaznik to nonprofit Radio. Steven is co-founder of Financing Solutions. The largest provider of lines of credit for small nonprofits. He has built 7 successful businesses over the past 30 years and 2 of the companies made the Inc 500 fastest growing list. The company is at financingutsnow.com. And Steven says he’s not very active on social media. Steven, welcome to nonprofit Radio. Tony, thank you for having me. I, I’m looking forward to this. Oh, thank you very much. Uh, you have some uh interesting ideas about what we, uh, on the nonprofit side can learn from our comrades over on the, on the for-profit, uh, business side. Um, but first I want to explore your, uh, your Jersey roots. It looks like you’re a New Jersey boy. I am. I, I live in, and I love saying it because, you know, the connotation for New Jersey is that it’s ugly and Uh, it’s, uh, anybody who’s been to a lot of New Jersey know, knows that’s not true. Uh, it’s, uh, I live in the lake and mountain region of New Jersey which people are always shocked to know that there’s a lake and mountain, there’s lakes and mountains and so it’s a beautiful area. I live about 50 minutes outside New York and I’ve traveled the world and I, I tell you, it’s, it’s the area I live is special and so I’m proud of it. Uh, wonderful. Uh, I, I saw your, your town, uh, we can shout the town, Boonton. That’s where my offices are, yes, and, and yeah, so I live 15 minutes away. I, it’s, uh, I, I think I’m living in a little more rural than Boutin, but Boughton is a, an interesting town. Mountains and lakes. It’s mountain lakes and yeah, and I saw that you, I saw that you went to Rutgers also. So between the two, I thought Jersey boy, yeah, I grew up in, uh, up in Bergen County in the northeast corner of the state in a little town called Old Japan. Oh sure, beautiful. I went to a 1776 house there. Oh yeah, the 76 house. Yeah, that, OK, you were, you were 5 minutes from my house. The 76 house. um, I used to go there with my parents. That’s in that’s actually in Japan, New York. That’s right, right, it’s right over the border. It’s, it’s a 5 minute drive. My parents used to go for Sunday brunch so often that I could tell you where the Eggs Benedict was located. And I had a funny Eggs Benedict because that’s where, uh, that’s where Benedict Arnold was put in prison. That’s right, yep, and then he was hanged up on, uh, on, uh, no, Colonel Andre, yeah, Andre. Uh, up on, uh, Andre Hill, they walked in from the courthouse at the 76 House to the hill, and there’s a monument there where he was hanged. Yep, yep. So it’s really old building. It’s beautiful. I had my rehearsal, my wedding rehearsal dinner there. So, oh, wonderful. Well, where did you get married then? Uh, well, uh, a chart house in, uh, on the Hudson, the one in Weehawken, yeah. OK, but you had the rehearsal, who was so close to, we were living in Nyack. Oh, Nyack, New York. OK, Rockland County. OK, you were living close to the 76 house. Yeah, yeah, um, yeah, I’ve been there probably dozens of times with my parents through the, through the years. It’s beautiful, it’s a cool place. Yeah, right, fantastic. So welcome. Uh, another another level, another level. We can we can share. All right. Um, So learning from, uh, for-profit businesses I’m all in favor of, um, I, I don’t get that many pitches like this, but, um, I, I like them when they come, so that’s, that’s what attracted me to your, uh, your pitch to, to come on the show. Um, why don’t you acquaint folks with, uh, since you do work for your company is around nonprofits, uh, acquaint us with uh financing solutions. So, uh, for the last 12 years we’ve been the largest provider of lines of credit to small nonprofits in the United States, um. Anybody who’s ever tried to get a line of credit from a uh commercial bank knows that it’s almost impossible. Um, typically a bank’s gonna want a personal guarantees, uh, they’re gonna want collateral. It’s a very laborious process and to be quite honest with you, banks don’t want to work with nonprofits. There’s too many, um, concerns they have in regards to if they have to declare the fault and the press, the PR behind it. So, especially for small nonprofits, um, so we, we are, uh, we, we, we have that niche for ourselves. We’re one of the only companies that really kind of does it. We are providing, uh, we use our own money. So that’s the reason why there’s no PGs personal guarantees, there’s no collateral. It’s the best way to use this product, uh, is, is you have uneven cash flow. And you know, if, if, if you know the money’s coming in. It’s a good, and what’s really interesting is we’re actually a little slow right now, uh, and you would think that would be the opposite and it tends, and the reason being is that nonprofits tend to be very responsible. And if they know that money’s not coming in, Then they tend to not go into debt. That’s very good to hear. I’m glad we’re, I’m glad we’re overall, we’re responsible. They are, yeah, but that’s why we do the line of credit for 2 weeks, 30 days or something, you know, that, that’s not the end of the world. That’s that’s, that’s the purpose of the, of the product, get you over a low cash flows period. Now, if you’re because you’re relying on your, I don’t know, is it like 90 days if you’re relying on your credit line too much, that’s a, that’s a bad sign. I, I think so. I think 90 days would be 90 days is a little much. I mean, we had certainly have clients that go way past that. I, I would tell you is that you should understand, and I’m not selling you on anything, you know, you, you know, it’s, we are, we’re 5 star rated, and the only reason I point at the statistic is whenever we, you know, I talk to clients all the time, they love that they. have this ability. I never had a client say, oh my God, it’s expensive, or, oh my God, I, I, you know, you know, I, I wish I didn’t have this. I have just the opposite, uh, I hear the just the opposite. Um, it’s really valuable. And, you know, if we’re gonna bring it into our discussion, for-profit businesses use lines of credit all of the time. So, it’s, it’s. A way for them to manage cash flow. And by the way, if you think you’re a nonprofit and you think that you’re unusual that you have ups and downs in cash flow, what you’re not. Everybody has ups and downs in cash flow. I’m a little, I’m a one person, uh, solo consultancy and I have a line of credit at my bank. Yeah, because there are months when, uh, someone pays slow or there’s nothing due or you gotta get by. Yes, all right. So, um, so your idea, your idea for coming on was, uh, things we can learn. On the nonprofit side, as I said, from, uh, from our, our friends over in for-profit, um, like strategies during tough times, what do you, what, what’s your advice there? Like this is, I guess these are things that you don’t see nonprofits doing that they ought to consider doing, is that, is that it? Well, yes, and so business wise, yes, and listen, other than building 7 companies over the last 30 years, I’ve been an entrepreneur my whole, uh, almost my whole career. Um, I also am lucky enough to work with executive directors all the time, so I, you know, I know what’s going on in nonprofits. I’ve also served on two boards. So I have a little insight as to both sides of the table. Now, uh, you know, Tony, you know, during this talk, I, I’d like you to really kind of give a little bit more insight as to, you know, I have 10 areas that I think uh uh really successful business owners do. Um, that, uh, that I’ll share with everybody, um, and then maybe, you know, because you know the nonprofits, uh, much better than I do, you can just give us your take on it and it kind of apply it even more. So, uh, you know, I, I’m happy to address the crisis. I just actually did a, uh, um, uh, uh, a white paper on what to do in a uh uh crisis as well. Um, and I’ll, I’ll give you, that’s, that wasn’t on my list, but I’ll, I’ll, I’ll give you my two cents and, you know, the idea behind a crisis is survival. It’s, I mean, that’s not a big deal. But you always wanna fight, be able to fight the next day, so you have to really buckle down, cut costs extremely fast, um, I think the worst is gonna come down the tubes and really reduce your cost structure as quickly as you can. I’ve been through 3 major recessions in the United States and all my companies that I had during that time. Um, you know, really had to survive and, and so I know what it’s like, and, uh, you know, it’s a little late now and if you haven’t done it, but you, you unfortunately you got to really cut costs and uh, you know, unfortunately 65% of all nonprofits costs go into often payroll so you uh unfortunately have to look very closely at that. So, so this is saying you you’re saying as the crisis emerges. Yeah, well, we’re in crisis mode right now, right? Yeah, well, yeah, uh, well, not as bad as 2008, 2009, or, or 9/11, not like, well, I’m talking about nonprofits if you’re, you know, the government funding, we saw a lot of our clients nonprofit, yes, you’re right by State Department. I mean, the 12 years I’ve been doing this, this is the worst time in nonprofit’s history in, in, uh, and during COVID, you know. The the donors stepped up and then all of the nonprofits got money that they weren’t expecting and people did a really nice job and now we’re seeing not over the government funding stopping, but, uh, also, uh, uh, we’re not seeing uh donors stepping in like they did in in COVID. Yeah, no, I understand. um, and a lot of that, you know, during COVID was. Uh, initially nonprofits were very reluctant to ask because they were afraid that, you know, everybody’s we’re all staring down our own mortality but we’re like, you know, at, at the early stages we didn’t know if a trip to the grocery store, you know, could, could end up uh getting, we, we get a disease and, and there’s no cure for it, there’s no, uh, vaccine for it yet. Like a trip to the grocery store could be deadly. So, so no profits backed off, but our, our advice, you know, the, the, the advice consistently was you still have needs and you have to share those needs, and people, people, yes, people have greater concerns about their own health and mortality and their families today than they did 3 months or maybe even just 3 weeks ago, depending on, you know, when we’re talking, but you still have, you still have needs and let your donors balance. Give them, give them the, give them credit for being able to balance their own now greater concerns and maybe needs with your still continuing ongoing, you know, your needs, but give the donors credit and, and I think that’s you don’t step up. I agree. I, and I said cut costs, but the second part of that is, but I think this is more obvious to people that you have to be putting everything you can into fundraising. Uh, you know, grants, uh, donors, uh, you know, you have to be putting a lot of that into, and that, that kind of moves us into like the 10 points that I thought I wanted to communicate today, um, to everybody about what really good people do who let me just add a little point to what you just said about not cutting fundraising, you know, that, that’s very shortsighted is when you know because that revenue fundraising is your revenue. All the, all the streams you just mentioned, uh, you know, that’s, that’s your income. And when you cut your income sources, then, then you, you may as well cut everything else. And the other thing you need to be, you need to be cautious about knee jerk reactions. I think, I think what happens you start to really be, uh, what’s really effective, what’s working, and you, you kind of zero in on those, uh, things and. Uh, uh, you know, one of the things that during recessions, uh, that I learned, uh, in this case of recessions we’re talking about for businesses and we’re gonna be going into a recession, if we’re not already, uh, and again, let’s be clear what a recession is. A recession is a negative GDP for two full quarters. That’s the consensus. So, uh, negative growth, so of the United States. And so, uh, do you foresee, you foresee a recession. We don’t don’t statistically have one no brainer. No, no, we can’t tell because statistics aren’t coming out. Yeah, we can’t do we know what the statistics are, but all right, assuming. Right, well, that, again, it’s gonna be 2, it’s gonna be 2 full quarters, so it’d be 6 months, you know, we’re, uh, we’re definitely in a, in a huge slowdown. But, uh, this is, I think this is something I’m about to say that’s very helpful. I think you want to look at your organization and, and I did this and say, where do I want to be in 3 years from now? And it, what it, you know, it, it allows you to have a sense, once you’re past that initial stage of, oh my God, I, you know, think once you are able to stabilize your nonprofit, and you can get to this next phase, the next phase is what do I want our organization to look like when this gets better? Cause it’s gonna get better. But, you know, whether it’s one year. 2 years, 3 years out, it by doing something like that, it galvanizes the purpose of your staff and you, and it gets you out of this negativity and more into a positive. And that really helped me through recessions, I know. OK. But, so like, let me read off the 10 things and, uh, and then we’re gonna then if we can, we circle back. I don’t know if we’re gonna get to all 10 of them. A good exe a good business owner, and I’m talking about for uh a business that’s between, uh, well, there’s two types, but Steven, just tick them off quickly. Don’t go into detail on any of them and then that’ll give us the most time to be able to go back. Go ahead, read them off. Works on their business and not in it. OK. Uh, they build systems. Uh, number 3 is to make sure 10% of their business doesn’t come from one client. They know their numbers cold. Uh, they are not overly optimistic and more, uh, and idealistic, they are, uh, realistic. They focus relentlessly on customers. Uh, they know exactly their perfect client. Uh, if we could translate to nonprofits, that would be their perfect donor. Uh, what that person would look like. They, uh, they, uh, they are business owners who are really good at what they do, communicate company culture, purpose, goals, and company direction, and they know them inside and out. And their staff knows them inside and out. And uh they keep learning constantly, and lastly, they manage their cash flow. So those are the, uh, the, the 10 I have, and I tried to rank them in order. Um, the first one, which was works on their business, not, is not in it, is what I often see with executive directors who are under, uh, the revenue is under 2 million like so to speak, in revenue a year that usually those executive directors are doing everything. And they’re they’re in the weeds, they’re in the weeds and not in the treetops, and you, you may not be able to get there, uh, so the, you know, the way that you do that is you, you, you either delegate to get out of the weeds, or you get to a point where you can hire a second in command. And that, you know, it may not happen to 2 million, but that’s the goal is for you to not be the, uh, the person who’s doing everything at the organization. You, and by the way, usually you know it because you’re burning out, which is very common. Yes, you’ll feel, you’re right, you’ll feel