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Nonprofit Radio for November 18, 2016: 8 Areas of Nonprofit Excellence

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Sharon Stapel & Melkis Alvarez-Baez: 8 Areas of Nonprofit Excellence

(L to R) Melkis Alvarez-Baez & Sharon Stapel

The NY Community Trust Excellence Awards are based on tough criteria that reveal the right way to run your organization in areas like fundraising; management; board; financial; and diversity. From the Nonprofit Coordinating Committee, Sharon Stapel, president & executive director, and Melkis Alvarez-Baez, deputy director, explain the standards. They’ve been upgraded since we covered this on March 6, 2015.

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Duitz hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I’m your aptly named host. Oh, i’m glad you’re with me. I’d suffer the embarrassment of yours if you rubbed me the wrong way with the idea that you missed today’s show eight areas of non-profit excellence the non-profit coordinating committee excellence awards are based on tough criteria that revealed the right way to run your organization in areas like fund-raising management, board, financial and diversity. Sharon staple, president and executive director, and melkis alvarez-baez deputy director explain the recommended standards. They’ve been upgraded since we covered this on march six twenty fifteen on tony’s steak too, maur ntcdinosaur goes, we’re sponsored by pursuant full service fund-raising data driven and technology enabled, you’ll raise more money pursuant dot com and by we be spelling supercool spelling bee fundraisers. We be spelling dot com for glad to welcome back to the show. Nakis alvarez-baez she’s been with the non-profit coordinating committee since two thousand eleven and overseas their programs and member services melkis is at and pcc and why underscore d d i r deputy director and and pcc is at and pcc and why dot or ge? Marcus, welcome back. Thanks so much for having me back. Did tohave you? Pleasure? Sharon staple she’s the president and executive director non-profit coordinating committee. She was named a white house champion of change. As executive director of the new york city gay and lesbian anti violence project, she joined the non-profit coordinating committee in october of fifteen and she’s at n pcc. And why underscore prez pea are easy. Welcome, sharon. Thanks for having us. It’s. A pleasure pushing up both ofyou. Melkis. Uh, you got a promotion since you were here last time you were you were you were deputy. Then you were deputy director of programmes. I was director, director of programmes. Now your deputy director. I share your whole thing. Cool. Congratulations. Thank you. Um, we’re talking about these eight key areas of non-profit excellence the know that these are a criterion for a competition. Sharon, don’t you start off what you acquaint us with the competition and how these areas fit in? Well, i think it’s important. Understand what? Who and what and pcc is on and why we care about non-profit excellence and and pc sees a membership organization of fourteen hundred non-profits in new york city in the new york area, and we are really the voice and information source for non-profits and one of the ways that we think non-profits need to get information or the things we think they need to know about is non-profit excellence and management excellence because we think that for non-profits to be able to really get to their mission and be able to focus on the thing that they were created to two, they want to be managed and manage themselves as efficiently and effectively as possible. So the non-profit excellence awards is really a formal way for us to teach people about non-profit excellence and two go thank you. So it’s really informal way for us to teach people about non-profit excellence and two really recognized and celebrate that excellence in the sector and melkis having been a part of not just n p c c for five years, but also the non-profit excellence awards is probably our best guide through the history of the probe. Grandma and it’s already anarchy, so i asked you, but you’re going to defer to melkis way just want to make sure you have the best person talking your subject thought so. The key areas are really the driver of our near community trust non-profit excellence awards program on dh, the awards air program that and pcc created on dh manages and so we created the program in two thousand six, so this is our milestone tenth anniversary and it’s an exciting year for us and the awards are really an opportunity for non-profits tto learn from other non-profits and so we really go beyond honoring excellence, and the awards program are truly an educational experience for the organizations that go through it, but also for the other non-profits in the sector that are able to benefit from the best practices that we highlight throughout the process. Okay, thie awards ceremony is coming up it’s friday, december second, right? Okay, that’s the same day of non-profit radio airs every every week, so you may have t pretend you make pretend it’s trouble in new york city area. Okay, let’s see, i am goingto i’m goingto take through the eight areas so that everybody knows what we’re going to be talking about for the next hour. Uh, and then we’ll cover a little more about why. These are bona fide before we actually get into them. But so number one is overall management focus on results and impact and then governance structure moves the organization forward. Financial management is strong, transparent and accountable. Organization is diverse and inclusive. Number five is human. Resource is our valued and developed. Number six use of information technology systems improves efficiency and advances. Mission communications are strategic effective and build brand latto and the final area fund-raising and resource development. Our strategic donor-centric and effective. Okay, melkis let’s, stay with you. How do we know that these recommendations these criteria are are bona fide? I mean is this is not just something. And pcc decided and foisted on the community that’s, right? What’s the process through the get to these eight areas. So when we were creating the awards program ten years ago, we looked at what other state associations of non-profits were doing, and we looked at the other state associations in particular that had standards of excellence programs. There’s about twenty three, of them now on day in total represent about twenty thousand non-profits across the country. And so we looked at what they thought matters for non-profit success and so we picked the areas where there was consensus, but also balance that out with areas that we know are important in the new york city area. So for example, diversity and inclusion is an area that appears throughout the country as part of their standards for us. It’s a discreet section in our guiding eight areas, as we feel that it’s an important topic and management area that organisations in our area need teo be focused on and managed towards. Ok, so ten years ago you crowdsourced the genesis of this yes, through all your sister organizations call a colleague organizations throughout the country, right? Okay, cool. And in the end, they’re updated every year. I’m just gonna get yes, sharon, the awards i’m sorry. The key areas have changed just since last year. Yeah, well, the key, the key areas actually remained the same. We what we did really was to try and make more clear for the non-profits that we’re applying and make more accessible for everyone who is interested in the key areas. What we meant by them. What are the standards for those areas? Where do we think organization should be aspirational and how can they be aspirational and gave sort of slightly more specific examples about what we meant in those eight key areas? So so the overarching eight areas are not change, right? The sort of description and hopefully accessibility of them are ok, you were finding there was some misunderstandings about what some of the areas are meant. You know this, tony, because you do this work, but, you know, a lot of management khun feel amorphous sometimes right, and what it means to be a good manager of religion, good organization or what it means to be effective or efficient, sometimes that’s really hard to grasp. And i think i know as as someone who has applied for the non-profit excellence awards of my former organization that sometimes the standards it’s helpful to have a little bit more clarity when you’re not doing this every single day and when you’re sort of looking into the award greater specificity, yeah, okay, cool. We’re going back for our first break. We come back, the three of us will dive into these eight key areas and get acquainted with them. Stay with us. You’re tuned to non-profit radio tony martignetti also hosts a podcast for the chronicle of philanthropy fund-raising fundamentals is a quick ten minute burst of fund-raising insights, published once a month. Tony’s guests are expert in crowdfunding, mobile giving event fund-raising direct mail and donor cultivation. Really, all the fund-raising issues that make you wonder, am i doing this right? Is there a better way there is? Find the fund-raising fundamentals archive it. Tony martignetti dot com that’s marketmesuite n e t t i remember there’s, a g before the end, thousands of listeners have subscribed on itunes. You can also learn maura, the chronicle website, philanthropy dot com fund-raising fundamentals, the better way. Welcome back to big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. All right, let’s, dive in, ladies! Sharon let’s, let’s stay with you the first area overall management focus on results and impact. You want to see a clear mission statement and articulated values what’s this a little more about the values? Well, i think it’s important that organizations no, not well what i think isn’t actually that important. But what we know from the eight years of non-profit excellence is ah, clearly articulating a mission is critical. Of course we need to know why we exist in what we’re doing and and why the non-profit is is in the world, but understanding the values that go along with that what does the organization stand for? What does the organization wants to be? What does the organization i want to do around the way it treats its employees the way it approaches the issue the way it intersects or interacts with other organisations? Is justus critical as knowing that we want to end hunger? We want to end homelessness. We want to work with survivors of violence whatever the mission is now you have for each sub area within. The eight areas there’s their standards. And then there’s aspirational. There was you standard aspiration. Does does an organization not do well in the judging? If everything is standard and not very much is aspiration, i’ve achieved aspiration? Well, you know, i think it’s there’s sort of two purposes for this program, right? And so one is it’s an educational opportunity. And so any organization whose meeting all of the standards is doing great work, right? Those air what we think they are, the foundations of how folks should be using the eight years non-profit excellence, then there’s the actual competition of the awards, right? And there we have a selection committee of experts who know these eight key areas, and they are looking for aspirational, replicable, innovative and exciting practices when we’re looking at sort of overall non-profit excellence in terms of the competition, the award, okay, let’s, go into some or the area that we’re going to get the education component i know there’s a program for everyone these eight i mean, this is not is not just judging, but there’s a lot of training and help that goes along boosting lots of non-profit whoever wants to participate in let’s see, we’ll do you might can i just say another thing about overall? Management focus on results already anarchy. Yes, but i appreciate your asking. Thank you, it’s, you know, so it’s important to have a clear mission? Absolutely, but it’s also in court, important that we see organisations being able to measure review and most importantly, use data that points to organizational programmatic results, right? And we also want to see that organizations or strategic planning and thinking in a forward way. So when we’re looking at sort of the i talk with my hands too much or got tio here, somebody bumped a micro follow-up s so when we’re looking at the sort of overall area we’re looking for mission, we’re looking for vision, but we also want to know, how do you know you’re doing what you’re supposed to be doing? And how do you use the information? How do you think about your strategy, given that information and how it relates to your mission? And how do you plan in a way that allows for learning environment and understanding that not all programs air perfect all the time? And so you’re going to learn the lessons, but also that you’re able to see that you’re moving toward the ultimate. Goal of your organization. Okay, so they really were to things wrapped up in what you were just saying impact reporting, basically, i mean, i’m i’m not we have to focus a little, you know, i have to make a lot more concise because we have, like, fourteen pages, so so i’m going, to paraphrase the impact reporting and also you want to see a vibrant strategic planning process, yes, and the learning environment, learning, learning from the results that you’re reporting and and then hopefully, i mean, you’re also you want dissemination of the results, right? Is that not a part of this or that? But i mean that somewhere else, but you don’t want to keep the results internal you want you want stakeholders to be seeing these, right? And i think that here we’re focused on the way that you monitor or use the results, but certainly in the governance of the organization for transparency. What you want to see, those results disseminated in communication strategies you want to see, you know, so you’ll see results because, you know, non-profits air created for the social good and to meet their missions, we want to see results used. In multiple different ways, but when we talk about sort of overall management with a focus on results we’re looking at, how are you using the data that you do? You have a data available, and if so, how are you using that data? I gotta be honest, as i was reading through these key areas is okay if i call make standards, is that is that is that is that word bother you if i call him standards or recommendations or what? What besides areas give me another word that you’re comfortable with, so i don’t offend the program. So i would say that the the eight areas and we call them that on purpose is because they go beyond standards, right? So one of the things to know what you’re right, they become aspirational. Yeah, give me a word. Besides harish, i just keep using areas. Yes. Okay, you’re right. So as i was reading through the areas, i was thinking, i mean, this is sort of a test for non-profit radio. Like how much of how much of this stuff have we talked about? Because the mission of non-profit radio is two help small and midsize non-profits with all the areas that they are struggling with a face challenged every day. So i’m sorry, you know? I mean, like, testing the show against now. S so i’ve got some shows to recommend. I haven’t got it. I haven’t got a recommendation for every single area, although we were, but we’ve hit every area, but i can’t i can’t impact report that, but so if anyone wants teo, get learn more about impact reporting. Look for the guest doctor robert penna, whose book is the non-profit outcomes toolbox and he’s been on a couple of times. More recently, he was on talking about the history of non-profits going back to the sixteen hundreds in in england. But before that he’s been on it was on talking about his book non-profit outcomes. Toolbox. Ok, ladies, let’s move on. Melkis you ready for? You want to take area to governing structure? Move the organization forward. You dealt me out with this defined. Ah, boardmember has a strong fiduciary. What does that mean? Sure. So what we mean by that is that board members are engaged in the oversight of the organization, not just in the finances and making sure that they’re engaged in the budgeting process and making sure that the finances are in order, but really that they’re holding the organisation accountable, promoting and ensuring transparency and accountability on that they’re also partnering effectively with the staff to really drive the organization forward and to support the mission of the organization. How do you tell that all these things were happening through examples right that the thie organizations are highlighting throughout their applications, right? So they give examples that really show not just that the practices exist, but that show riel impact on the organization, right? So it’s not just enoughto have a stellar boardmember show us what that stellar, what meat? What having that cellar boardmember on your board has meant for your organization has have they’ve been able to connect you to, you know, particular donors? Or have they been able to help advocate for certain policy and change that that impacts and influences the organization? Okay? And then now for semi finalists, there’s an interview is that right? Or there’s there’s onsite visits? I want to get to the semifinals, so we’re at eleven semifinalist now we’ll narrow those down to six finalists, and they’ll have in person meetings with our selection committee, okay, is there an onsite component to it? You visit officers? We’ve reformatted that part of the process and so would you used to, but you don’t anymore. We don’t anymore on dh, so they all come and meet with this election company at a neutral space and it’s great to see what different organizations do with the same space, okay? And don’t no shame in that i’m not like him shaming your in that we’re not ashamed chaillou think decision, but i think i think durney since we’re talking about the application process, one of the things that we’ve done this year in an effort to make the awards and the educational opportunity more accessible to people is we created at the very beginning of the process of readiness assessment, which is basically a yes, no check, you know, sort of list and it’s an online application it’s, an online assessment, you go online, you answer the questions and we have sort of ah scale of scoring on the higher end it’s like this is you guys are doing great, you should definitely consider applying for the excellence are on the lower end it’s like, you know, you may have some work to do before you want to actually think about applying, and we then linked to resource is in specific air specific eight excellent the areas and then if it’s in the middle, we say to people like, give us a call and we can talk to you about where you’re at because we know it’s a big lift for organizations to apply for the excellence awards it’s a multi month process for them. The first round is four open ended questions about how the areas affected their meaning or how their management is is viewed through those areas. And then the second round is an incredibly intense application that examines each of the eight areas carefully, and then you have to do as you’re saying this in person visit and it’s it’s very rigorous, and we don’t want organizations wasting their resource is applying if they’re not going to be there. But we do want to give everyone the opportunity to assess their management practices through the eight areas because we think it’s an excellent tool to get people to move in the direction of making management changes. The sticking with the governance structure, the board has a giver get policy, one hundred percent board giving melkis you wantto you wantto emphasize the importance of that? Sure so that i would say that that’s something that the selection committee is looking for across the board of all organizations of all sizes and missions, is that there’s one hundred percent board e-giving on dh the idea behind that is that if your board members don’t give, how can you convince other donors other funders to give right? And so i think, and sharon, you might be able to speak more of this as a leader of a non-profit but foundations are increasingly asking for that metric that that board members are giving it doesn’t matter what the amount is per se, but that they’re giving something to again show their commitment to the organization on to the mission. Okay, and later on, when we get teo fund-raising you ask for a personally significant, i think that’s the phrase personally significant, okay, we’ve had lots of people are talking about boards. The ones that come to mind are michael davidson. You could search his name he’s twenty martignetti dot com michael davidson’s on your selection committee. Army veteran one has served since the beginning of the program, standing all ten years, years, he’s been a guest on the show, like three, four times i let happen. Um, we both are i could, and also for board fund-raising specifically, when get to the board fund-raising part. Gail perry, whose book is fired-up fund-raising she talks a lot about board fund-raising she’s been a guest. All so you could look for her on the history of the show. Um, okay. Oversight informed board provides oversight you haven’t, you haven’t. Interesting aspiration here. The succession plan. So it’s aspirational though it’s not standard. Why? You know, that doesn’t seem like it should be a standard thing. A succession plan. I think that many organizations think about succession planning as something that stops at the leadership of the organization. And so the aspiration here is that there should be a thoughtful succession plan in place for board leadership as well. Okay, okay. That’s, the operational partner. Right? The board evaluating its own performance? Yes. Say something about that s o we’ve seen a range in terms of how what this practice looks like. So we’ve seen that some organizations will do individual assessments of board performance in terms of meeting attendance fund-raising participation at events, site visits and involvement in programs. But we’ve also seen organizations do a performance assessment of the entire board, right? So instead of individual assessments doing a group evaluation but now your standard says that is boardmember performances individually assessed him. Reported back to the individual yes. So you really want to see that as a standard, the individual performance we dio and bored performance also board as a whole performance also we do, and the ideas that were striving towards engaged board service and having an evaluation process allows board members to know where they need to up their game and where they’re doing great in terms of supporting the organization like that, you specifically say, and is reported back to the boardmember there’s no there’s, not a lot of value for the boardmember if his or her performance is evaluated and it’s only discussed among the executive committee that’s absolutely what am i learning as a boardmember if i don’t know where my shortcomings are so like, okay, we evaluate what we’re going to share it with you, okay? I don’t know, like i don’t mean really do ping pong, but it’s turning out this way, sharon, you wantto area three years comfortable with the financial management is strong, transparent and accountable. Absolutely okay, and so i think what we’re looking for here and this goes back to the idea that non-profits are built for the public trust that there’s an obligation to be transparent and to build that trust with their donors and a part of that for a lot of donors is understanding. And frankly, a lot of a lot of constituents of the organisation is to understand where the financials air at, so we want to make sure that as a team, minimum organizations or transparent about their financials, posting things like their nine nineties and their audit on their websites and making sure that those air easily accessible documents, but we also want to make sure that internally, they’re really regularly reviewing what what is their performance versus their goals, not necessarily their performance versus what life looks like right now, which is, i think, what a lot of profits non-profits end up doing, um, did you want to say something? No, i’m agreeing with you and yeah, and and i think i think this is really hard, especially when you don’t talk, i’ll just interrupt, uh, i think this is especially hard during times of economic uncertainty, and we’ve sort of we may have in parts of our non-profit sectors climbed out of the sort of two thousand eight uncertainty, although there’s still a lot of non-profits as we’ve seen in recent reports that are teetering on the edge and we want to make sure that folks are being as intentional as they possibly can in times of crisis or near crisis, right? And and so that means having a plan that goes beyond the sort of reactionary and his various you’re proactive talk about budgeting, budgeting for surplus. Exactly. Exactly, actually, that’s an aspiration? Yeah, just included. Surplus, right? And then also, we want to make sure that people are looking at their day to day sustainability because a lot of times financial, financial analysis is can often be done at a board level on a quarterly level on an annual, you know basis. And we want to make sure that the leaders of the non-profit are looking at what does this mean for your day to day? What your cash flows look like? How profitable or your programs are you investing money in the right places? Are there places that as painful as it might be? You have to say, this isn’t either profitable and profitable in the sense that the program can pay for itself. Um, or it’s? Not as related to our mission as it should be. And we need to think about the finances there. You you have something? A statement under standard, the organization’s chart of accounts is aligned with the organization and program budgets what’s a chart of account is that just an excel spreadsheet? So hopefully, i mean, i suppose you don’t know in some very small, so basically it’s, the way that your accounting system categorizes the way that you spend money, right? And some for some organizations, they could be incredibly detailed for other organizations that could be less detailed, but basically what the standard is, you need to know where every dollar is going, and you need to know whether that dollar is going to the right area, right? So if it’s restricted program funding, it should be in your chart of accounts as restricted program funding if it’s unrestricted and you’re using it for fund-raising then you should be able to tell how many dollars you’re using for fund-raising versus if you’re using for management or other purposes. Or maybe you’re using your unrestricted dollars to cover the costs of your programs because you’re funding sources don’t cover the full costs, but you should know where each of those dollars is going, and you should be able to tell people about where each of those dollars is going. Okay, we have about a minute before we take another break. Heimans and i want to get back to something if we could do this in a minute. Sharon what you were just talking about earlier, you know, the assessment for on dh, not wasting non-profits time. But it sounds like the assessment is something valuable. Is that available now? Knowing that the awards are in process or not wear? Where where can we find find it on and pcc. And why dot or ge? Do you know the the actual part of the website it’s on it’s under the non-profit excellence awards are and it’s called the assessment a readiness is matter-ness assessment? Okay? Because it sounded excellent. It’s i think it’s such a huge resource for non-profits. And they should take advantage of it all year round irrespective of whether you’re in new york and you can fly these awards or not. Okay, exactly. Okay, ladies, if you’ll indulge me for a couple of moments, we have more on these areas coming up first. Pursuant, they help you raise more money. Their tools are ideal for small and midsize shops. That’s. Why? They’re a perfect sponsor for the show because they have online proto tools that you use for yourself velocity it was developed for their consultants to use internally to manage big client campaigns, and they found that was so valuable they rolled it out for you to use in managing your own campaign. You don’t need the pursuing consultant, you can use the pro tool