that. Um, I have a suggestion for transitioning from one state to the to the next one employee to the second or third to be where you can where you can hire a 2nd or 3rd, and that’s using. Consultants, freelancers, help you, help you build up some of your some of your capacity maybe in grants. So then you then you can hire a grants person full time because you can justify that or your individual fundraising, uh, maybe it’s, uh, events. I’m not, I’m not keen on events as primary fundraisers. Maybe I should like that that would be like a footnote, um. But, uh, you know, building up your sustainer base, building up your social media presence so that you have a funnel of folks that you take from, you know, the people who engage with you on Instagram and you try to, you move them, whoever’s willing, into donating or volunteering. Volunteering can also be a valuable transition method. So between those two consultants and, and using volunteers. Uh, those can sort of be a bridge to, you know, you as the sole employee to being able to expand the, the full-time employees. Yeah, and I, I’ll also add one to that too that I learned. I, I, when I was, I had one company when we were at 5 million, um, I, it wasn’t enough for me to hire a second in command. So I gave somebody on my team who I really liked a dual role. Not only did they do the job that they did, um, but then I asked them to take over as director of staff, and then I paid them an extra 5000 or $10,000 I forget what it was, um, to, because they took on some additional responsibilities and it allowed me to transition. So, uh, well, you know, if you’re talking about like in this same topic. Uh, working on the business, the executive director, or let’s just talk about the business owner, they really good business owners typically focus on one or two things that are the most important for the organization. In a business, it’s about revenue. It’s about how can I drive revenue. And that’s where they spend their time and I think it should be similar in the executive director for a nonprofit where they’re really, you know, 95% of their time should be in regards to driving revenue. Unfortunately, what happens is the the smaller the nonprofit, often time the more the executive director is much more comfortable working in the, the, you know, the, the other side, which is how can I help. The people in the cause, you know, my cause and you know it’s the operation side of it, yeah, right, let’s go to number 2. I want, I would like to get some detail on each of the 10. So let’s, let’s go to your second. They build systems, so they, they make sure they have processes and procedures in place. They make sure their employees follow those processes and procedures. They use technology really, really well, um, to make everybody productive, but they don’t, you know, they, they build processes so that think of it this way, if one of your key people were to leave and you have to have somebody else come in and fill that spot. Would they be able to get up to speed super quickly? And um and there’s a, there’s a, there’s a reason for processes are so important is because it builds a standard in your organization about how things are gonna get done. In essence, they replicate the way you would do things, um, and you’re, you know, now you’re, you’re documenting it and you’re making sure this is the key, you got to follow up to make sure people are following the processes. What’s your third? Uh, make sure this is a big one. Make sure 10% of your business doesn’t come from any one client. So often what we see at financing solutions, in fact, this is one reason why we will not fund somebody, uh, uh, is because if there are a large percentage of the business only comes from one or two, either people or grants. Um, so if you, you know, in a. I, I don’t know what the magic number is for a nonprofit, but in a business, if more than 10% of your business comes from one area, then that’s not a good sign. When you say one area, you mean one client, one client, not, not one industry or market or something like that. OK, alright, so yeah, um, I mean, look, you know, our listeners are small and mid-size nonprofits and it’s, it’s very possible that. More than 10% of fundraising revenue could be coming from either one person or one foundation or one government agency. It’s a big red flag if that’s the case. I mean, yeah, I mean I’ve heard of like substantial amounts of revenue coming from. Well, maybe it’s not a single government agency if it’s different government agencies, then that’s a little different. Um, OK, but if it’s a single agency, just to be clear, this happens, uh, so many small business owners who are not, you know, you know, are not that experienced, uh, or not very good at what they do, they get like it happens all the time. They’ll get 90% of their clients from one, a 90% of their business from one client. That’s a big problem. If you then the reason being, of course, the most obvious if you lose that client, you’re really in trouble. So Decentralized, like, you know, revenue, revenue sources need to be decentralized. Um, look, you know, in your first year or something, you know, if, if you, if you’re successful, I mean, a foundation grant, well, it could be, uh, it could be a foundation that funds start up, you know, like they’ll fund you for the 1st 2 or 3 years, and then after that, you know, they’ll wean you off or they’ll just cut you off. You need to be self-sustaining. So look, in your first year, you can take what you can get. If that’s a foundation or a large donor or I mean, look, it could be even the funder, and it could be the founder funding it him or herself, obviously that’s an exception, but you need to get off that, you know, you, you. It is, it is dangerous. It, it’s, I mean, think about, think about it like if you’re $3 million of revenue and you know you go to bed at night just hoping that your biggest donor doesn’t, $300,000 or more, a million dollars doesn’t just go 1/6 of your revenue doesn’t go out because the donor had a bad year, had a fire in their home, you know, whatever. All right, enough said. It’s time for Tony’s take too. Thank you, Kate. I know tails from the gym. The on Halloween week. The there was a little uh a preschool parade right through our community gym, because the preschool is just across the hall from the gym in the community center. So the kids came through, uh, interrupted my elliptical workout. I, I mean, how can I keep running on the elliptical when the kids are going by. I had to stop. I had to give them their due. So otherwise I would be an old crotchety, you know, so and so, so no, of course, everybody stopped in the gym. There was like, I guess it was about half a dozen of us in the gym. We all clapped. Little preschoolers went by. There were two Supermans. There was a princess Arielle, uh, a cowboy, and a cookie monster, and the there was a girl who was the cookie monster. So it was all very cute, of course, they just, they just marched through with their little preschool, well, not the adults aren’t little, with the preschool leader and, and then there, there was a a woman following. Uh, and they did a little parade just through the gym. And it was adorable, so. Great, uh, uh, a fun, you know, every, every tale from the gym is not a crotchety curmudgeonly, you know, why is somebody doing this to me type, right? Of course not. Halloween parade, it was great fun. Loved it, very adorable. And that is Tony’s stick too. Kate. Sounding like the Scrooge of Halloween over here. Well, yeah, I mean, they, they came through, they’re parading through the gym. I’m busy, I, I have things to do. I, I, I don’t have time for parades, especially, you know, impromptu, unplanned, um, you know, I’m on the elliptical here. Come on people, please. No, it was, it was fun. It, it was, it was fun to see the, of course, see the little preschoolers walk through. It was very adorable. We’ve got Bou but loads more time. Here’s the rest of what we can learn from for-profits with Steven Halaznik. The next one is, uh, they know the numbers cold. They, they know the key performance indicators KPIs. They’re the things that really matter to their organization. They know them off the top of their heads all the time. So these, you know, what are, what are some key KPIs? Well, for, well, for a for-profit business, uh, uh, number one would be profit. Well, well, let’s do the nonprofit. Can we do the nonprofit side, or you can help me with it, but I would say revenue, profits are revenue, revenue of all sources. Yes, revenue of all sources. I earn income as well as fundraising. Number 2 would be, um, I, I think. would be, uh, uh, where your costs all are, what the percentage of your costs, costs are, where they come from. So what percentage of your, uh, are you paying in salary and versus revenue? Um, what, what, um, let’s say, uh, uh, you know, some of you maybe the three biggest areas of cost in your organization, I think it would be really, really important. Um, what, what else would you think, Tony? Um, cash on hand, cash on hand. Oh, definitely, yeah, OK, how many, how many months of cash should we have? I, you know, I Yeah, I, I don’t know. I, you know, they say, uh, for an individual, they all say, oh, come on, you started 7 businesses and 2 of them were on the Inc 500 fastest. You must, what did you look for? I always had a line of credit. Oh, so you, yeah, I always had a line of credit, you know, this is, but the one area that you should know that that nonprofits blow away businesses, for-profit businesses that is budgeting. And forecasting. Yeah, you have some you have some things where nonprofits do better. They do. I was gonna get to those after we did 5, then I’m gonna get to get to the nonprofits do this, but this is more about that. Yeah, well, they just nonprofits are fantastic at budgeting and forecasting and, and, and also making and following up on it. I don’t know, listen, you understand, I know. 3300, 400, 500 business owners because I’m constantly involved in that circle. And I don’t know, I literally do not know one business owner, right? And this is from businesses from 1 million in revenue to 20 million revenue that budget and forecast. I don’t, I just don’t know anybody like that. I’ve never done it. And I don’t know any other business owners who do it, but all the clients that we talked to with, they all budget really, really well, and that’s a, that’s a positive. OK, all right, um, all right, so know your numbers. So, all right, so we talked about, uh, oh, so you asked me then, OK, so cash on hand. Um, Not sure. I mean, You know, you might have, you might have, uh, well, especially in the 4th quarter, you might have weekly production goals. You probably have at least biweekly production goals in the 4th quarter, if not weekly production goals. So you’re, so you’re, you’re paying attention to those, um, I’d I’d like to know. Yeah, away from the money side, but meaningful contacts, how, how many meaningful contacts are is your individual fundraiser or are your individual fundraisers? Having in uh I guess over a month, meaningful contacts. I mean, a meaningful contact could be, could be just left a phone message. I mean that can be a meaningful contact, not, you know, not call me back, that’s not meaningful, but happy birthday, left a phone message, happy birthday, happy anniversary. It’s the anniversary of your very first gift to us. That’s always a very meaningful one. Remembering people’s donor anniversaries you gave to you gave your first gift to us eight years ago today. Nobody, nobody tracks that no individual tracks that fundraisers who track that so fundraisers who track that you can really touch your donors. So I’d say meaningful contacts, uh, from your individual fundraisers that, that, that’s another, that’s a metric I’m interested in. Yeah, and so, uh, what my suggestion to everybody who, who’s listening is, um, is you should have an Excel spreadsheet and on Excel shell shells uh spreadsheet, yeah, you should have, yeah, you should have your KPIs that you care the most uh uh about. Uh, I, I would tell you not to overdo it. Um, and I have a reminder on your calendar or if you do have an, uh, someone who’s working internally as an accountant or something like that. Um, a bookkeeper, give that to them and say, I want this every single month, or you do it every single month, you know, yourself. And every single month, you, you, you update that calendar, I’m sorry, that spreadsheet so that you know your numbers and also so you can see trends, and I, I would tell you it’s very helpful to be able to look back eventually at 2 years ago, 3 years ago, 5 years ago to see where your numbers trended. Um, and so that’s my suggestion. OK, do one more and then we’ll go back over to the what nonprofits do better side. Yeah, um, 5, you’re on your number 5 now. We’re on number 5. So, uh, this is one I got from my business. I have a business partner and, uh, he, he works more on the, uh, operation side, so he’s dealing with a much more documentation regards to, uh, to, um, nonprofits and also talks to executive directors, uh, even more than I do. And he’s the one who gave me this and he said executive directors are too optimistic and idealistic, um, and, you know, when it comes to, uh, uh, so that’s what the, you know, that’s one that he kind of wanted to put that down over optimistic and over idealistic, yes. OK, um, can you, can you channel your, your, uh, your co-founder and say a little more about, I mean, what would be generally an upbeat class of people, I think. Well, I think that’s, I think, uh, he, he said overly. So, uh, it’s, I think more experienced business owners know, um, to not grow too fast until they have their model down. And they, they, they, they really minimize making mistakes, uh, when they’re too small. The whole idea is to build a build a runway. It typically, uh, as a small business owner, you, you, it takes you 3 to 5 years to really understand your, your business and the marketplace you’re in. And, um, you want to be able to, uh, uh, I used to have a great business, uh, mentor. I had him for 25 years, and he said, the longer you stay in business, the more chances is that you’re going to figure everything out. And so that, that is kind of what your goal should be to, to grow, um, uh, not too fast until you really figure out, you really have your model down. Let’s move over to the uh nonprofits do it better side. So budgeting, we’re OK, tick off what else, what else, one other that we do better? Nonprofits have a built-in purpose that really galvanizes the team, the mission, the mission, and really, uh, for profits have to, uh, they all and good ones, really good ones. Um, uh, have to uh work on understanding what their true mission is, so that, uh, and, and make sure that they have buy-in from the people who work for them. Um, and that’s, that’s not, uh, really good experienced business owners know how to know what their culture is, know what their mission is, uh, know what their goals are. Um, but it’s, it’s it from what I’ve seen is nonprofits have it, uh, the, the purpose built in and that really allows you to have a energy in the Nonprofit with your employees, um, that is, is hard to duplicate. So over on the business side, you all or some folks need to be more, you know, I mean, this is, you’re