on your own and that tools again velocity you’ll find it at pursuant dot com we’ll be spelling spelling bees for non-profit fund-raising they make spelling bees incredibly fun. It’s fund-raising but there’s also live music and dancing and stand up comedy. If you are looking for a millennial event for your organization, i think you should talk to we be spelling there at we b e spelling dot com and there’s a very cool video there that demonstrates all those things that stand up comedy that dancing, etcetera. Now, tony’s, take two i was at the non-profit technology conference back in march on in fact, i’m going to talk about and ten more. We got to the section of the eight areas, so, you know, i was there because you’ve heard the interviews now i’ve got the video’s up, i’ve got mohr of the thirty video interviews that i got in this two and a half day conference was incredible rush thirty interviews in two and a half days all the smart guests you’ll see my introductory video with links to this batch of interview videos at twenty martignetti dot com and that is tony’s take two. Okay, thank you very much, sharon. Thank you, marcus. Short indulgence. Thank you very much. Hey, well, it was important to talk about our sponsors graciously let’s move on. We’re in the next area four and melkis you want to take the organization is diverse and inclusive. I noticed that it it’s not only policies, but also practice, right? So as i said before, diversity and inclusion is one of the areas that we feel is a true value to highlight in our area. As i said, diversity is part of other standards across the country. But for us we thought we needed to have diversity and inclusion as a standalone area so that we can continue to focus on it as a riel area for management performance for non-profits and what we mean by that is that the organization’s practices and policies need to reflect a commitment to diversity and inclusion at all levels of the organization. So not just making sure that the staff is reflective of the communities that they’re serving, but also that the board and the volunteers are as well on. Do you include training’s? Yes, yes. I want to see training’s regularly with all these different constituent areas that you mentioned, right, exactly. So that everyone can effectively support and promote the mission on deliver on the performed the activities effectively that move the organization and towards achieving its policy wise. You have ah, you’re looking for. And this is a standard looking for a written diversity policy and a policy for reporting discrimination, right? So at this point organization, the selection committee is looking for for organizations to have a written diversity policy which is different from an affirmative action statement. But is where a lot of organizations just stop there on the election committee. Can you differentiate between those for us? Sure. So, sharon, you might have a better thought of these, but my for diversity and inclusion. My understanding is that the organization is stating those two areas and cultural competency as well as values for the organization and they’re informing hiring practices, promotions as well in terms of also the training of professional development that’s offering that are offered to the staff. Sharon, you might be able to distinguishing that with affirmative action. Yeah, i mean, i think affirmative action is a legal obligation, right? You’re not you’re legally prohibited from discriminate against people based on certain classes of identities. Well, we’re talking about diversity, inclusion, cultural competency and to some extent, equity, which we don’t really get into in the key areas but is an important part of the conversation. What we’re talking about is affirmatively embracing and understanding the value that diversity, inclusion, cultural competency bring to being able to achieve your mission, right? So it’s, not a sort of prescription it’s really a value and a business decision that the organization makes that we will be a better organization if we have a diversity of people. If we have a diversity of ideas, if we have a diversity of approaches to the work that we’re doing and making sure that that at a minimum that is encompassed in their policies and procedures, you know, and also assessed you have one. Of the standards assessing staff inboard diversity, yes, i mean and goals measured time against measurement against goal. Absolutely. I mean, i think that there is ah lot of people i think when they’re thinking about diversity inclusion, they often think about it as identity characteristics and that’s really important right race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, all citizenship, immigration status, all of those things are really important, and we want people to be aware of and tracking where they are at, especially as it relates to the consistencies that they’re serving. But we also want people to understand diversity as bigger than just identity care characteristics. It’s also do you encouraged disagreement that is healthy and constructive? Do you have diversity of opinions and ideas that can result in innovation and moving people forward? And we know that from the literature and from the research that that makes it that that makes business better, that makes the meeting the mission better. And we also know that people who come from diverse backgrounds are going to be more likely to have diverse opinions, right? So it all sort of works together two with the aim being that it’s our job to the best work that we can do to meet our mission, and if that means that we need diverse people, which we think it absolutely does mean, then that has to be one of the key things were looking at when we’re managing the organisation, it can’t be an afterthought or as the affirmative action plan might be sort of a legal, you know, legal disclaimer in our problem exactly, exactly. Okay, let’s stay with you, sharon. Talking about human resource is the human resource is air valued and developed now in small, small shops there’s very likely not even in h r for a person devoted to this topic, i mean, it could fall to i don’t know, theo, or maybe the executive director even this this could be a tough one other thing, i think it can be tough. I’m going to take a moment to say that part of the reason n pcc exists is to provide for our members thes trainings in this information so that they don’t have to have someone on site to still know what they’re doing, so there is a resource for smaller organizations, but i think it is tough. And i think that we do our very best to keep non-profits particularly are smaller members apprised of compliance issues and legal issues so that they’re running the best hr department that they or their running the best organization is in terms of hr as they can. But this is also about and and i was actually listening to your most recent podcast where you had against talking about happiness and well being, and this really is also about what, how we treat our our human resource is, like, literally after anna lisa sherman just exactly like the happy, healthy non-profit exactly, and, you know, really, i think we say hr without understanding, we actually mean, the human beings that are in a sit in are non-profit and we need teo and study after study shows your guest last week talked about this that healthy work-life balanced work environments which are incredibly difficult to achieve and non-profit sometimes because of the under resource ing and thie over demand, but really focusing on are your employees happy and are they are? Are they finding a work-life balance that’s going to make your business more effective, more efficient? You’re going to be reaching your mission. One of things you you’re looking for a standard. His job descriptions, including for well, it’s, aspirational. I think for volunteers, you have definitely job descriptions for employees on board members. And then is it aspirational when it’s job description for volunteers or is that part of the standard? I mean now volunteers when you realise they’re considered the end of the meeting, the mission. So now you’d be looking for job descriptions for volunteers, i think. Yeah, i wantto listeners. We have. Ah, just recently replayed heather carpenter. Her book is the talent resource platform, and she was just on a couple weeks ago talking about job descript. Specifically, the the segment was called your job descriptions could search that and also going backwards. One just occurred to me. Um, fields jackson has been on the show talking about diversity and the value of diversity in your non-profit his name again. Fields. Jackson. Okay, see everything else on, uh, a charm. And you covered quite well. Oh, succession planning is important. Charon. Right for ah, in succession. In hr. We talked a little about that with melkis. Anything more you wanna say about importance of succession? Planning? No, i think i think melkis when she was talking about it, with the board that’s really important and not a lot of non-profits do it, i will say the one thing that i hear most often about succession planning is the fear to start it because it might seem to signal a departure out of the organization on and really, i think one of the things that we’d like to see is tohave succession planning be so routinized that it begins on day one of the Job that on day 1 you’re starting to think what would happen if i wasn’t here, who would be doing this and who would be doing that? Because it also helps you figure out your chord structure and are due to the right people in the right places, and it helps you figure out your strategy and who’s going to put that strategy forward, and i think we have to get over this sort of, i don’t know and it’s almost like this embarrassed like shyness about doing succession. Look, if there’s if there’s trust between the bored and the video, then i think the board chair can reassure the ceo that this is not about your departure exacts about the long term viability of the organization and a potential crisis exact a cz well, as you know, you, you might decide that you found a job that dropped in your lap, and you want to take it five years from now or ten years from now, we need to be prepared exactly it’s all those things. So hopefully there is that trust between the board and their ceo. I could have one more thing, i think that what we’re talking about, a succession planning beyond the ceo that were also thinking about succession planning as an opportunity to really invest in the staff and going back to your first point about developing the talent in the organization and just building up the bench in the organization. S o succession planning is not just about the ceo potentially leaving, but also being really smart about who you have on your staff and developing them to take on more responsibility in the case of an emergency or in the case of just more opportunity, teo, grow and and promote your staff and that feels good for the staff to they see you, they see a career path within the organization or they see that when they get to a certain level, there’s a discussion of career path within that organization. So you know that i mean that’s promotes honesty and comfort within within the organization. You working for let’s? Go to aa number six. Let’s. Go. Sharon, if we stay with you for information technology, i feel like playing this ping pong game. I don’t like it. So information technology improves efficiency and advances the mission. You got some very basic standards. I hope these are not hard to meet. Offsite, elektronik back-up surge protectors, virus scans, firewalls. Are their organizations still struggling with just the standard stuff? I think so. And i think you know melkis khun speak much better than i can t the applicants that we’ve seen with the excellence words, but i think one of the things about it is that it is hard to find funding for specifically for idea. So you may have folks who know what to do and who want to do it and are desperate to get themselves up to the standards and really want to aspire to the aspirations. But there just isn’t. Any sort of funding that is earmarked for upgrading it tea or connecting your networks, or doing any of that if you’re including this in, if you’re if you’re a grants partially grantspace porter or condition partially, of course, because you want to be very diverse and your fund-raising including that in grant application, is that realistically no, no, i think if you’re right, it is important to running your programs and someone sponsoring your someone supporting your programs. It’s a direct and sometimes indirect, but often a direct cross for your programs. And obviously each organization has to analyze what it is for them when they’re making the application on. And i also think that we should be we should be thinking there are lots of really wonderful tech organisations that work on non-profit tech and i know you’re about to talk about why i’m probably they’ll do it not now. Thank you very much. Not intend. Non-profit technology network uh and and tien and ten dot or ge, of course. Amy sample ward, the ceo is a regular contributor on this wonderful, you know, maybe sample, you know and who she’s wonderful on the show every month welchlin cubine i’m returning, it gotta get it back now. She’s back off maternity leave, but yes, and ten, of course, or amy’s on every month, i go to the int’l unconference every year, i’m just saying i captured thirty interviews in the last twenty sixteen conference. I’ll be back, i’m sure twenty, seventeen lots of and ten videos at ah, my youtube channel, real tony martignetti and also lots of n ten interviews, lots of technology interviews here on the show. Okay, just let’s. Stick with area six, the six area, just for another minute or so before i go to a break. Sharon, basically, i mean, you want to see investment in technology resource? Is that technology’s actually supporting mission? Someone’s responsible somebody’s responsible for it. And again, this is a hard position teo create as a full time employee at an organization, right? And so we don’t think that responsible employment means that you have to have an afternoon for you, you know, on on on your payroll. But we do think that you have to be working with a night provider who