talking about essentially like culture and that that’s gonna start from the top. That that the the CEO of the business is clear about the values, the, the culture, the, the, the just the overall the, the spirit of the organization, what you know, I, I hope that it’s more than just profit. It’s maximizing we’ve got maximize profit. That’s that’s such a shall I don’t know, but you know I work on the nonprofit side, but to me it’s such a shallow. Uh, pursuit, I itemize profit. That’s why we’re here to maximize profit. That I don’t, I don’t know any good business owners who, I don’t know any business business owners who do that. I don’t know one, not one. They are all, they’re, you know, I listen, going on this podcast talking about, you know, for-profits versus nonprofits, it’s, it’s, it’s a little scary for me because. Yeah, because it’s a safe space, it’s a safe space here. Yeah. And that’s why I’m asking you for advice, but um nonprofit, people who are in a nonprofit sector, often are don’t look favorably upon for-profit businesses. But when you’re in a for-profit business, uh, and I like the the hardest decision. I think people are gonna be surprised to hear this. The hardest decision that a business owner has to make is to lay off people. It’s the hardest decision that you make. And I think most people who are not in a for-profit business are surprised to hear that. Um, I know that that gives, uh, all the people I know angst when that’s something like that has to happen. Um, so, you know, the. Uh, for-profit businesses, uh, want to have a purpose, um, uh, and, and a mission and, and a culture, and really good executive director, I’m sorry, really good business owners. Get to that really, really early. And the reason why I put this down is that I’m a big believer in building culture, purpose, mission, and goals really, really, really early. I, I actually did that before I started the companies, you know, so. Let’s go back to your number 6 because I really, I don’t want to shortchange nonprofit radio listeners. So you’re number 6 for what we can learn better. Now, I, I wanna relate it back to nonprofits after I say this, but, uh, really, really good companies focus relentlessly on customers. And, um, and I think when you look at customers for nonprofits, um, I think the area is, uh, your customer, you, you have two. You have your cause, uh, the people that, you know, I mean let’s use the word your clients who are you’re doing your services for maybe and you know that everybody’s different, but, uh, but I, you know, you’re in, and the other side is your donors, you know, focusing relentlessly. On the donors who are donating money to, to your cause. And, uh, and that’s what I, uh, that’s what for-profit businesses do really well. And it’s something for you to consider if you’re running a nonprofit. And the only thing I would add is uh volunteers. Yeah, you’re right. The people who are benefiting the people who are doing, getting the benefit of your work or the animals or, you know, relentless focus on them, also they’re donors and, and I would add volunteers. I agree, agreed. Next one, number 7 is, uh, knowing exactly their perfect clients. That’s what for-profits do really well. And the reason for this is, uh, uh, in a for-profit business, you, this is for marketing, so that you know where to put the money and where you want to put your effort into getting clients that really can use your services. And if you translated this to a nonprofit, I think where this could be used is, do you know what your perfect donor looks like, or your, or your volunteer looks like? Do you know where to find them? Do you know how much money it costs you to get them? Yeah, um, do you, like, why, you know, you’re perfect client. And I, the way you analyze this is you look at the people who are giving you money now. And you say, hey, you know, how did they find us? and what do they care about and what resonates with them and why did they give to us? And uh where they, where else do they hang out? You know, it’s the client model, and that allows you to focus your energy very efficiently and effectively because if you don’t have a lead generation system to get donors or clients to you, Then, um, then you, you’re really spinning your wheels a lot. Uh, uh, on the business side is because your, your ideal client profile, is that something I ICP or do I have a right, is that acronym I your ICP? OK, OK. I’m surprised. I’m surprised I got the right. OK. I that’s by the way, that’s like. The end of the business that I’m really good at. I spent a lot of time, I spent 95% of my my time in the understanding of that and where do we find our clients. I don’t go out and do it. I just, uh, work on the model of that to really understand it. What’s your number 8? Uh, experienced owners for businesses know, know, uh, they, they, we talked about it already, but they communicate company culture, purpose, goals and company direction. And they, they really stay laser focused on those, and they’re always talking about it, and they’re always making sure that it’s, that the company is doing it, and that their staff knows what the company culture, purpose goals and and company direction is. So what I used to do, uh, uh, you know, what I do with my company and uh ones in the past, is whenever we have a meeting, I make sure I review those things and I ask the staff, are we living up to this? You know, and uh and and really, really good business owners make sure they they they they stay true to that. You do that in every single meeting? Uh, I do it, uh, in every, every monthly meeting that we have as a team. That’s correct. OK. People don’t roll their eyes. No, because if you get, here he goes again with the culture again. I gotta hear this. Well, I, I’ll tell you if someone like, uh, if, if I, I would be paying attention to that, but I, I wouldn’t be, I, when I go into meetings, I don’t lecture. I, I ask questions. I think as long as it’s being lived, then it’s, it’s not eye rolling. I mean, as long as they’re witnessing it in between the monthly meetings, they’re seeing the company live up to it. In just day to day, you know, just day to day decision making, then, then it, then it’s true that the company is in fact grounded in, in these values in this direction and these goals, right? I mean it has to be lived in between the meetings. Yeah, I mean, it’s all you need to say is, you know, this is our company culture, our purpose, our goals, and, well, don’t go over goals yet, but that’s too big a deal. But here’s our company culture our purpose and our direction, um, is over the last 30 days, did you say, did you see any instances where we didn’t live up to what we’re trying to do? You know, that’s, that, that doesn’t dictate that asks. And, um, I, I’m not an intimidating person. I mean, my, my, the, the people who have worked, uh, with me, they, uh, feel like they’re part of the company, uh, that it’s not my company, that they’re a part of it. Um, so yeah, I’m a big believer in buying and the only way I’m gonna get buy in is if they really believe in this stuff. Right, right, that, that’s essential, that, that’s essential culture and they’ll be again, you know, they’ll believe in it if they see it in practice. What’s your number 9? Uh, uh, really, uh, good business owners are continuously learning. They’re just constantly learning. And you know, this goes back to, um, and I think they’re not just learning as a company, I’m sorry, they’re not just learning as a person, but they’re helping, they’re helping people, um, in their company learn, um, they create a learning atmosphere. Um, and it’s constantly, you know, how can we be better at what we do, um, how can we better, how can we be better for our customers, um, you know, it’s, and, and the business owner is always reading, learning, asking questions, really, really gives the best business owners that I know. In fact, I just spoke to one of, 11 of my friends who’s a fantastic business owner. And he, uh, he, uh, he’s just such a, um, uh, he just is always, uh, a benchmarking, uh, you know, learning from other companies, even in his own sector. So I think in nonprofits is, you know, I, I, you, you know, one of the things you, how you can translate this is also, you know, do you have a, a group of people. People that are, uh, other nonprofit executive directors that you talk to, uh, that’s very valuable, right? Having a peer group, definitely, because, because when you’re in the leadership, it, it, it can be lonely at the top, uh, people have agendas, you’re not sure who to who to trust 100%, you know, so having someone who’s objective about your business and nonprofits are a business, they just, they just happen to be incorporated as a not for profit corporation, but it’s. They should, I always say they should be run as businesses. Someone who’s objective about your business, who doesn’t have a stake in the outcome or your decision. Can be a very valuable, right, peer supporter, mentor, call them whatever you like, friend, friends are good. We like having friends, you know, friends we can bounce things off. So yeah, what’s different with this, what’s different with this guy I talked to yesterday, he was, he’s Dwight, is he, uh, he and I actually had a had a company, uh, uh, he had his own, I had mine that we were both competitors. And that’s, you know, most people think, oh, well, if you’re competitors, you don’t talk. Well, Dwight and I talked all the time. And, you know, his, his company was at the time was $90 million my company was $11 million. We were in a $13 billion dollar industry, so we were both small potatoes, and we both knew that it didn’t matter. We weren’t gonna cannibalize each other’s business. We were gonna help each other’s business. So look at it that way. Your final, final one is, is, uh, it is self-serving, but uh I wanna leave I wanna leave a little time to go back to nonprofits do it better side so. Don’t, don’t, don’t go too long on number 10 because I wanna, I wanna end with, and with that. Go ahead. What’s your number 10? Um, they just, uh, they have a plan to manage cash flow, um, and that is right, you know, there’s gonna be ups and downs and either, you know, they have a certain amount of money that they figured they put aside. again, you got, uh, uh, nonprofits are better at budgeting, um, you know, or you have a donor who, who will always step up to help you when things are, uh, when, uh. When your cash flow is down or you have a line of credit in place, or, but you have a plan. You have a plan, uh, uh, that, that, that handles when there’s ups and downs, uh, in cash flow. You mentioned something about donors having trusted close donors they might be board members, maybe they’re not board members, but trusted donors who you know you can go to when there is a crisis, uh, you know, they’re investors, they love your work, they know your outcomes, they respect the CEO. You don’t come to them on a knee jerk, but you know we something happened, uh, you maybe had a catastrophe of, of whatever sort imaginable, and these are the folks you can go to and say, you know, can you help, can you step up, help us in this help us in this crisis moment? Yeah, the problem that I’ve seen is that, um, that sometimes OK once, maybe twice. But when you have to go back to that person over and over again, yeah, well, that’s then that’s kind of becoming the knee jerk, right? It’s a little embarrassing. That’s like, yeah, that’s like having your relying on your line of credit for, for 6 months. Uh, yeah, no, it, it is right, then they’re gonna start to question the leadership. Like why do you have so many crises? OK. Let’s go back to the nonprofit to do a better side and wrap up, give us a, give us a third one that uh you all on the commercial corporate, well, we’re all corporations. You all over on the for-profit side can learn from us. Uh, Yeah, you don’t have a 3rd 1, do you? I really don’t have a 3rd 1. Yeah, yeah, I, I would be, I’d be like shooting in the dark, I think, you know, I, I, you know, I think, I think employees want to stay with your organization longer, you know, they, they care more, so they tend to be happy, but, you know, the problem actually I just wrote a paper about this today, which was, um, about, uh. Your, your staff needs still to be fairly compensated fairly as well. And a lot of nonprofits think, well, the, you know, you’re here for the cause and I don’t need to pay you as much. Yeah, that’s bad. Yeah, yeah, it’s not really great. What about something around passion. I, I mean, I’m sure business people are passionate, but keeping the passion, it’s related to what you said, mission, you know, mission alignment, keeping that passion burning. In, you know, uh, I, I use animals as uh as an example a lot. I’m not sure why, but let’s. Clean water, clean water. You know, just reminding folks every day, every day, not literally, reminding folks routinely that we’re here for, we’re here for drinking water for children, for, for, for the infirm for, for those of us who are healthy every day, we all need clean water and you know, and sort of keeping that passion alive. I don’t know. You’re, you’re on the business side. I’m not sure. I, I, I, I maybe I’m stereotyping business people, but I, I wonder if the, if the, the, the early on passion, does it stay? Does it stay 5, 10 years, the passion for, for, for why you built that business because that’s what I’m advocating, keeping that passion burning in yourself. and, and on your team. I, I, so I, I’ll answer it indirectly and I think that the burnout at nonprofits for executive directors is much, is, is significantly higher than it is for uh business owners of businesses. So it’s interesting you should say that because the built-in purpose, you would think would lend itself to not burning out as much, but maybe it’s because the nonprofits have to fight so hard. Um, to get funding and it’s such a, it’s such a much more difficult, I think, um, uh, uh, issue than it is for a for-profit business, uh, to succeed. Um, I, I don’t know statistically if nonprofits fail higher than non than for-profit businesses, but the burnout syndrome in a nonprofit is much higher and I I, you know, I often say, um, remember that this is a marathon and not a sprint, and you need to be, you, uh, you know, nonprofit owners and business owners need to remember that, um, you need to take care of yourself first because you’re no good to your employees, you’re no good to your customers, you’re no good to your cause if you’re burnt out. Perfect. Self-care, absolutely. Leave it there, that comes first. That should have been your number one. Steven, Steven Halasnik. You’ll find the company at financingutsow.com. Thanks very much, my fellow, uh, my fellow Jersey boy, thank you very much for sharing. Thanks for having me. It was fun. I’m glad. Next week, another conversation with Art Taylor, the CEO of AFP. If you missed any part of this week’s show, I beseech you. Find it at Tony Martignetti.com. Our creative producer is Claire Meyerhoff. I’m your associate producer Kate Martignetti. The show’s social media is by Susan Chavez. Mark Silverman is our web guy, and this music is by Scott Stein. Thank you for that affirmation, Scotty. Be with us next week for nonprofit Radio, big nonprofit ideas for the other 95%. Go out and be great.

Nonprofit Radio for August 22, 2022: Accounting For Nonprofit Leaders

 

Tosha Anderson & Zanni Miranda: Accounting For Nonprofit Leaders

In our penultimate #22NTC show, Tosha Anderson and Zanni Miranda introduce key accounting concepts to help nonprofit leadership avoid the common pitfalls they see. Tosha is CEO of The Charity CFO and Zanni is with Nonprofit Solutions.

Tosha Anderson Zanni Miranda

 

 

 

 

Listen to the podcast

Get Nonprofit Radio insider alerts!

 

 

I love our sponsors!

Turn Two Communications: PR and content for nonprofits. Your story is our mission.

Fourth Dimension Technologies: IT Infra In a Box. The Affordable Tech Solution for Nonprofits.

Apple Podcast button

 

 

 

We’re the #1 Podcast for Nonprofits, With 13,000+ Weekly Listeners

Board relations. Fundraising. Volunteer management. Prospect research. Legal compliance. Accounting. Finance. Investments. Donor relations. Public relations. Marketing. Technology. Social media.

Every nonprofit struggles with these issues. Big nonprofits hire experts. The other 95% listen to Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio. Trusted experts and leading thinkers join me each week to tackle the tough issues. If you have big dreams but a small budget, you have a home at Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio.
View Full Transcript

Transcript for 605_tony_martignetti_nonprofit_radio_20220822.mp3

Processed on: 2022-08-22T13:22:40.693Z
S3 bucket containing transcription results: transcript.results
Link to bucket: s3.console.aws.amazon.com/s3/buckets/transcript.results
Path to JSON: 2022…08…605_tony_martignetti_nonprofit_radio_20220822.mp3.502625655.json
Path to text: transcripts/2022/08/605_tony_martignetti_nonprofit_radio_20220822.txt

[00:01:51.40] spk_0:
Hello and welcome to Tony-Martignetti non profit radio big nonprofit ideas for the other 95%. I’m your aptly named host of your favorite abdominal podcast. Oh, I’m glad you’re with me. I’d suffer the effects of pseudo papillae Dema if I saw that you missed this week’s show Accounting for nonprofit leaders in our penultimate 22. NTC show Tasha Anderson and Zanny Miranda introduce key accounting concepts to help nonprofit leadership avoid the common pitfalls. They see Tasha is ceo of the charity CFO and Zanny is with nonprofit solutions on tony take to the endowment excitement webinar, we’re sponsored by turn to communications pr and content for nonprofits. Your story is their mission turn hyphen two dot c. O. And by fourth dimension technologies I. Tion for in a box. The affordable tech solution for nonprofits. tony-dot-M.A.-slash-Pursuant D just like three d but they go on to mention deeper here is accounting for nonprofit leaders. Welcome to nonprofit radio coverage of 22 N. T. C. The 2022 nonprofit technology conference. My guests now are Tasha Anderson and Zanny Miranda. Tasha is founder and ceo of the charity cf. Oh Zanny Miranda is operations Manager at nonprofit solutions. Tasha Zani. Welcome to nonprofit radio Thank

[00:02:05.94] spk_1:
you for having us. Yeah,

[00:02:07.50] spk_2:
thank you so much for having us on

[00:02:11.89] spk_0:
pleasure. I’m glad we’re gonna talk about this. But 10 things every nonprofit leader should know about their accounting

[00:02:17.66] spk_1:
Alright.

[00:02:23.44] spk_0:
I I suspect this is an often ignored um ignored area by by nonprofit leaders until there’s some kind of a problem I guess or until the the 9 90 has to be filed, you know, so maybe once a year they become, or maybe there’s board reports, but in between all that, um I suspect it’s ignored. Uh Tasha, do I have that? You’re nodding? Is that

[00:03:12.03] spk_1:
yeah, I think, yeah, I think it’s ignored because it’s for a lot of small organizations. It’s not their primary role. It’s not what they’re experienced in. It’s not their skill set and it becomes one of those things, it’s not an immediate issue. It’s not something I’m particularly good at, it’s something I’m gonna have to teach myself and I’m gonna have to um very kind of the procrastination that I put into it. And then it’s when things kind of abrupt Show up like our 9 90 return or we realized we have an audit or our books have gotten further and further behind and now we have to hurry up and scramble for that, you know, board meeting or something to that effect. Um that’s kind of best case scenario. Um worst case scenarios are other more significant things that might come up with our accounting. Um that that all of a sudden becomes more of a priority.

[00:03:34.21] spk_0:
Like, alright, we’re focused on motivation. What are what are one or two of those worst case scenarios?

[00:04:46.20] spk_1:
Well, some of those worst case scenarios, I think more abruptly we get a lot of clients that work with us that have a lot of government funding and government funding usually includes um some pop up surprise what they call site visits. So if you anticipate uh your site visit or kind of your audit, I use the word loosely with audit. But if you expect your funder to show up on, you know, this period and then they end up coming in sooner or more regularly, either normal or whatever. They just changed their protocol and you’re not prepared for that. That then calls into question your ability to manage the program, your ability to manage the finances of that particular program. And we’ve seen organizations be at risk for losing their funding. And we’ve seen that more often than not, which we’ve kind of talked about and the original presentation that Danny and I did some of the challenges around um not just, you know, keeping caught up with the accounting, but the succession planning um in the transition. I mean, we’re in the midst of what they call the great recession. And so what organizations do that put all of their eggs in one basket with respect to this kind of swiss be nice if you will position that holds also financial management. And when those positions turn over, we’ve seen organizations find themselves really vulnerable situations and it becomes very apparent when it’s time to start sending those periodic reports to your funders or when they start to come out, when you look at your records, it’s a problem.

[00:05:06.79] spk_0:
You’re referring to the great resignation. You mean succession planning. Okay.

[00:05:16.60] spk_1:
I’m

[00:05:35.54] spk_0:
listening. I’m listening channel. I’m channeling listeners. They’re gonna say, wait, great recession. That was many years. Alright. We know we know what you meant. Alright. So Zanny, why don’t you why don’t you kick us off? We got 10 things people are supposed to know nonprofit leaders are supposed to know. So let me ask you before we kick off with our our list. Is this specifically the C the C. E. O. Are we, are we at that level? You know, listeners here are small and midsize nonprofits. So that could be like one or two people up to. I mean 100 or 250 employees could be a midsize nonprofit. Are we in the meat with this? We’re talking about nonprofit leaders. I assume we are.

[00:05:57.71] spk_1:
I

[00:05:57.89] spk_2:
actually think that this information can be for any leader that is self designated or you know, does hold one of those executive positions. I think what we share in this presentation is really about making sure everyone is on the same page across the entire organization. So it’s really for anyone,

[00:06:28.03] spk_0:
uh, with, uh, okay. But we don’t want our Ceo and other other C suite executives ignoring these things. Certainly.

[00:06:30.92] spk_2:
No. Okay.