is reputable, who knows what they’re doing, who is responsible. And, you know, it can often create many crises in the ways that you know firewalls, air down or whatever that are in critical to the organization. So they have to be someone you can rely on is well and making sure that you’re thinking about this is an interval business structure, strategy procedure, potter, not an ad on exactly equal to your to your business to your mission. Exactly. Okay, we’re gonna go out for this break. When we come back. We’ve got two more areas communications and fund-raising stay with us. Like what you’re hearing a non-profit radio tony’s got more on youtube, you’ll find clips from stand up comedy tv spots and exclusive interviews catch guests like seth gordon. Craig newmark, the founder of craigslist marquis of eco enterprises, charles best from donors choose dot org’s aria finger do something that worked neo-sage levine from new york universities heimans center on philanthropy tony tweets to he finds the best content from the most knowledgeable, interesting people in and around non-profits to share on his stream. If you have valuable info, he wants to re tweet you during the show. You can join the conversation on twitter using hashtag non-profit radio twitter is an easy way to reach tony he’s at tony martignetti narasimhan t i g e n e t t i remember there’s a g before the end he hosts a podcast for the chronicle of philanthropy fund-raising fundamentals is a short monthly show devoted to getting over your fund-raising hartals just like non-profit radio, toni talks to leading thinkers, experts and cool people with great ideas. As one fan said, tony picks their brains and i don’t have to leave my office fund-raising fundamentals was recently dubbed the most helpful non-profit podcast you have for her. You can also join the conversation on facebook, where you can ask questions before or after the show. The guests were there, too. Get insider show alerts by email, tony tells you who’s on each week and always includes link so that you can contact guest directly. To sign up, visit the facebook page for tony martignetti dot com. Hi, this is claire meyerhoff from the plan giving agency. If you have big dreams but a small budget, you have a home at tony martignetti non-profit radio. Did you think that i had forgotten the live listener? Love perish, perish the thought live listeners, wherever you happen to be, were pre recorded it’s ah it’s the end of september, right now, september twentieth, and were pre recorded but the live lister loved it goes out the live love is out, so wherever you, whether you are domestic or foreign, here or abroad live listener love goes to you, and ah, but send this in the yeah let’s handle ah, linguistic live love konnichi wa r ni hao on your haserot come sodom, ham, nida. And if you happen to be listening in mexico, which often is the case point a start is if you’re in the czech republic. Dobre din german gooden dog us live love to you accompanying the live listener love has to be the podcast pleasantries because we have over ten thousand listeners from itunes, stitcher and then smaller platforms like player in pod bay and the one in germany couldn’t talk two to all those podcast listeners that’s, the vast majority, the audience, all the audiences i’m grateful for, but the vast majority happens to be in the podcast audience pleasantries to all. Those listeners, all of you, each of you and our am and fm affiliate affections have to go out. You’re going to do the live. Listen, loving the podcast pleasantries. You have to do your filling affections or am and fm stations throughout the country. Let your station know that you hear non-profit radio on their station on your station. They would appreciate that. Feedback. I would appreciate that. Affections to our affiliate listeners throughout un tree melkis alvarez let’s turn to you for ah, our seventh area communications. They should be strategic, effective and build brand what you want, let’s? Open it up broadly. What’s this about. So what is this about? So this is about effective communications and planning. We think that communication should be strategic and integrated again. As we’ve said before, communication should not be an ad on or something that is just done every once in a while, communication should engage thie organization in terms of programs and other key areas of operations. It should be a organization wide conversation, and we’re proud to do that at and pc. See if we can put ourselves on the back. Andrea lee, i think that one other thing to know about communications is that it’s it’s two ways, right? So it’s, not just about what the organization is putting out there, but also how are we responding to what our key stakeholders and audiences are telling us? Are we listening right? And so it sze that feedback loop the loop and being mindful of the feedback that we’re getting and being responsive to that as well annual annual report, you want to see a robust annual report, right? So that is, i think, one of a key marketing to elena and a fund-raising tool that many organizations use and it’s it’s meant to highlight thie organizations, accomplishments from the prior year and so that’s one key way that they can communicate impact of the work that they’re doing, i would say that that’s external facing for the most part, this area also considers internal communications and the power of effective communications, too inform and motivate staff on dh so just making sure that that communications doesn’t stop with social media or e blast, but really thinking about how staff are communicated with as well. Um, you’re looking for hyre understanding among lots of stakeholders that they can act as representatives, outward facing representatives of the organization and that their empowered to do that right. So boardmember is there’s a good example? Right? So how can they be strong ambassadors for the organization? Bond? We we’ve seen organizations do this successfully when they prepare they’re boardmember sze to be effective champions, making sure that they can communicate the mission and the values of the organization and to be able to really speak to the impact of the programs and the effectiveness of the work. Other volunteers to rather volunteers. You want them, you want them to be empowered? Exact. We want people talking about the organization that they love, that they’re spending time or money with or, you know, i mean, these are critical. Resource is people e-giving you want you want them in power, right? You all right? See one of these? Oh, you have a nice ah, organization has this a standard organizations confidentiality and opened this policies and procedures sabelo about the openness policies. Is that is that basically we were were talking about yes, that is that. Okay, cover that. Okay. Yeah. Okay. And then confidentiality what’s that related to well, that you have the proper safeguards in place to protect confidential information both of the staff, but also of donors. A. Cz. Well, you wanna make sure that you have the systems and policies in place to make sure that that information doesn’t go beyond the organization and that only the folks that need to know it have it. I love the one two that’s ah sites website content updated regularly. Having this static website is not going to encourage people to visit on dh, melkis says. You said the communication is to go beyond social media, and that includes your website, it’s basic. But for for guess that we’ve had on this. Well, kibby larue miller was on recently because i interviewed her as part of a panel, of course. She’s, the non-profit that marketing guide guru, guru. But give you a room, miller’s been on, and you could search a tony martignetti dot com for branding or marketing communications. We’ve had lots of other guests on talking about that. Let’s, move on. Two fund-raising general, you don’t need us for this, tony. You could do this one way. Natural not fund-raising plan e-giving fund-raising and the child administration work i do. And that’s ah, minor minor part of what you’re looking for here, that resource development is strategic donor-centric and effective, the chief executive and development staff, together with the board, set the fund-raising strategy. Why? Why is that important sharing so inclusive? I think you can. And this goes back to actually what i think melkis was just talking about in terms of of who could be your ambassador for the organisation. What you were saying about multiple people should be able to talk about the organization, and then also something you said earlier about, which is also ah focus of this area that you’re fund-raising has to be diverse in order for it to be sustainable, right? And so you can’t really rely on one type of funds and be sustainable on along over a long period of time. So hear what we’re saying is the strategy to raising money can’t just come from the development director who says, okay, that’s, why i think our options are can’t just come from the d a who says okay, this so i know or can’t just come from the board saying, like, okay, this is what we need to do, it has to be a group activity and a group strategy because everyone is going to be deployed in that strategy, and you need to be able to have people understand what it not just what the strategy is, but where they’re headed in the long term. So we think that that work has to be done holistically in the organization, ok, wait can’t spend as much time on fund-raising as we did the other areas as critical fund-raising is so what i would like to do, sharon, is where can people find these areas and all the bullet point of this, some tub sub areas and the bullet points that we’ve been talking through? Where who knows best where to find that going to be on our website? Www dot n pcc and why dot orc and you can visit our non-profit excellence awards tab all of our resource is and compilation of prior years best practices are available there, okay? And this is an incredibly valuable fourteen. Page document really, really valuable melkis we have just a little under a minute, but i want to cover the education part of this. You have a webinar for each of these a day, a key areas, right? Yes. So we have a subsequent pathways to excellence workshops where we bring back past winners to really detail they’re winning practices in each of these areas, and again, they’re meant to promote ongoing learning. But i would say that the the biggest way that organizations learned through this process is by applying and putting together their team and going through the application process and getting the tailored, comprehensive feedback from our experts selection committee. Excellent wrap up, you’re going to find that it np all of this at n pcc. And why dot org’s and i apologize that we kind of ran out of time and we didn’t cover fund-raising to the extent that it deserves that really is that’s that’s my fault? I didn’t quite manage the way i like to, so i did not meet the aspiration today for me next week. There’s no show it’s. Happy thanksgiving next week except for our am and fm affiliates, of course. I will find a very good archive show for you. If you missed any part of today’s show, find it on tony martignetti dot com, responsive by pursuing online tools for small and midsize non-profits data driven and technology enabled, and we be spelling supercool spelling bee fundraisers. We b e spelling dot com pursuant is pursuant dot com. Our creative producers, claire meyerhoff. Sam liebowitz is the line producer. Gavin dollars are am and fm outreach director shows social media is by susan chavez. This music is by scott steiner. Brooklyn. Be with me next week for non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. Go out and be great. What’s not to love about non-profit radio tony gets the best guests check this out from seth godin this’s the first revolution since tv nineteen fifty and henry ford nineteen twenty it’s the revolution of our lifetime here’s a smart, simple idea from craigslist founder craig newmark yeah insights, orn presentation or anything? People don’t really need the fancy stuff they need something which is simple and fast. When’s the best time to post on facebook facebook’s andrew noise nose at traffic is at an all time hyre on nine a m or eight pm so that’s when you should be posting your most meaningful post here’s aria finger ceo of do something dot or ge young people are not going to be involved in social change if it’s boring and they don’t see the impact of what they’re doing so you got to make it fun and applicable to these young people look so otherwise a fifteen and sixteen year old they have better things to dio they have xbox, they have tv, they have their cell phones. Me dar is the founder of idealist took two or three years for foundation staff, sort of dane toe add an email address card. It was like it was phone. This email thing is right and that’s why should i give it away? Charles best founded donors choose dot or ge. Somehow they’ve gotten in touch kind of off line as it were on dno. Two exchanges of brownies and visits and physical gift. Mark echo is the founder and ceo of eco enterprises. You may be wearing his hoodies and shirts. Tony, talk to him. Yeah, you know, i just i’m a big believer that’s not what you make in life. It sze you know, tell you make people feel this is pa public radio host majora carter. Innovation is in the power of understanding that you don’t just put money on a situation expected to hell. You put money in a situation and invested and expected to grow and savvy advice for success from eric sabiston. What separates those who achieve from those who do not is in direct proportion to one’s ability to ask others for help. The smartest experts and leading thinkers air on tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent.

Nonprofit Radio for November 11, 2016: How To Appeal To High Net Worth

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

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Melanie Schnoll Begun: How To Appeal To High Net Worth

What are the wealthy looking for as they check you out on their way to becoming a connector, board member, investor, donor or other supporter of your organization? Melanie Schnoll Begun leads Morgan Stanley’s philanthropy management.

 

 


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Hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent on your aptly named host. Oh, i’m glad you’re with me. I’d bear the pain of pyla, rale, gia, if i had the stomach, the idea that you missed today’s show how to appeal to high net worth. What are the wealthy looking for as they check you out on their way to becoming a connector boardmember investor? Melanie schnoll begun leads morgan stanley’s, philanthropy management tony’s take two mohr ntc video interviews responsive by pursuant full service fund-raising data driven and technology enabled, you’ll raise more money pursuant dot com and by we be spelling supercool spelling bee fundraisers we b e spelling dot com no additional begun she’s here in the studio she’s, the managing director of philanthropy management at morgan stanley. She works with the firm’s, wealthiest and most influential clients, including prominent business owners, venture capitalists, social entrepreneurs, professional athletes and entertainers, as well as foundations and non-profits she is the nominating chair and former board president of the juvenile diabetes research foundation, new york city chapter and vice president of the board of metropolitan college of new york. Melanie is also on advisory boards for the naomi berrie diabetes center and quinnipiac university law school. Welcome back, melanie metoo pleasure. It was it was april two thousand twelve. You were here a long time to for, like, for four and a half years ago or so you’re looking great. Good to have you. Well, i like that. Thank you. Absolutely need that every morning for now. You impressive bio. No book. I thought. In these four and a half years, you would have written a book by now. Well, you know what? What i’ve done in four and a half years, i’ve i’ve run eight more marathons. Is that impressive? Okay, that that’s ah, yeah that’s that’s a a run up to that, but i like to see a book that you like to see it, but now you’re doing the marathon this year, right? And getting the marrow, which means yes, we’re a little pre recorded about ten days or so, which means this sunday you’ll be running this sunday on behalf of a cause. So of course, i’d never just run twenty six point two miles for myself. I’m raising money and awareness for juvenile diabetes for jr of europe. Okay, you’re on the advisory board, right? New york city chuck’s correct. I was ah, president, but more important than that, i’m an owner and owner of the disease, so you’ve got to take a stand, right? You can’t just own a disease and allow other people to raise the money or awareness. You have toe roll up your sleeves like i do. Tow. Take insulin. Okay, you gotta go out. There and run and raise awareness and money. Was there a juvenile diabetes research foundation? When you first found out that you had diabetes, there was the organization’s been around for over forty two years, and i’d say that we’ve had our greatest success this year. So far, we have received fda approval for the artificial pancreas, which could be my life cloaking technology outstanding, right? An owner of the organization that feels magnificent feels magnificent, but it’s not a cure, right at the end of the lot of us owe our promise has always been better treatment, prevention and a cure. So you know another device to wear in your bodies, you know, another device to wear in your body. There was just something in the times i think is today that so many of the the health that cause related non-profits are now seeking cures rather than just counseling and support on howto live with the disease. Yeah, i think that was just in today’s times. Yeah, yeah, it was it was the right article. Greater. Alright, so that’s what? Basically we’re here to talk about what a non-profit khun do should be doing to get the types. Of people who are your clients? High net worth ultra high net worth individuals interested in the cause as as interested as you are in jd are okay and that that’s on all different levels that might be a boardmember donor-centric ter, maybe just like introduction, supporter and some other methods, you know, maybe a volunteer, but not a boardmember so we’re going to talk a fair amount about you’re bored, you know, sort of fine tuning your board and making that look appealing, but the conversation’s not limited there, and we may just be talking about very well. Azad said non dahna relationship all right, so you’ve got you got a bunch of tips. Um, let’s, let’s, get into the heads of these men. He says this is an elusive group for a lot of people. They read about them. It’s always arms length. You know, ninety nine percent of us don’t know these people personally, they never will never meet them. But i got to believe that in the end, they really just i want to be connected to a cause no different than the rest of us. Just people just with norvig gets more money, there are people okay. Okay. Let’s. Gratifying, right? Right. So they just want, you know, they want some connection, the personal relationships. All right? No, i fear that in this presidential cycle, people could come away with a negative opinion of the very wealthy, but i hope that most are not like that. I presume they’re not. I’d like to see the good in you. I think i think we have to think that money and ego could be separate, right would be separate, of course, andi, ultimately, the people that we’re talking about today, which i think i think we’re looking at, many, many, many, many, many people, right? Ultimately you don’t see someone who is ultra high net worth right? It’s not, they’re not wearing it on their face. There’s no color. There is no religion, right it’s associated with with the kind of hair that you have. So it’s a it’s a matter of being right, it’s it’s something that you become either because you inherit the wealth, you create the wealth. There might have been a situation which brought wealth to you and the majority of the clients that we work with. Many of them don’t want to be associated with money. They want to be associated with purpose. So when we think about what creates purpose inside of someone versus a person being a wealthy individual and therefore they have purpose, but what creates wealth in itself, i hope it’s not a purpose as not it i’ve heard lots of stories about very wealthy people who are quite unhappy and quite modest people who are quite a brilliant in their lives, exactly, exactly, definitely independent and independent of you go to now let’s reassure people that there could be a place for these, these these people, these folks in small and midsize non-profits and they don’t all necessarily want to be on the metropolitan opera board, stanford university, right? And not necessarily, i think i think it’s a fallacy to think that wealth associates itself with just large, robust organizations. There is an opportunity if you’re a significant wealth holder to be not just a difference in a small organization, but perhaps to be the difference in a small nonprofit organization. But again, it’s really related to what the organization is doing. There are small, independent colleges that do not have wealthy donors that don’t have wealthy. Alum and are seeking amazing volunteers support leadership. There are arts organizations that are not like the amazing one sitting here in new york city for small museums that are small art collections all over the country that require and need attention. So again, it goes back to you know, where does the person feel that incredible connected with the organization you’ve helped some of your clients start? Teo get engaged with small and midsize non-profits i think the best part about our work is that the best part about our work is helping them distinguish between an organization where they could have a long, amazing history with versus one which is, you know, nice to be on procedures, prestigious. They got great people sitting around the table, they all looked look like them. They all have bank accounts that are like theirs, but most of our clients like a balance, right, and that’s what’s also so interesting about the majority of the boards that i work with. There are a few wealthy people sitting among the board members. There are some who are just industry experts who associate with the organization. There are some who just have some incredible skills or time on dh? All of that is what makes the composition of aboard great so wealth is not wealth doesn’t necessarily mean that i’ll be a great boardmember a great volunteers, you’re right. In fact, it could be the other way around. It could be difficult for the organization. That’s okay, we take our first break um, you know, what can i say? This is going to be exciting, we’re going to talk about it is exciting, we’re going to talk about getting your organization in tune for for making these approaches and then also even these are just very good advice, even if you’re not approaching high net worth individuals, just this is good stuff for your board and for your organization generally, so stay with us. You’re tuned to non-profit radio tony martignetti also hosts a podcast for the chronicle of philanthropy fund-raising fundamentals is a quick ten minute burst of fund-raising insights published once a month. Tony’s guests are expert in crowdfunding, mobile giving event fund-raising direct mail and donor cultivation. Really all the fund-raising issues that make you wonder am i doing this right? Is there a better way there is? Find the fund-raising fundamentals archive it. Tony martignetti dot com that’s marketmesuite n e t t i remember there’s, a g before the end, thousands of listeners have subscribed on itunes. You can also learn maura, the chronicle website, philanthropy dot com fund-raising fundamentals the better way. Welcome back to big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. Okay, melanie schnoll begun. Let’s get into ah, some strategies that we got for for looking good and just being solid. And, um, what is the word that we always use? Sustainable? Of course. Ok, so we, uh, we’d be well advised to show that we can help someone we might be trying to appeal to as a volunteer that will be willing to help them raise money. What kinds of help should we be offering to our volunteers? Right? So many ultra high net worth individuals created their own businesses, right? You would think that they know how to raise money and it’s incredible the difference between yeah, that’s different kind of raising it’s a different fund-raising right, a capital raise for business versus raising money for non-profit that you might be so passionate about. For some reason, the psychological obstacles that happen in someone’s head are incredible. And i’m a professional fundraiser, so to me, i can’t understand it. But you have to appreciate that people get really scared about asking friends, colleagues, business associates for money so non-cash profits staff really needs to feel comfortable. In health, being potential board members were volunteers overcome these obstacles, and there were definitely techniques to do it. I’m getting them into a mindset to realize that this is not asking money for themselves. Most people think when they go out, even though they know they’re raising money for an organization, a small organization, they care about the desperately needs the money, they feel that making that ask appears to be making and asked for them personally. It’s personal way we got to get rid of that, right? Like you got to take that idea. You gotta put it on a shelf way, way up on the top of your ceiling and decide you know what? I’m not going into that box because this isn’t about me. This is selfless. I’m spending my time, my energy might interest to create awareness and raise funding that’s either desperately needed or trust is needed to improve the work of the organization, so taking yourself out of that formula is really important. One of the ways that we do it is helping organisations help, they’re bored or volunteers were raising money, helping them create personal and public narratives, and a narrative is a story, right? We all have our own stories. I have a story about who i am now j r and your relationship with jamie our f etcetera, metropolitan college, all these organizations, all of these organizations, are all of those organisations, so finding that story inside of you that you’re really incredibly comfortable with this isn’t an elevator speech, this isn’t, you know, standing in the middle of, you know, a tight little elevator where the door is closed and the person can’t get out of the way. This is something where it’s so authentic genuine, but this is but this is making it sounds like magnum or personal. We’re trying to put personal up on the shelf now, but but personal because you’re comfortable telling the story about your association with the organization that this is not money for. So i don’t want anyone to think that when i’m raising money for tv, raph, i’m raising it so that melanie doesn’t have type one diabetes. I’d love to not have type one diabetes it’s a disgusting auto immune disease, but i’m not raising money for me, and there may never be a cure for type one diabetes in my lifetime, i’m raising money because i don’t want any other little girl to have type one diabetes because i don’t want another woman tohave to wear all of these devices underneath her dress, trying to figure out you know where i hook it on. Can i wear this tight, beautiful blouse? You know, i just i want people to feel comfortable recognizing that they can keep it. Anything is a type one diabetic. They could be a competitive athlete running the new york city marathon. They could run a big business, right? They could have babies. They would have to worry about living with complications that type one diabetes could bring on. So i take myself out of the formula. You’re not giving me the money you’re giving in an organization that’s working in excellence to do the research to find better treatments and cure. But i tell a story about myself, because, tony, i want you to see me in the center of the story, and then i want to drag you into that conversation because i want tony to see that my story about type one diabetes is your story also it’s your story. I help you. See the connection between me