[00:06:32.33] spk_0:
Okay. All right. So why don’t you kick us off? What’s uh, what’s your

[00:06:37.25] spk_2:
first one is definitely benchmarks and metrics and making sure that you have defined expectations about what those are and how they fit with your organization and I’ll actually pass this one over to Tasha because this is definitely her area of expertise as the C. P. A expert.

[00:07:54.23] spk_1:
Yeah, sure. Uh, so really what we mean by defining benchmarks? Oftentimes, what we see is that not just the tactical work of bookkeeping and accounting is delegated to one individual, but almost the full financial management and responsibility. Understanding how much money is in the bank account. Are we receiving the funding that we thought we were, Are we utilizing the contracts that we’ve committed to our to our funders? Really high level, even where we are with our fundraising goals. And I’ve personally been someone that kind of delegated that responsibility and financial oversight. And I just think it’s imperative whether you’re a for profit business and non profit business at the end of the day, it’s a tax designation. It’s not just because you’re a nonprofit, you should not be delegating full financial ownership and responsibility of your organization to one single person. This is really where that leadership at the ceo level or executive director level, there needs to be some understanding of what your benchmarks are. What are you trying to measure in the holding people accountable to it? And I’ve seen so often where the accountant or the bookkeeper is delegated the responsibility of the budget and they might be doing the bookkeeping in the reconciliations and all that. But is anybody really looking at that budget and holding anybody accountable to it? So what we’re really encouraging is that the leader, you need to understand where things are and what expectations do you have? What processes do you have in place to make sure that you’re moving in the right direction? So

[00:08:19.70] spk_0:
following the budget doesn’t belong with the bookkeeper.

[00:08:23.50] spk_1:
The

[00:08:23.97] spk_0:
bookkeeper does the work.

[00:08:49.29] spk_1:
Yes, the bookkeeper prepares the reports, diving into Why is this off from what we expected? That is joint ownership, frankly, in my opinion, from from the individuals that are charged with that. So your program team, maybe your fundraising team. And I recognize we’re talking with small to middle size at a minimum. The Ceo is looking at this or the executive director and so often times I see uh leadership teams that are just delegating that responsibility and they’re not really immersing themselves in the financial management, the way that I think they should

[00:09:00.00] spk_0:
be alright. You didn’t have to, you know, you two don’t have to go in sequence. You could have picked one that you’re, that you’re an expert on. You know, you don’t have to do it the same sequence. You did it in your in your in your seminar. Alright.

[00:09:13.07] spk_2:
Well, I definitely wanted to make sure Tasha kind of came from the C P a standpoint,

[00:09:18.39] spk_0:
you know, make

[00:09:21.36] spk_2:
sure they all knew, Yeah,

[00:09:22.75] spk_0:
she’s the charity. CFO so

[00:09:24.30] spk_2:
she knows what she’s talking

[00:09:26.01] spk_0:
about

[00:10:08.64] spk_2:
and I have to say I come from the small nonprofit side. So we have a mighty team of three full time and one part time person. So we are, you know, definitely representative of some of the groups that are probably listening. So and these are all things, these are all things that we have learned through working with Tasha that um are very important and we went through a transition and planning and uh had a transition in leadership which then created a transition into changing our bookkeeper um to the charity CFO. So we went through a lot of what we’re talking about in terms of the the sort of scarier situations of how did we get ourselves in this situation? What does this all mean? Where all the, you know, how do we get everybody on the same page? So we definitely learned our lessons.

[00:10:21.81] spk_0:
Let pick one that you are familiar with that you can talk about what’s next.

[00:11:23.37] spk_2:
Yeah, let me take a look. So I know that so kind of speaking about like getting into a sticky situation or number four is I would have understand my compliance needs. And I think that when you do like Tasha was saying, when you have those government funders or even really complicated funding grants from foundations, sometimes they require progress reports, they require year end um reports that can be really calm complicated to do at the last minute and they can be really complicated if you have not set yourself up for success at the very beginning. And so one of the things that we sort of have said is that you really need to take a look at what the grant is requesting from you when they’re, when you’re in that grant search process. And before you apply or maybe right after you apply, making sure that you’ve got things set up with your accountant and things set up in your chart of accounts to make sure that when you’re going through and processing and actually spending money related to these grants, you’ve got everything in place, you know, from the onset, so that it makes it a lot easier to pull those reports and to get that information instead of scrambling and going through, you know, a year’s worth of credit card receipts.

[00:11:50.57] spk_0:
Yeah.

[00:11:53.20] spk_2:
Mentioned

[00:12:17.33] spk_0:
compliance. And there’s, there’s state state laws also depending on what state you’re in. You know, there are, there are the laws that you have to be registered in each state where you solicit donations, that whole charity registration morass that I used to have as part of my practice. Um, you know, keeping keeping track of that. Um, there, there could be, uh, other, I mean, there are federal, there are federal rules that have to stay in compliance with, so there’s, there’s a lot, there’s a lot in that word, compliance.

[00:12:35.20] spk_2:
Yeah, exactly. It’s not just the funding that you get, it’s making sure that, you know, the things that you’re doing are following the law all year, not just when someone comes knocking

[00:12:43.02] spk_0:
and and Tasha, these often come up in audits right? They’ll be they’ll be uh I forget with the technical terms, but they’ll be like memo items in uh report items in an audit that you know, you’re not in compliance with something here. Things like

[00:14:10.94] spk_1:
that. Yeah, findings. And what’s really interesting. I have a funny story when so I used to be a CFO of a non profit organization and we had 14 different government contracts that were a little larger probably than maybe an average listener. We’re about, you know, 6 to 8 million a year. And uh that’s that’s that’s to me that seems large because so many organizations are much smaller than that. But really that’s not huge and what’s really, we went through every single one of our program contracts and wrote down all of the things we’re responsible reporting out to them. So not just on the financial compliance side but also like program outcomes and those sort of things. Anyway, we had five pages front and back on an Excel spreadsheet when we printed it out was five pages, front and back of all of the things that we were responsible for reporting out to someone. And so the more more complex your funding gets, whether it’s multiple foundations or government funding sources. When we hear the word audit. I think we think at the end of the year we have a C. P. A firm that comes in and does an audit. But oftentimes what people don’t realize that you may have multiple audits or inspections or reviews or whatever word you want to use for the same funding, right? You might get um, you know, kind of beat up at a local level through some pass through fun. Then you might have that sourced through the feds and then the feds might come in and do an audit, right? And then your auditors that come in at the end of the year that you hire will also do an audit. So I think that sometimes I’ve seen our clients not necessarily read the fine print of those grant agreements to know what they’re going to be responsible for doing and what frequency. So they find themselves kind of working reactively and scrambling to get that stuff.

[00:15:57.46] spk_0:
It’s time for a break. Turn to communications media relationships and thought leadership. You need one to get the other. You got to have the media relationships. So you get exposure and become the thought leader. Turn to will help you build those relationships. They’re former journalists themselves. And by the way, as you’re getting that exposure, they’ll help you craft your messaging. You get the increased exposure. You’re seen as a thought leader in your field. The thought Leader, the thought leader in your field, they can make it happen. Turn to communications, your story is their mission turn hyphen two dot c o. Now back to accounting for nonprofit leaders. You wanna know as any said, you want to know ahead of time what the requirements are. First to make sure that you can comply with them. You have the infrastructure either internally or or through a provider to do it, you know, and if it’s if it’s beyond you, then that that’s not a grant that you should be applying for because you can’t keep up with the I mean the money may look nice, but you can’t keep up with the back end requirements and you’re gonna end up in a bad situation. Okay.

[00:15:58.93] spk_1:
Absolutely. Absolutely.

[00:16:00.26] spk_2:
Absolutely. No.

[00:16:01.56] spk_0:
In advance. I’m sure this especially applies to a government, a government agency. Yeah.

[00:16:07.28] spk_1:
And that’s funny. We we talked about that a little bit in our session just because there’s money available may not be a good deal. Just what you’re doing, not just the infrastructure. Um, there’s a lot of considerations where it might make sense for an organization to not accept funding. Um, it just doesn’t make sense. And asking ourselves those hard questions before we just

[00:16:25.90] spk_0:
before, Yeah. Look, look closely at what your obligations, your responsibilities are gonna be. All right. All right, well, let’s stay with you, Tasha. Why don’t you give us another another thing. Leadership should know about.

[00:17:33.03] spk_1:
Alright. I think another thing that leaders don’t always realize again, because most leaders of nonprofit organizations, they don’t come from the financial business management side of the biz right? Oftentimes you’ll see leaders that maybe come from the programmatic side of things. Um, and that’s fantastic for a lot of reasons. But what I think some people default to hearing, well this just can’t be done or this financial report can’t be created in the way that you want. And I really encourage leaders of organizations again, to define those expectations of what they’re looking for and ask their account to develop tools that help them measure if we’re on track or not. And this is usually by way of financial reports. And I hear this all the time. Tasha, you know, I get the standard set of financial reports from my accountants. It doesn’t make sense to me. It doesn’t make sense to my board. We don’t know where we’re at, we don’t know which direction we’re heading and what I tell people all the time that financial reports, Yes, your auditors will require to look in this perfect box and it has to look exactly like that. But that’s for the outside world. Think about what your organization needs internally and create those measurements, those tools, those financial reports. That makes sense for you internally. So that you can make business decisions based upon that and what a lot of people don’t realize.

[00:17:52.75] spk_2:
We

[00:18:53.12] spk_1:
Have over 150 clients. Probably many, if not all of them have some level of customization to their reports. So they need to get reports that make sense to them, not already nonprofits have to have the same internal financial statements. In fact, you shouldn’t have the same internal financial statements and start asking yourself what do you need to see? So I’ll give you an example. I have one organization that was really, really cash strapped. They had all the revenue sources in place. They could not understand why are we cash poor, Why do we not have any money? And the reality. After a quick look at some of the financial reports, I realized they were building their funders but they were never collecting them. There were some issues with the quality of their invoicing and some problems they weren’t troubleshooting and poor training and just some other issues that are actually pretty easily fixed. But going forward once we were able to get caught up on that building, the ceo want to make sure that never happened again. So she wanted to make sure she got a detailed listing of what invoices were still outstanding because she started understanding the, the, the timing of when payments were expected to come in and once things started to go off track

[00:18:59.15] spk_0:
basically

[00:18:59.70] spk_1:
immediately, basically

[00:19:01.09] spk_0:
talking about tracking your accounts payable.

[00:19:02.88] spk_1:
Yeah, accounts receivable in this case or payable

[00:19:14.25] spk_0:
receivable? Your receivables? Yeah. I took, I took accounting for poets in college. So I do remember that, um, assets equal liabilities plus owner equity. Is that still true?

[00:19:19.74] spk_1:
That is true.

[00:19:20.97] spk_0:
Axiom still still valid. Like a law of physics doesn’t change. Okay.

[00:19:25.52] spk_1:
In the nonprofit world, we say we don’t have equity because there’s no ownership. But the concept is still the same. We called net assets in the nonprofit world, but the concept is still the same

[00:19:34.74] spk_0:
assets equals net assets. Oh no, we

[00:19:37.60] spk_1:
called the net assets. Yeah.

[00:19:39.61] spk_0:
But the other side is assets, assets equals net assets.