and you give you a quick example whenever i’m raising money for type one diabetes and i talk about me being in a car, my blood sugar being low first talk about the possibility of what could happen to me or my kids if they’re in the car with me. I then relate the story to a donor that that that i’m trying to raise money with from and i say to them, you know what? If you were in your car on the road when i was a possibility of negan into an accident, hurry myself is possible, the possibility of me being low and getting into an accident and hitting your car is also likely. Now i’m not saying that type one diabetics get into more accents anyone else? Probably less because we’re so much more aware of our health and our well, is that anybody else? I’m always checking before i get into a car, but that’s how i help other people who are raising money for diabetes make a story that’s personal, but connect themselves to somebody else and it’s, not about statistics. People are nervous about talking about, you know. The efficiencies of the nonprofit organization they’re nervous about talking about the impact of the organization. I could relate it to just a little story about me being in a car and talk about how j d ref is doing such amazing work on better technologies and how that’s helping me live a better life and helping you because i won’t be in a car on the road level. Yeah, outstanding, milly know very i feel it because i’m planning on soliciting cubine shaking you down for a couple of bucks for my city marathon on sunday, we’re already doing a service for j d r f there were going to take them on the promotions for the show, they’re goingto they’re getting there getting an hour of promotion. Okay, one one more idea of a simple way, tio help someone who’s who feels like they’re they’re not a comfortable, they don’t feel comfortable soliciting one more. One more thing, one more thing you’re gonna have three ideas in your head, like just three don’t noel the facts about the organization we get lost, we get lost. In fact, people get lost in numbers when you make a mistake about a number so you’re you’re making a claim that this little school is serving twenty five children living with autism and the results are fifty percent better lives, whatever it might be, we get lost in statistics, and the issue with numbers sometimes is people can prove us wrong with a number it’s harder to prove us wrong with just a story. So i suggest to all of three organizations i work with who are helping their volunteers, their donors raise money, give them three easy facts that we no can’t be disputed right can’t be disputed and that you could really understand again that you could create a story around one of the facts if if we’re talking about autism and let’s assume that we have a play centre for children xero through the age of five rights in a community important to that community, we know that that autism eyes is increasingly on the rise. We still don’t even know why this is happening to our young children, but this center is so important to this community. So three particular stories, right? So i would i would give them one story about one young girl, right? And how? It changed her life by being in a community where she began. Tto be able to associate, have friends right where he began toe learn skills, teo cope with some of her emotions. We’re too began to make eye contact, right? And then i give them another statistic and it’s a step about the way it changed the life of the parent. That the mother now feels confidence and leaving her daughter in this beautiful little community centre, that the mother now can have a part time job. Right? There’s so many ways to give statistics, they’re not versus forty eight percent of our families feel more confident. Yeah, with the with having a two family income just, you know, okay, exactly. Exactly. So those are the three fax are are incredibly important to fund raisers. And one of them should be a fact that that you can that the fundraiser, right? So as a non-profit is working with someone on the board that the fund raiser can associate with themselves, perhaps they have a child who’s living with autism so they could tell a story about, you know, my daughter, uh, when he was four years old was in this school, you know, and what it did for her and just giving specifics about actually how it can capture how it came to that family’s life, what it did for the siblings in that family, so three strong fax can never go wrong and lose the numbers if they if they don’t serve you, you just raise something that there has to be an affinity before we approach any individual way don’t want to go after high net worth people just because they are because they are wealthy, that there’s no, if there isn’t some genuine affinity for the work that you’re doing. There’s no point, right? May i mean, unless you’re a robber, right? Unless you’re looking to, you know, going to someone’s home and you don’t care now, why would you even think of that? I don’t know, i mean, i wouldn’t even think about it, you know what? I don’t know why? Because i think in fund-raising sometimes wait do feel like we’re robbing the person we do if we don’t if we don’t believe in the story of, you know, i’ve heard actually i’ve heard that from grant writers we were asked by sometimes its board members or their ceo go after this hit this foundation and there’s no connection, but they have to try to find one and they know it’s tenuous as their writing the words of their typing. They know it’s disingenuous, and they know it’s going to fail, but they’re executing something that they were asked to do by somebody who presumes themselves to know more about grantwriting than the professional. So and i’ve heard in that in that realm, it’s, that it feels very feel smart. Well, it feels empty, it feels empty and the results are horse, so you have to know that there’s some connection now you know, you’ve you maybe have seen another similar organization that the person supports you mentioned some of your clients are entertainers and are athletes, so maybe they tweet about a cause and they don’t know about your organization. See, according paper, you know, if it’s not somebody with seventeen million twitter followers but you see them quoted relating to a cause, something you’ve got to know that there’s a connection before you tryto given introduction, we call it a common denominator common denominator so my my son is in the sixth. Grade. We deal with all these fractions percentage of fractions, and every time i’m sitting down looking at his mathos work i’m thinking about fund-raising because i’m thinking, what is that common denominator and a common denominator means we have to have some tenuous connection, something that where there’s there’s a correlation between me and the person that i’m raising money from? So we do a lot of work, we help our non-profit clients to a lot of work on the person, the organization, the foundation before they go and make the ass. Okay, maybe we should touch on something. What do you do for your non-profit clients cause i mentioned it in your intro and that you mentioned well, let’s, acquaint people with that side of your practice. Great. Happy tio r work starts with advisory services, so we work with non-profit organizations, small and large helping them in three particular areas. The first is bored development in governance and going into a nonprofit organization looking at their board, seeing where there are strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats. The typical swat analysis, right? And during a swat analysis with a board is amazing. We do it on the way. We do it backwards. I think most people start with their strength, like who doesn’t want to talk about how strong i am? We start with their threats. You call it a tuesday, we calling wools elearning you’re inter combining okay, that’s right metoo we turn it on its head so threats and weaknesses have to be first. You could always go to the opportunities and the strengths of a nonprofit organization. S o going in really analyzing the organization, there will be some tremendous talents thing on the board. Sometimes the board is tired. I mean, we have to realize that some boards where they don’t have bored tenure and this happens a lot, tony and small non-profits like the leadership on the boy that’s been around too long over and it’s because the bylaws say it’s two three year consecutive terms is the max and you look on the board in there, people have been there twelve, fifteen, seven, twenty years, nobody has the the courage or the energy to enforce what’s in writing at night, so you know, you don’t get fresh perspective. I mean it’s terrible it’s terrible, and part of the reason is because they live in a feat they live in fear, you know, starting fresh perspective, people come on the board and they see what is supposed to be six year max, maybe a possibility of a second of a third three year term, and their board members have been here for seventeen years, and i don’t even follow their own by-laws what kind of an organization? By joining that’s, right? So so not only does it have poor governance, right? Not only does have poor governance, but ultimately it’s a new fresh member of the board. When you look at someone who’s been on a board for so many years, you know it, they’re they’re they’re exhausted from raising money for the same organization that’s, that’s one it’s not that they’ve lost the passion for the work they care about the work they want to see the results, but ultimately every three to campaign cycles, a delete four five year campaigns at least, and everything in between those and the preparation of planning and that’s a couple strategic planning cycles with that if you was done right, takes at least a year or so and that, and that means that they’ve even seen strategic plans that have sat on shelves that haven’t even been on there embarrassed the board members embarrassed to leave don’t want to leave the organization flat, but the organization is embarrassed to get the person off he’s another by-laws say they should that’s right, it’s a bad situation. Let me tell you how we help. Let me tell you how we help. Let me tell you how we help, we go into that board and we sit down with, you know, the current officers and really talk about you, let’s, analyze your you’re bored policy, right? This is what your terms are if they’re right. If it was right when we wrote this this language, if we were right about this, then we have to govern this way. Onboarding exactly so we need to make decisions now, how do we get rid of a boardmember who cares about this organization, who we care about, um, letting them resign in honor, right, letting them resigning? I think a lot of times it just takes a face to face conversation at seoul. It takes some degree of courage. Just ask the person to come in and sit with the ceo. And se look, oh, it sit with the board chair, hopefully is not the board chair, but that could be the person, but whoever it is, you know, you gotta go. You gotta grow a pair and and start enforcing the governance that you’ve you’ve put in writing. That’s exactly right that’s exactly what it is that simple and the person is a very good chance that personal thank you. In fact, not only thank you, they want to go, they want they’re embarrassed to leave. They’re embarrassed to tell you that they don’t want to go and you’re embarrassed to ask them to leave. But but i’d never let but it’s an opportunity, right? We never let ah threat or weakness like having someone who’s tired, who’s been on a board too long not turn into an opportunity and into a strength we go back to our twos, and so what’s the opportunity as you are a cz ur graciously in honor it’s celebrating the service of a boardmember who’s. Now retiring, you ask for a gift, we ask for a gift and we do it upon exit. And we allow that retiring boardmember and honor we celebrate that. Boardmember allow his or horse story about leaving this organization all the work that he’s done and in celebration upon departure, leaving a major gift. And by the way, major, at their level right now, talking about small organizations, this person might not have a fourteen to give, given their capacity at their capacity. I never heard that one outstanding, and i’ve heard the transition respectfully, to an advisory board nice, but ask for a gift as forget. I mean, of course we’re going to do all of those other things. But why lose our opportune eddie? Allow someone to retire and give at their highest and best potential and celebrate and celebrate their service and their their their gift? Okay, would you hang out, take it, take sip waters, complicity from aroma while i do a little business, you just keep that. I give a lot to remember. It’s not it’s, not a paid, so we don’t have to disclose it. Um, so much more with melanie coming up first. Pursuant, they’ve got another free webinar. If this one is upgrade your best donors today with pursuant consultants chris taft and christian priest they’re gonna help you identify your donors who have the capacity and interest to do more for you maximize your resources as you engage the right prospects and fine tuning your prospect visits. This webinar is on tuesday, november fifteenth, at twelve central time. If you want to register, go to pursuing dot com and under resource is click webinars yet another free webinar from pursuing we’ll be spelling spelling bees for non-profit fund-raising these air, not your seventh grade spelling bee there’s live music, dancing, standup comedy fund-raising and of course, there is spelling woven in there as well. The’s air ideal for millennial outreach night you’ll love these things because you do them in bars restaurants, not your seventh grade spelling bee. Check out the video at we b e spelling dot com now tony steak, too. I’ve got more video interviews from the non-profit technology conference he’s a rond fund-raising i picked the brains of smart technology guests to help you raise more money. This is what we’ve got in this batch donorsearch vase to boost your revenue growing your sustainers revenue, smart email marketing and increasing donorsearch retention all for those group together my video with the links to each of these four video interviews is that tony martin durney dot com, and that is tony’s take two. Melanie, thank you for hanging in there. I love i just love that gift idea. I know i said it three times already, but i love that gift idea of the departure of a boardmember but, yeah, we can’t have the seventeen years service service members it’s it’s just it’s not right. It’s bad business. Well, you just mentioned millennials and as i think about boards again, some of the work that we do it, morgan stanley is developing these boards. There is not a board around today that’s not looking to bring young leadership onto the board, and some have young monisha advisory boards, even they have if they don’t, they should, and they don’t, they should, and millennials are feeling the pressure. Tony. They’re really feeling the pressure because they realize that these organizations are all looking at them right now, right? Like there is an eye on them to be safe metoo saviors i i go to conferences and there’s a panel of three millennials, and there has to speak for the whole thirty million court record three people supposed to represent the entire group, they’re representing their representing all of us both leadership from the past, and they’re going to be our future. So, you know, we need to be mindful of the pressure that we’re placing on them, but also but again, we need to recognize the opportunity. So as i think about boards and for, you know, the other nonprofit organizations, the organizations that that listened to your show that you serve bringing on young talent is incredibly important. But that common denominator right, you doesn’t necessarily mean that. Wow, that’s a person i want sitting on my board. So as i think about the colleagues on my team, even even craig was on my team was here in the studio with us today, when i think about, you know, how do we bring young talent onto non-profit boards? He gotta do the same personal assessment of them and that’s what i helped non-profits tio, we help them analyze the potential of a young boardmember so e-giving really almost like like a questionnaire and analysis. Who am i? What kind of boardmember could i be? What kind of time could i give? What kind of thoughts can i? Offer would i be intimidated? Sitting among ah board of people so much senior to me coming in and they’ve been there for sixteen years? Am i going to have a permanent gag order? Will i ever feel comfortable offering my opinion, having a voice at that table? So you need to really look at millennials who come on to your board if they’re going to join your big board and make sure that they have the potential to be an equal participating boardmember support the reassurance? Yeah, the coaching one of your ideas is that there be a board buddy system? I love talking about that. I love it! I love it it’s like anything else. When you learned how to swim, no one went into a pool on their own little diesel sensitive hands under me as i was kicking and flailing. I’m still i still i still need that i’m actually not very good even i live on the ocean i flail that the hands have grown but they’re a little different now of it’s the same i do love it well, maybe that’s because you should be using your feet more than your hands that’s a swimmer it’s really? The power comes from the feed from the from the from the legs, but you’re right, it’s that support underneath you until until you’re ready to swim on your own till you’re ready is from on the road. So it’s the same exact like to see a mentor assigned a banner different dahna mentor has a met buddy somebody now i heard friends or friends buddies wait friends of friends, pals, pals, buddies sleep together. Okay? That’s not that’s, not the kind of body. You know what? We’re going to keep this show really clean. Okay, so, so what’s going on? We’re not. We’re not talking about the word sleep that’s killing you, right? So blue. So it was the together part. It was together part, but in the bud washing room she’s really norvig it is mormon studio, but you’re blushing more now than you were ever best falik so the idea of a buddy system it’s not a mentor in it’s, not a sponsor. It’s it’s, not someone who’s going be there give you no guiding you your half and it’s not someone there who’s gonna sponsor you to take on a bigger role in the organization it’s someone who’s going to share with you what they went through when they were joining the board. So would he to know that? Like, when you walk, i’ll give you something. This amazing issue that people have when they first joining aboard, where do i sit? Oh, my god. I’m walking into this boardroom there’s ten board members to someone which we have assigned seats on by sitting in someone’s chair and that’s that’s their there right? How do i prepare for a board meeting? Should i come into notes all over the board book? They’ve dog tag in my book be all highlighted. Do i ask questions? Should i answer questions? I mean, all of these things that go on in someone’s head when they’re first joining aboard because remember, you’re joining a family aboard is a family. These are people who work together, live together, pray together, cry together, sometimes over the issues that they’re working on, and you’re the newcomer and your brand new and your brand new. So a body is someone who gives that kind of support. The first thing a buddy does is they find a seat for their buddy might. They walk in and they go, you know what? You’re going to sit right next to me, you’re going to sit right next to me that reassurance when you just walking for that first meeting, knowing that you got someone right next to you and who like whispers something in your ear, like, you know, by the way, don’t listen to that woman, you know, she doesn’t have a clue what the hell she’s talking about or oh, that guy talks about fund-raising but he hasn’t raised a dollar for this organisation in ten years, you know, that kind of insight on that thing kibitzing really help someone get comfortable and ease into their fiduciary responsibilities, sitting on the board outstanding because i wanted to talk about making explicit the responsibilities of the boardmember clearly the organization has responsibilities to the to the board with the boardmember has responsibilities to the organization, and they go way beyond fund-raising and we need to make these explicit on, i think, going back again to governance many organizations, even small organizations, right, even start up organizations recognized the need tohave policy, and they’ll perhaps even write policy they’ll feel, perhaps copy some other organizations policy and make it their own not knowing what to be in their policy, but at the end of the day, whatever their policy suggests that are the board members responsibilities should be in writing, why’s that so critically important because new board members, especially for small organizations, they need to understand. What am i supposed to be doing here? Like what is my role? The first critical role is to talk about raising money for some reason, we leave it for last we we nominate people to the board, we cultivate them. We’re so excited to bring them on. Sometimes we’re bringing them on because they actually gave a gift to the organization in the past, right? They were a donor to the organization, and then when we bring them onto the board all of a sudden, you know, we don’t talk about fund-raising i start, i lied with with fund-raising in fact, we have not policy usually usually there’s this give and get expectation on the board. I hate that word. I hate that word. Why what they mean by expectation? The reality is, if there is a need, then we should say there is board fund-raising policy and some boards will explicitly say how much the number is that they have to raise. They don’t necessarily have to say how they get the money. But, you know, every board needs to realize if there are ten, people sitting around this table and if there’s an expectation for us to each raise ten thousand dollars or five thousand or one thousand, you know, i don’t know how much some of the organizations who are listening might expect of their things are in the range so in the range, but let’s just say it’s ten let’s, say it’s ten because it’s easier for me to do that kind of mathos on dh there, sir. Ten people sitting around the table rights of ten thousand times ten. You could even do that math. Tony what’s. That number would be a hundred thousand. Well now, imagine formal difference. Wolber lorts right for michael. But both were former lawyers. Exactly. Imagine the difference in a non profit organization. If it every single year before it even had toe open its doors, it knew it had a commitment because the board understood that each of them had the responsibility and on dh. Not a goal, not an expectation, but the responsibility to get ten thousand dollars in that organization knew we have one hundred thousand dollars toward with that. Do you prefer to see those expectations as a dollar amount or something? You see the phrase personally significant gift each year? I like clarity. Ok? I mean, i’m all about being clear and concise. What i hope is that ten thousand is the floor, not the ceiling. Yeah. See, that’s the problem. If you if you say there’s a certain there is a responsibility to do that, that becomes the person ceiling. Exactly. I got ten thousand dollars. I’m done. So i’ve got ten thousand dollars in january and i could fall asleep for the next eleven months. Now, what do you do though if you have a diverse board in terms of assets and ability to give? Yes. And for some people with ten thousand dollars is a stretch. And for some people, it’s, you know, a remainder at the checking account at the end of the week. That’s, right. So so that’s. So now let’s, let’s. Go back to this ultra high net, worth enough people that we were talking. About the beginning of the hour right on policy in that regard doesn’t necessarily have to be the same for everybody, right? And when you’re recruiting a member to report when you’re recruiting someone and you know that they have the potential to give hyre than other board members, you’re i’m i’m very clear with that new board potential boardmember i will explain the composition, the board i want you understand who you’re gonna be sitting with, you’re going to be sitting with some people who are academics who don’t have the opportunity to give them selves significant, but man, they gave intellectual capital to this organization. We have some board members who can give, ah, small amount of money, but give their time and then and then you, tony, you know, you have a lot of time, you’re running a big business, you live in north carolina, you’re on the radio, you got a lot of people want your attention, right? Right, right. Sounds good. Sounds good with you was reality story. I’m creating a good narrative for drama you add to it is eyes intense it’s all about creating the factual was all factual but bring thrown creating the public narrative here creating the public narrative so around that story, i know you have the potential to give mohr, but you don’t have much time. You don’t live in new york, so you can’t always be here for board meetings. You can’t always be here for the volunteer events, so you know, you’re in north carolina, but you have the potential to give more. I would be very explicit with you, tony, i want you to understand something the required give for this board is ten thousand dollars, but one of the reasons that we want you on the sport is because we know you have some tremendous networks. We know that you’re very affluent, we know that you run a great business, we know that you don’t have a lot of time, so we want you to realize that we’re not going to ask is much time of us. We might be asking of other board members, but we do hope that you can give at a higher potential. And what do we embarrass about what it was like, seriously, what we embarrassed about asking, but we know it, right? We’re thinking it, but for some reason. Somewhere between our brain and our mouth, there’s there’s this disconnect, we can’t get those words out, and we know the person we’re talking to his thinking it because as i’m describing the diversity of the board, i know that the academics don’t have the capacity to give the hypothetical tony level that’s exactly right qualified with hypothetical that’s, right? So you’re allowing i know it, you know it let’s talk about the elephant in the room, it’s the elephant in the room, and instead we’re going to be professionals. We’re gonna be genuine, we’re going to be authentic and we’re going to be transparent, and if i’m going to allow you to serve in excellence, what i don’t want to happen is i don’t want tony in north carolina running a big business who says, wow, i feel totally guilty because there was, you know, a volunteer events today. We were going out and clean the park because we’re over the garden because we’re garden organs, unicorns i feel totally guilty. I wasn’t able to be there, and i wasn’t able to be there for the last three, you know, vegetable growing things and the flower cutting thing, but you know what i know i could dio i care about this organization. It was in my neighborhood when i was growing up. I want to be a big part of it. I could give more than other people can give, okay? Honesty, explicitness, professionalism. We’re adults here, all right, let’s, go out for our last break a little early, and then we’ll wrap it up. We’ll still have another, like, nine, ten minutes or so you hang in there. Like what you’re hearing a non-profit radio tony’s got more on youtube, you’ll find clips from stand up comedy tv spots and exclusive interviews catch guests like seth gordon, craig newmark, the founder of craigslist marquis of eco enterprises, charles best from donors choose dot org’s aria finger do something that worked and they only levine from new york universities heimans center on philantech tony tweets to, he finds the best content from the most knowledgeable, interesting people in and around non-profits to share on his stream. If you have valuable info, he wants to re tweet you during the show. You can join the conversation on twitter using hashtag non-profit radio twitter is an easy way to reach tony he’s at tony martignetti narasimhan t i g e n e t t i remember