[00:19:43.54] spk_1:
You could do assets minus liabilities equal net assets or assets, you know, equal, you know, however you want to do the algebra of the formula, you could say in multiple different ways. But um, yeah, we say assets minus liabilities equals net assets, but

[00:19:58.75] spk_0:
assets, my stuff, that makes sense to me, assets. Everything you have minus what you owe your liabilities, which I know, I know I’m grossly oversimplifying by when I said what? You know, but again, I took accounting for poets. So you’ll have to excuse that. I’m trainable. I guess I wasn’t, uh, yeah, equals your net assets. Right. Everything you have minus what you owe is is the net

[00:20:21.20] spk_1:
okay.

[00:20:22.47] spk_0:
We don’t have to go any deeper than that. We shouldn’t.

[00:20:24.85] spk_1:
No one wants to hear that. But

[00:20:26.63] spk_0:
Not profit leaders should not profit leaders should, I’m not a nonprofit leader. So I’m not, I’m not on the hook for this. Alright. Um, name another one. Somebody. Somebody throw out another another top 10.

[00:21:32.17] spk_2:
Well, I think, um, following up to sort of, what Tasha was already saying is that you can have all those in place, but if you don’t have anyone, um, doing checks and balances or even around to take over key processes. If someone goes or if someone’s out on vacation, that’s a really major risk. You know, we were in the training or the workshop last week and a lot of people really resonated with this, you know, don’t burn out the one person you have on your team who knows how to do payroll? Who knows how to do vendor payments? Who knows how to do the bank deposits. There can’t be just one person on your team who knows how to do all these things. There needs to be some, you know, some thought to succession planning. Some thought too. Um,

[00:21:32.59] spk_0:
or not even not even succession planning, just like you said vacation.

[00:21:36.04] spk_2:
Yeah, just process documentation.

[00:21:38.00] spk_0:
You know, we got somebody goes out on maternity leave. We still have to process, we still have to process vendor purchase orders.

[00:21:52.11] spk_2:
Yeah, we had someone chat in the comments saying I’m going out on maternity leave, but I still have to process payroll, which is not

[00:21:53.91] spk_0:
great.

[00:22:14.59] spk_2:
That’s not great for your staff’s morale. So definitely just making sure you’ve got some of those basic processes written down, trained, um, cross trained with different people and having backups in place so that people can take a break and people can, you know, not have that looming over their head when they’re supposed to be on maternity leave

[00:22:20.03] spk_0:
or, or

[00:22:21.18] spk_2:
family leave, you know, it’s not sustainable.

[00:22:37.49] spk_0:
Um, I have seen that too, in, in uh, clients that I’ve worked with. I do plan giving fundraising. Um, and you know, we have, we need vendor, we have vendors, there might be, there’s, uh, you know, there’s a company that that manages the soft that provides the software for playing giving calculations. Well that purchase order has to be paid. You know, my purchase order has to be

[00:22:49.87] spk_2:
paid. It

[00:22:51.37] spk_0:
seems sometimes to be one person who can do it and we’re all, we’re all screwed if that person is busy or away or whatever. Alright, let’s stick with you. Give us another one.

[00:23:26.25] spk_2:
Sure. Another thing that you brought up was having the right software to use. So, um, you know, we found when we were in our sort of leadership transition in our, uh, you know, transition between bookkeepers. We just had someone who was, you know, taking our information and then,

[00:23:27.07] spk_0:
you know,

[00:23:27.81] spk_2:
kind of piecemeal putting it together, like looking at the paper receipts, looking at this and really it’s just not sustainable long term to do that. And there are so many options with technology

[00:23:38.44] spk_0:
now to

[00:23:39.84] spk_2:
really make the transition easier. And a lot of nonprofits do qualify for

[00:23:46.85] spk_0:
discounts

[00:24:08.43] spk_2:
for some of these larger tech companies, they have a lot of for profit people using their services. So they, most of the time will have a nonprofit discount or even offer their their software for free. And really it just becomes a matter of making sure that the people in your organization are up to speed. And um, I think Tasha had an incredible case study that she shared about what, how she saw this kind of go sideways um, in her own practice. Okay,

[00:24:35.66] spk_0:
Natasha before you tell that story, aren’t there? There’s also scores of smaller companies that are devoted to nonprofit financial management we through the years. And non profit radio I’ve had one or maybe two of them as sponsors. You know, there they’ll say that, you know, quickbooks is basically they’re they’re, they’re thinking is Quickbooks is not made for non profits. You have to be able to do fund accounting and things and you know, so we’ve got, we’ve got the software solution that’s an accounting financial management devoted to non profits. You don’t have to modify Quickbooks or Intuit or something. Or maybe intuit’s Quickbooks, I don’t even know.

[00:24:58.47] spk_2:
But

[00:25:03.05] spk_0:
counting for poets, but you know, um, so you don’t have to use these major companies that there’s smaller, smaller apps devoted to nonprofit financial management. Right?

[00:26:34.72] spk_1:
That’s right. That’s right. And it’s funny, I was gonna talk a little bit about that because I think that there are a lot of organization accountants that will say nonprofit accounting is super special and we have to have everything special. Um, and I, I don’t disagree with that completely. But the challenge is it creates a, it creates barriers for nonprofit organizations to be able to um work with some of these providers, especially if the proprietor like proprietary software or things of this nature, What I try to do with our clients is create software solutions that can work with nonprofits have a really low cost point price point on those things. And more importantly, the software is very user friendly. There’s a lot of free training resources. So we actually use Quickbooks. I’m not being paid to say that I have no formal partnership with Quickbooks, but I like the software because if they needed to bring their accounting back in house when working with us, they could find bookkeepers or accountants that have experience with with Quickbooks. And so sometimes I think it’s a matter of preference. I say as an account that has my own preferences for how I like to do things. I think it’s, I can say that, but what I think is um important for nonprofits to understand what technology is available out there to Sandy’s point and how can they use that to alleviate some of the manual um time consuming task going back to not burning out your one person that does everything. If you can find ways to autumn streamline that they can maybe focus on bigger value added work or just simply take a breather or focus on work that feeds their soul a little bit more than just doing data entry into the accounting. So

[00:26:50.44] spk_0:
Okay, Zanny said you have a story well

[00:26:51.15] spk_1:
in this particular case. Sure. Yeah, sure. So

[00:26:54.90] spk_0:
speaking

[00:26:55.97] spk_1:
of tedious work that burns people out and it’s very time consuming. So I started working with an organization way way back many, many years ago and

[00:27:04.76] spk_0:
they, this is not, this is not a story about.

[00:27:07.30] spk_2:
No not

[00:27:12.05] spk_0:
but it’s not okay.

[00:27:14.12] spk_1:
No I have a friend. No it’s

[00:27:15.73] spk_0:
not. Yeah

[00:29:06.76] spk_1:
exactly. No it’s about software and how software can change how we do things. So I started working with an organization which actually is now a client of ours um in a very contract away a few years ago and we realized that they were heavy credit card users, credit cards are debating the existence of all accountants out there for every nonprofit. I promised you can quote me on that. I’m sure. Uh And the problem is that there’s not a good system for collecting the receipts, it’s very manual. Um You have got a copy, you gotta scan, you got a code, you got to get into all the people. Anyway, they have about 20 credit cards that have hundreds if not thousands of transactions a month. The accountant, the finance director um is they hired that person for that high level skill analysis, Financial thought leadership. That person was spending a good week of her month. So 25% of her working days, reconciling and tracking down all of these hundreds of receipt if not thousands depending on the time of the year. And one of the things that we immediately realized this person actually left the organization and the organization was left scrambling trying to replace it. And one of the things we realized immediately, we could save a lot of time. If we just have software, your team is already making copies of the recedes, forwarding it to the account, the account has to use all these Softwares to stamp it with electronic approvals and all that. We could replace that whole manual back and forth email flurry of system with the software, like many of nonprofits out there now use things like expensive fi or dext or or something like this where the user of the credit card actually just takes an image identifies what type of expense it is if it’s designated to a specific funder, um, if it’s restricted or not and then submits it off to the accountant and the accountant just matches them up with what’s actually ending the bank account. So this whole flurry of hundreds and hundreds of unnecessary emails, all of this monotonous detailed work that you’re bogging your accountant down with. Um, now has freed up their time to be able to do other things. In this case, it actually saved them cost because we don’t have to do that much work and it’s not as labor intensive, but if you did have somebody in house that you wanted them to focus on higher value work that that’s more valuable to the organization. You can use technology to do that sort of thing. So I’ll echo what Danny had said.

[00:30:27.33] spk_0:
It’s time for a break. Fourth dimension technologies. The free offer. It’s still out there exclusively for nonprofit radio listeners, complimentary 24 7 monitoring of your I. T. Assets for three months. They’ll monitor your servers, network and cloud performance, they’ll monitor your backup performance all 24 7. If there are any issues, they’ll let you know ASAP and you will get a comprehensive report on how you’re doing at the end of the three month monitoring. And they’re gonna throw in a few surprise offers as well. It’s complimentary, it’s on the listener landing page, tony-dot-M.A.-slash-Pursuant mention deeper. Let’s return to accounting for nonprofit leaders. Tasha, name those couple of resources that folks could look at again.

[00:31:03.46] spk_1:
So again, I like kind of uh out of the box like package is really easy to use expensive. Fi is a really popular one. Um dext formerly known as receipt bank is one. So those are two that work really well with Quickbooks are very user friendly. Um, you can have your people that use credit cards a lot of times they’ll have like apps on their smartphones and so they just take a picture of it while they’re out spending, you know, the money rather than worrying about lost receipts and things like that. So those are two really common ones that are again, really low price point and easy to implement. Easy to use

[00:31:09.49] spk_0:
is dexter D. E. X.

[00:31:11.25] spk_1:
T. That’s right, yep.

[00:31:12.88] spk_0:
Okay. And expense if I. Okay. Yeah. Alright let’s stay with you. Tasha give us another, we’re halfway through our list by the way I’ve been keeping track,

[00:31:22.99] spk_1:
we’re not combining any of these.

[00:31:24.99] spk_0:
Alright if we end up as long as

[00:31:26.49] spk_1:
well we’ll tell you when we run out,

[00:31:29.94] spk_0:
as long as we cover the content. You know it doesn’t we end up doing them uh 10 things but we ate you know ate under eight topics as long as as long as you’re not holding back on non profit radio listeners that

[00:31:39.14] spk_1:
we’re not holding.

[00:31:40.16] spk_0:
That’s my concern. That’s my audit. That is my benchmark. Is that the content is there doesn’t have to be under 10 distinct rubrics. But we have done five anyway. Alright.

[00:34:04.12] spk_1:
Okay so the next one I would say uh that uh nonprofits don’t necessarily realize that there’s not a one size fits all with accountants. And I think I realized this when I started hiring my own accountants and staffing um the work as the charity CFO for on behalf of our other clients. And what do I mean by this like any profession accountants and their experiences, skills and expertise vary. So I kind of divide up in this 80 20. Roll the infamous 80 20 rule 80% of accounting is very transactional input output. You need somebody that’s very good at attention to detail, very consistent, very reliable thrives and routine. They like doing the same things over and over again. There are a lot of accountants out there like that. Um They do a great job Then there’s like the 20% of accounting, that’s the creative accounting but not you know, go to jail creative accounting. I’m talking moving the needle with the organization, building better budgets, building financial models, really thinking how we can implement best practices or re imagining what our accounting function can look like implementing software. For example these are the visionaries. If you will, you can probably guess which one of those I am. I find that most organizations, all organizations need both of those skill sets, the challenge is oftentimes, although the label on the title on the resume or the job is accountant or CFO or controller or whatever, but the reality is there’s two different types of accountants. Now, some people could try to do both but that’s not where their skill set is. So if you took someone like me a 20% and you put me in a job where 80% of my time is doing, you know, detailed work on routine tasks. I’m not gonna stick around for a long time, I want to do things that feed my soul and on the flip side if you take a more transactional tactical accountant, that’s really good and you expect them to solve all of your financial world problems, you’re probably not going to get as far as you would hope. And I think that many organizations think that they could hire an accountant to do all of those things and and I think that that’s not realistic and that’s why we see some turnover in these roles um or organizations struggle with, I just need somebody that does both of these things. And I don’t think people really realize that accountants are not all the same. And so many organizations, money is not such an abundance that we can just both of those accountants.

[00:34:13.35] spk_0:
So

[00:35:27.46] spk_1:
a lot of nonprofits have to decide what’s most important. How can I get both of those um Accounting needs met tactical detail because that’s 80% of the work, you know keep the wheels turning and the bills paid. Um and but how can I also get that financial thought leadership that I’m looking for. So what I’ve seen in some cases that organizations will maybe higher and operate person, I just did a podcast the other day saying like nonprofits are quitting their accountant and what I meant by that is non profits are moving um similar to Danny actually probably speak better to this than I organizations are moving to more of an operations person that’s kind of the hub and spoke and they’re outsourcing outsourcing some of that technical work right? Maybe it’s hr maybe it’s accounting, maybe it’s I. T. But you still have somebody that can maybe do some of the tactical work because they’re on the front lines. They’re interacting with the staff in a more significant way. Or maybe they’re outsourcing that financial thought leadership. Or maybe they have a financial thought leadership in house but they’re using some other staff people to help do some of the bookkeeping. So that again you keep people doing what they do best um and creating work that’s meaningful for them. So not all accounts are created the same.

[00:35:31.32] spk_0:
Not all made the same

[00:35:32.19] spk_1:
as the biggest takeaway.

[00:35:33.35] spk_0:
Alright. Um I have to ask though, are there any accountants who would say I’m in the 80%?

[00:35:39.97] spk_1:
Absolutely.

[00:35:41.15] spk_0:
I’ve got a whole team.

[00:35:42.20] spk_1:
Yeah. Yeah. It’s funny because I have 32 employees and I would say probably 70% of my staff falls into that and we need to make sure that people see a path that they can take on additional responsibilities but not so much that they’re gonna be overwhelmed. Um

[00:35:59.67] spk_0:
I thought maybe all accountants think they’re in the creative,

[00:36:03.16] spk_1:
definitely not.

[00:36:06.28] spk_0:
Not that they actually are but that they think they are. It’s it’s a self image question.

[00:36:10.31] spk_1:
Well that’s a great point. I sometimes think as accountants are known to have maybe inflated egos of herself. If I dare to

[00:36:20.20] spk_0:
say. All right. That’s that’s where it was coming. That’s where I was coming

[00:36:22.06] spk_1:
from not

[00:36:23.07] spk_0:
where they are but where they think they are. All right, well, we’ll uh we’ll concede that you’re definitely in the 20% because you you can’t run a company called the charity CFO if if you’re if you’re not be the otherwise you’d be the charity bookkeeper,

[00:36:37.98] spk_2:
you’re

[00:36:39.11] spk_0:
not the charity bookkeeper. Alright. Um Danny, you want to contribute something.

[00:38:53.16] spk_2:
Yeah. So, you know, as Tasha was talking and and sort of talking about how, you know, technology needs. Like everyone can just use decks to take a picture and know what account to send it to and have everything all easy peasy kind of ready to go and like technology takes care of it, blah blah blah. Well, you can really get yourself into trouble if you don’t actually know what the structure of your accounting system is. So let’s say you have a program person who is using dext or even just you know, trying to code something on their receipt to share with their accountant. But they put the wrong chart of accounts. Well, the accountants just gonna do what the person told them to do. Say, okay, it’s in this one you told me to put it in there. Um And you don’t want them to be creative with that. You want the budget to match the chart of accounts. You want the chart of accounts and all of the expenses to go to the right place. But you don’t really know if that’s going to happen correctly. If you don’t train the people on the ground making the expenses sending in receipts if they don’t have the right information and you’re not kind of sharing that widely and having everyone understand with the chart of just the very basic things are and what, how to code things for your accountant. You’re really gonna get way off by the end of the year, you’re gonna, it doesn’t matter what fancy technology you have or if you have a 20% or 80% accountant, they’re doing what you’ve asked them to do. And so making sure that you’ve kind of got everybody buttoned up and, and learning what the basics are for your chart of accounts. And there’s not gonna be uh, one size fits all, like list of chart of account for every organization. That’s definitely something that comes out of programming comes out of requirements from your funders, It’s all related to your specific business. So we definitely went through some growing pains as we transitioned and had to essentially redo a lot of our chart of accounts because we realized our accountant that we had previously was sort of getting a little creative about which we didn’t provide any direction. And so they got creative on each month where these different same expense was going in a different chart. And so you have to sort of figure out how to unravel that. And then if it gets too far down the line, it’s really hard to do, it takes

[00:39:22.55] spk_0:
a lot, I don’t I don’t quite understand this one that you have to, you have to, so so you can educate me the way we were all supposed to educate the people who are spending the money when you say the chart of accounts, what why? I don’t understand why this is to everybody who’s out spending money, like you said, share the structure of your accounting system with widely, I don’t I don’t see what why that’s important.

[00:40:27.22] spk_2:
So let’s say, I mean I do this on a regular basis, so this is sort of my job is to make sure everyone in our organization knows what’s going on and how things code correctly. So, you know, let’s say at the beginning of the year, we’ve coded our organization provides professional development training, leadership training and um does some consulting work related to that as well. So we take a lot of our programming and we’ll bring it in house to people. So those are two different things. We have workshops that are open to the public and we have specialized consulting work that we do. So let’s say we have a consultant or a facilitator that we’ve hired to do a workshop. Well we’ve got a different chart of accounts essentially for saying how to split that consultants time. So we have one bucket that says, oh this is our consulting expense. But if you just put it in there and say, oh that’s a consulting expense or you know, this is a hired outside facilitator that we’ve brought in. But we don’t say whether it was for our workshops or for the, you know, the on site consulting specialized work that we’ve been contractually obligated to do with an organization.

[00:40:47.28] spk_0:
How

[00:40:48.49] spk_2:
are you going to know how much you spent

[00:40:50.86] spk_0:
for

[00:41:12.37] spk_2:
each of those different program types? So you really can have, and we have the same facilitators and they do different types of work for us at at all times, but we want to know at the end of the year what was our expense for our consulting work? What was our expense for our workshops and things like that? So we have to be very deliberate and understand when someone’s sending in an invoice or sending in a receipt that they’ve sort of coded that correctly.

[00:41:50.67] spk_0:
Okay, so it’s all a matter of like allocation to the right allocation to the right uh budget line or or general program area. The way you’re describing, you know, you have to you have two distinct areas, You are Alright, so allocating expenses and revenue, obviously two to the right, you know, not just that, it’s it’s just not generic revenue, but, you know, because at the end of the year we want to know what our expenses and our revenues are like in across. Well, in your example, you know, on both sides of the work that you’re doing, right? The public workshops and also the private consulting,

[00:41:58.74] spk_2:
right? Yeah. And so that can be really complicated if you let it sort of go down the wrong path. But you’ve got one of those really complicated federal funding grants and you’re not supposed to allocated a certain amount to this program. It’s really supposed to go to this program. Um,

[00:42:16.88] spk_0:
and

[00:42:17.10] spk_2:
you can kind of, you know, can be a lot of a bigger process to undo later on.

[00:42:22.88] spk_0:
Right, do it right the first time instead of trying to do forensic accounting to try to figure

[00:42:27.65] spk_1:
out. So

[00:42:28.76] spk_2:
it’s important for people who are, who are sending in those, you know, those pictures of their receipts on decks or expense. If I too have coded it correctly, before they send it to the accountant to make sure that they understand what account it’s supposed to go into or come out of.

[00:45:01.97] spk_0:
Okay, very helpful. Thank you. It’s time for Tony Take two. I’ll be on a panel endowment excitement, fundraising and management end quote. So where are you with your endowment? Do you have an endowment? You might be at zero or maybe you have a mid size middling endowment or you’ve got a vast endowment. The other three folks will be able to help you with endowment management principles. You probably don’t have a vast endowment. I bet there aren’t too many listeners who have vast endowments, but for the outliers, there’s something for you in this panel as well, for the vast majority of folks, no endowment or teensy weensy, itsy bitsy endowment or something in the middle. I’ll be doing the planned giving fundraising part of endowment excitement, fundraising and management. I’ll be the fundraising part. Talk about how planned giving is enormously valuable for endowment starting or endowment building. The other three folks there, the smart folks in endowment management. So we got the fundraising, we got the management doesn’t matter where you are in your endowment status capacity robustness, if you like. There’s something for you. It’s August 25 at noon eastern time. Oh and I should say we are sponsored graciously by an ex unite. Thank you and next unite. So to make your reservation, you go to N X unite dot com and you click webinars and panels and if you can’t join us on august 25th at noon, sign up and you’ll get the video. Of course it’s 2022 naturally. So I hope you’ll be with us either live or archive. That is Tony’s take two. We’ve got boo koo but loads more time for accounting for nonprofit leaders with Tasha Anderson and Zanny Miranda. Tasha. Your turn. You wanna, you wanna contribute.

[00:45:49.01] spk_1:
Yeah, yeah, I’ll contribute a little bit more to that one. But to kind of sum it up for me what I tell people. There’s usually a lot of frustration. I don’t understand my accounting and I usually tell people, it’s not that you’re using quickbooks and quickbooks is not sophisticated enough. It’s that it’s not set up the right way and then the user that’s using it is limited. And what I tell people kind of garbage and not that the work is entirely wrong. Right? It’s accurate. The dollar amounts accurate, the vendor is accurate, but if it’s not in put a certain way, then you’re not gonna be able to get reports out a certain way. So you kind of have to think more globally. Uh, you know, how do you want this to come out and then you have to understand the intricacies of the system in order to get the end result. So what Danny is referring to is just understanding high level, what is it that you want to see? How is that information can be put out and then making sure that the inputs are going in the right way so that you don’t have that forensic accounting that you mentioned trying to go back and figure that out. And so many organizations go through that forensic accounting exercise every time they have a simple report. Um, a simple report.

[00:46:17.39] spk_0:
Yeah, I’ve seen some of that. I know it’s it’s expensive. It’s, it’s time consuming. Didn’t have didn’t have to have been done badly to start with. All right. Let’s move on. Let’s move on,

[00:48:42.83] spk_1:
moving on. So the next one I would say, um, that nonprofit leader should share more about their financial information in their financial position with other people within the organization. And what do I mean by that? I kind of alluded to it earlier that I have been in situations where it’s just the Ceo and I carry the weight of the financial management, the financial, he’s right. And I’m not just talking like, oh my gosh, we have enough money to make payroll. I’m talking about being the person, the point person to explain to the board why we didn’t hit our fundraising goals, why our program contracts not fully utilized, why we were over underspending and salary expenses because we have vacancies in the various departments or what have you. Um, and that’s kind of what we’re talking about. It all kind of feeds together. So if we understand what those KPI S, those benchmarks, those metrics for measuring, we have an accounting structure in place to properly categorize and track these things, not just by thunder, but by department we customize our reporting in a way that’s meaningful. Maybe that that translates to creating a income statement or a financial report, a budget actual by department and then sharing with those that run those divisions of the business, their area of responsibility. That’s where I like to get to that the fundraising, you know, professional within the organization actually gets a periodic report. So they know what they spent in order to raise the money and where we’re at and what we expected them to do the same with the program team, same with anyone else that has that area of significant responsibility. And so often I see that again, the financial person and the ceo bear that responsibility and they end up being the money. Police, can I spend money for training? No, can I do that? It’s kind of crushing for morale a little bit that you have to police every dollar spent. And in a perfect world we would include all of these individuals in the budgeting process. Okay, fundraising department, what what do you need to spend this year? And how much honey are you bringing it? Same with the program team. You know, all of the different people involved. I like to get input from them. They give me their budgets on what they believe they need to spend to meet the outcomes and the objectives that they’ve laid out to do. So if that means we need to add another staff person, if that means we need to pay for more programs, supplies or go to a couple conferences, whatever it is. Um, let me know. So that when whenever you come and say, hey, can I, you know, attend this conference this year, I can then in return say was that in your budget and assuming the cash is available, people start owning their own things and there and we hold them accountable right,

[00:49:19.57] spk_0:
Right? Like delegating responsibility for the budget that you’re responsible for rather than rather than as you said, you know, having to ask, I mean you’re, you’re empowering folks, you’re educating them and empowering them to spend their budget responsibly. And obviously, you know, that’s part of performance review and, and, and through the benchmarks and the metrics that we talked about first, we’ll know whether you’re, whether you’re doing it accurately or

[00:49:26.46] spk_1:
not

[00:49:27.23] spk_0:
wisely or not. I guess it’s probably better than accurately, but Okay, Alright. So like delegating, delegating budget responsibility and accountability as well, of course.

[00:49:39.06] spk_1:
Alright, where’s

[00:49:43.20] spk_0:
the role of the board here, Tasha in should it just be a quarterly review of of the overall financial picture? Should it be every board meeting? Let’s take a board that meets, take a worst case scenario, a board that meets monthly. Do they need to see a monthly financial picture? Can it just be quarterly, semi annual? What, what do you think?

[00:52:09.36] spk_1:
Yeah, So that’s a great question. I think it kind of depends on the organization, uh, small struggling organization, I think probably needs more oversight than one. That’s pretty well figured it out and they’re pretty mature. I would say kind of best practices that you always provide financial reports at every board meeting. Um, maybe you don’t pour over it in a huge level of detail, but the reality of the fiduciary responsibility is up there with one of the top board responsibilities. So I personally would never recommend having a board meeting for which finances were not considered solely for that reason. Um, I will say a lot of the nuts and bolts of the oversight, the financial oversight. Oftentimes happens at the finance committee level. So oftentimes the finance committees will be reviewing more detailed reports on a monthly basis, asking whatever questions they need to ask, then, you know, usually a summarized version of that information is given to the overall board. I mean, we don’t definitely don’t want to spend board time discussing why we’re overspending and office supplies. Right? When we’re ignoring the, you know, the big elephant in the room on why we’re off of our fundraising projections by 50%. I think you had those conversations before. So we want to keep it really high level. Um, but the, the details get done at the finance committee level and the, um, the, the high level discussions happen at the board level. And I’ve seen the spectrum of some boards that are really involved in the financial management so much to say that it probably crosses the, uh, you know, some boundaries in terms of your role is oversight and not actually managing the organization. Um, and then I’ve seen some words that are probably too passive, uh, and will come back around once financially the organization starts struggling. And what I’ve seen that consistent, um, a consistent presence and a consistent accountability from the board. That’s what keeps organizations in a good place. I mean, if you just keep coming in and out once things start to get a little rocky may be having some consistency and some accountability will keep the pendulum swinging from one way to the other. So to answer your direct question, every board meeting I think should have a financial review. Um even if it’s only five minutes to just update everybody on, are we on track or we off track is usually what I like to tell people

[00:52:31.79] spk_0:
and it helps to have a finance committee that’s paying closer attention. If you’re, you know, if your board is has that expertise and and frankly is big enough, you know, a five person board may not, may not be big enough to have a finance committee and you don’t want to have just one person looking at it because that that’s a mistake. I think

[00:54:00.86] spk_1:
I want to say something to before we go into the last one, I don’t want to run out of time. But what I think is the most important thing cause I wanna, I wanna validate what you’re saying that not every board is big enough to have a finance committee. Um and not every board has an abundance of accountants lined up trying to join their board. I recognize that fact, what I think is really important, what I think what I like to do for our clients is to create the financial information um presented in such a way that they can have the board can ask questions and have fruitful conversation. What do I mean by that? Oftentimes they get all these really long reports with all these numbers. They don’t actually know what any of it means. And there’s this intimidation level where many board members just don’t feel comfortable asking questions out of fear of looking silly or uneducated. Right. And so what we do, we put together an executive summary. And so I would encourage anybody listening to have their account and create some sort of executive summary to give a narrative that explains the context or what’s really going on and more of a written format. Because if you just simply give financial reports, you’re gonna keep butting up against the same problem. So what I try to do is create a process that will drive conversations at the board level. So if we write, hey, we are off from our fundraising goals. This is a red flag or you know, maybe not in those exact alarming words, but they may not necessarily interpret that just by looking at the report. So, but if somebody read that, they could say, well, what are we going to do about fundraising?

[00:54:11.56] spk_0:
Right, context.

[00:54:14.57] spk_1:
Yes. Yes. And I think that that engages boards more to have some of those financial conversations. Um, so if that’s not being done, I would really recommend

[00:54:24.64] spk_0:
that. All right. Sandy, you have, we should be wrapping up with another one or two unless we combined or something. But as long as the content is there, you have, Do

[00:54:31.81] spk_2:
you think we combined a couple, particularly around succession planning and making sure you’ve got your processes in place? Because they’re sort of,

[00:54:39.89] spk_0:
we didn’t leave anything out there. Well,

[00:56:31.28] spk_2:
there’s one thing that I think Tasha was almost alluding to and if you if you’re answering yes to any of these questions, does my organization feel siloed? Are we not getting the right reports from my accountant as my program staff and development team, not communicating any of those details about what requirements are or when reports are due. If your board is sort of questioning things and they can’t figure out what’s happening if any of those things are happening, it’s really not your accounting, it’s your culture and so making sure that across the board accounting doesn’t just stop with the accounting team. It doesn’t just stop at the Ceo or the chief or executive level, I should say. You know, it’s really a team effort. Everyone in the organization, from the receptionist to the program staff to the board president, they all need to know maybe not every single detail of course, but they need to have a general picture and an idea of what is happening in the organization. And some people need to have more information than others. Like I would say, a program staff person needs to know very detailed information about their accounting as much or as the same amount. So they can have a great conversation with the accountant to make sure that they’re on track that they’ve got their budgets aligned and sort of creating a culture where you’re unsure what the other program team is making and how much money they have to work with versus how much you have. You know, why does my executive director keeps saying no to me spending money on these things that I think will boost morale or will actually get better outcomes for our program. What’s happening is that if those are questions that you’re having, it’s really time to examine what’s happening in your culture and maybe try to change some of that, um, sort of fear or change some of that mindset around sharing information about money,

[00:56:56.55] spk_0:
accounting may not be your problem. Maybe something deeper. Sometimes technology is blamed to the technology may not be the problem that maybe the culture in the organization Zanny where is nonprofit solutions and where are you? You may not be in the same place as

[00:57:46.31] spk_2:
I know. Now, now everyone can be everywhere. Of course we are based in SAn Diego. Uh, that is not our geographic limit though for nonprofit solutions. I also live in SAN Diego. Um, but we are online, so we do a lot of virtual workshops and trainings and we can also do our contractual work. Um, so if anyone wanted to hire us for leadership training and um, we do have a lot of management training for new managers. So that is all can be done virtually and we’re now that things are starting to get a little bit easier to to come together. We used to do everything in person and so now we’re slowly getting back to in person but I would say the majority of our work is virtual so we can really be anywhere in any time zone. What’s

[00:58:04.96] spk_0:
the website for nonprofit solutions?

[00:58:06.91] spk_2:
It’s N. P. Solutions dot org.

[00:58:11.39] spk_0:
Okay, Tasha, where where’s the charity CFO, wherever you are, That’s where the charity CFO is.

[00:58:27.72] spk_1:
That’s right. Well, our office, our headquarters and all of our team are based here in ST louis Missouri. So although we work remotely with our clients, our team is centered here in ST louis. We do have not Office, we collaborate here, however, um only about 30% of our clients are here in ST Louis, the rest are all over the country from coast to coast. So we work with clients all over the place in the United States

[00:58:38.12] spk_0:
and what’s what’s the website for charity? CFO,

[00:58:40.91] spk_1:
yep, it’s the charity CFO dot com.

[00:58:44.29] spk_0:
Okay, I love I love Missouri because I lived for five years in Warrensburg. Warrensburg where where Whiteman Air Force Base is,

[00:58:53.37] spk_1:
I

[00:59:03.01] spk_0:
was in the Air Force for five years. So I lived in Warrensburg, we used to spend more time in Kansas city because it was closer but we went to some ball games in ST louis. Okay. All right. Uh Tasha Anderson, founder and Ceo of the charity CFO and Zani Miranda Operations Manager at nonprofit solutions. Thank you very much. Thanks for each of you sharing. Thank you.

[00:59:19.83] spk_1:
Got

[00:59:22.92] spk_0:
a great balance between professional C P A. And the the practicing learning client who’s who’s got some significant accounting responsibility but not a C P A. I love the balance. Thank you

[00:59:32.47] spk_1:
very much. Thank

[00:59:33.73] spk_2:
you. Thanks

[01:00:48.65] spk_0:
to our listeners for being with tony-martignetti non profit radio coverage of 22 N. T. C. Thanks so much for being with us Next week. Our final 22. NTC show your tech problem is actually a people’s problem. If you missed any part of this week’s show, I beseech you find it at tony-martignetti dot com. We’re sponsored by turn to communications pr and content for nonprofits. Your story is their mission turn hyphen two dot c. O. And by fourth dimension technologies. Their product is I. T. Infra in a box, the affordable tech solution for nonprofits, but they’ve got the free offer going on. So that is at tony-dot-M.A.-slash-Pursuant D just like three D. But they do want to mention deeper. Our creative producer is Claire Meyerhoff shows social media is by Susan Chavez. Mark Silverman is our web guy and this music is by scott stein, Thank you for that. Affirmation Scotty B with me next week for nonprofit radio big nonprofit ideas for the other 95 go out and be great