there’s a g before the end, he hosts a podcast for the chronicle of philanthropy fund-raising fundamentals is a short monthly show devoted to getting over your fund-raising hartals just like non-profit radio, toni talks to leading thinkers, experts and cool people with great ideas. As one fan said, tony picks their brains and i don’t have to leave my office with fund-raising fundamentals was recently dubbed the most helpful non-profit podcast you have ever heard. You can also join the conversation on facebook, where you can ask questions before or after the show. The guests were there, too. Get insider show alerts by email, tony tells you who’s on each week and always includes link so that you can contact guests directly. To sign up, visit the facebook page for tony martignetti dot com. Welcome back, big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. Melanie, i love these ideas. E-giving really excellent. Um, by the way, you didn’t mention beach either on the beach in north carolina? Yes, i got it going. Address mamatoto the hypothetical means well, at that additional layer of fact and the view outside of your window. And now now you’re able to sleep with that with the shutters open because it’s getting a little bit cooler for indoor sliding doors, we could definitely do a fundraiser at your beautiful beach house in north carolina. Thank you so much for offering europe. Thank you for offering. I appreciate that. We’ll take that. We’ll take that done. Done. Let’s, not get aggressive. We’ll not only martignetti non-profit here not only taking we’re going where you already admonished me. Aboutthe sex joke that’s, right? We’re not gonna take it, but but at a gala we’re gonna raffle your home ofthe to somebody with a beautiful beach. Um, let’s show that our organization measures its own results, shows its impact assesses it’s assess its its effectiveness to the new potential investor etcetera that we might be trying to entice yes, so effectiveness. And measurement, right? So many conversations about this, i’m sure that you’ve had conversations like this on your range a lot we have, but it bears repeating buy-in impact reporting and measurements. Ok, so so we might have a slightly different opinion than many of the companies that are in the measurements reporting business. Go ahead and i’m gonna give you the opinion from the ultra high net worth jonah, right? So that’s, where we spend much of my time, our staff spends much of our time at morgan stanley. I’m you would think that the wealthy or someone is the more be the big bank accounts that they have the brokerage statements that they get. They always want all these reports. The reality is they don’t read them, they don’t read them, and i’m not saying everyone that no one reads them right. So their trust advisors, i might be reading them on behalf of the donor, but the ultra high net worth donor-centric ng all of your energy on it goes on red. So most of ultra high net worth donors want to know that you’re being effective, right? They want to know that if they have a connection to this organization. You’re not doing anything fraudulent, right? Just not doing anything. Fraud, that’s, that’s a that’s a floor that is the floor, right? That’s the floor. They want to know that their money is going to be making a difference, right? That there’s something that their gift is going to be accomplishing of the organization, that if you did not have their gift, you couldn’t do it right, like there’s. Just something else that was that might not have been able to have been happening. But the most important, the most important again is the relationship that they have with the person who’s making me ask or the relation that they have with someone on the board. So they look at these relationships and time and time again, they go back to, even if we might be doing a deep analysis on the impact of the organization and ah, qualitative and quantitative analysis of their work. If an ultra high net worth client has a relationship to the organization, if they have relations in person who’s asking him for the money or they have relation with a boardmember or they’ve had a relationship with the cause, the cause is done something for them personally for their family, all of the statistics there, not as relevant. And i’ll tell you why because we think about how doe i compared to another organization doing similar work. So if i went to will go back to the example of autism, if there was ah, community center in my neighborhood that was working with a small group of children ages zero to five and on and i had a friend whose daughter went to that school and i saw the impact it made on my friend’s life doesn’t matter if there’s another bigger organization working on autism, finding the research, doing the working towards the cure? No, because it’s so it’s, so easy for me t sting you wish between why this organization first another not because i don’t want to know that there’s going to be a cure, but i have that connection to this organization where my friend’s daughter excels, so it goes back to what we’ve been speaking about. Beginning results matter metrics absolutely matter when you’re looking for very large gifts, he need to make sure that you could back, huh? What you’ve accomplished with someone’s donation. But the end of the day working on that relationship nine times out of ten is what an ultra high net worth persons looking for just like a high net worth person or a low networth person. They’re looking for the relationship, the connection. We want to reassure our volunteers that their time is going to be used wisely, efficiently that we we support our volunteers, are meetings or efficient let’s talk a little about a little about overcoming some of the objections that people might have to volunteer like like thie perception is that all the volunteers are retired and they have lots of time um, the job’s right there, or or there where their home with their kids so so during the breaks with their kids, like they’re trying to find meaning in their lives and those of the people you should be asking for a volunteer, not me so much right away over how do we isn’t non-profit overcome that objection. So so i don’t want to assume that that mom’s at home who have tremendous potential to volunteer, really, who have no time because it’s the busiest, it’s it’s the hardest job on the face of the universe to be at home with your children that’s why i never stayed home with my children. Ah, much easier for me to go into morgan stanley, but ultimately, volunteers is going be an issue if your children listening to this is going to cause any but it could be something the family you know what? That when it was so so ryder and talk, i just want you to know later in life when when you’re lying on the couch just say it was because my mom just it was because of my mom don’t spend all the money saving himself gave all the money out of time and money save all the money and going back to the volunteers we confined volunteers anywhere, right? And the problem that that i see non-profits have is they don’t have an established volunteer program, right? They don’t know how to maximize the effort and the energy of their volunteermatch base. So if we are going after established individuals who have very, very busy lives and you want them to volunteer for a particular purpose, then outline what is the project, the program, the day, the hour than you want them. To spend maybe it’s doing a radio show like this, right? Like maybe it’s coming into your studio and spending one hour with you talking about the work of their organization man is that away toe volunteer and to volunteer in excellence, but many organizations who have who bring in a lot of volunteers, they become their staff to some extent, they’re not spend the time giving their volunteers thie the preparation to be really good volunteers, so even small organizations that are run by predominately of volunteer base volunteers could get lost. They don’t understand, you know, how am i going to be useful to this organization? So if they go into a small school or if they go into a library, let’s make it into a library, so i’m going to volunteer for a library in my neighborhood and, you know, i’m not a librarian, right? And i don’t know how to use the dewey decimal system anymore, right? To even use the library library. I don’t rememberthat night except duitz one through nine, right? That’s because we’re old on the card, the card catalogue. I’d love to go to court catalogue sametz just glide out so nice. There, all wood with the satiny brass fixture on if you pull the handle out, a lot of little tag inside the little it’s little frame. And if someone was eating like an oreo cookie, there was like that love thumbprint, right? Greystone think dahna car in the little time we well, i i don’t know what they use that anymore in our libraries. So when you’re going into a library, you know what? How you could be volunteering in a library and making sure that the volunteers that come in there, that there’s real potential for them tio feel to feel effective. The one opportunity teo do that is tripoint someone who is going to be the leader of their volunteers, right? Who is responsible for this incredible, incredible group of people who are going to be our staff for free, right? So someone needs to be assigned to be responsible for those volunteers they could check in with them. They give them their work orders. They evaluate them. They let them know what they’re being good. Volunteers, bad volunteers. How they could improve their volunteerism. So there’s accountability and and and support absolute. Okay, we have just like a minute and a half left and i want to how do how does that non-profit get the attention of the kinds of people were talking about? And we just have, like, a minute or so let let them realize that if they’re working in the space of on dh educating kids, health care, the feeding, the poor, those are issues that ultra high net worth individuals care about, right? We have to stop thinking that small non-profits need to be in the shadow of the large, established organizations ultrahigh networks care about the issues. How do we get their attention for our small roger’s warnings and make sure that we have stories there are powerful, so if you’re going to use social media, if you’re going to use volunteers to get the message out and advocate, if you’re going to use a letter writing campaign, be concise, be clear creating a public narrative that lets them understand why they are different than other bigger organizations, and make sure that you’re getting that message out to people not just mass but, you know, make it very pointed, so clarity, concise transparency and advocate for your organization because small organization’s matter. As much as the large ones, the ninety five percent matter. What is your twitter id? Melanie espy got melanie s begun. Mm. For morgan stanley at melanie s begun. Bj u n m s thank you very much, craig. Melanie, thank you so much. Great to have you back. Good luck this weekend. Thank you. And i appreciate your not coming on my hair. By the way, i’m dying. I have a second. So i have to just tell our listeners when i first met tony when we first became friends short cropped hair. Now it’s beach fundez mario. Probably like a lion like a lion next week. Eight areas of non-profit excellence. If you missed any part of today’s show, i beseech you, find it on tony martignetti dot com were sponsored by pursuant online tools for small and midsize non-profits data driven and technology enabled and by we be spelling supercool spelling bee fundraisers ideal for millennia. Ls we b e spelling dot com our creative producers clam hyre off. Sam liebowitz is the line producer gavin dollars are am and fm outreach director shows social media is by susan chavez. And this music is by scott stein of brooklyn. Be with me next week for non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent go out and be great. Yeah. What’s not to love about non-profit radio tony gets the best guests check this out from seth godin this’s the first revolution since tv nineteen fifty and henry ford nineteen twenty it’s the revolution of our lifetime here’s a smart, simple idea from craigslist founder craig newmark yeah insights, orn presentation or anything? People don’t really need the fancy stuff they need something which is simple and fast. When’s the best time to post on facebook facebook’s andrew noise nose at traffic is at an all time hyre on nine a m or eight pm so that’s, when you should be posting your most meaningful post here’s aria finger ceo of do something dot or ge young people are not going to be involved in social change if it’s boring and they don’t see the impact of what they’re doing. So you got to make it fun and applicable to these young people look so otherwise a fifteen and sixteen year old they have better things to do if they have xbox, they have tv, they have their cell phones. Me dar is the founder of idealist took two or three years for foundation staff, sort of dane toe add an email address card, it was like it was phone. This email thing is right and that’s why should i give it away? Charles best founded donors choose dot or ge somehow they’ve gotten in touch kind of off line as it were on dno, two exchanges of brownies and visits and physical gift mark echo is the founder and ceo ceo of eco enterprises. You may be wearing his hoodies and shirts. Tony talked to him. Yeah, you know, i just i’m a big believer that’s not what you make in life. It sze, you know, tell you make people feel this is public radio host majora carter. Innovation is in the power of understanding that you don’t just do it. You put money on a situation expected to hell, you put money in a situation and invested and expect it to grow and savvy advice for success from eric sabiston. What separates those who achieve from those who do not is in direct proportion to one’s ability to ask others for help. The smartest experts and leading thinkers air on tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent.

Nonprofit Radio for November 4, 2016: Increasing Your Donor Retention & Social Media For Year End

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Rachel Clemens & Sean Doles: Increasing Your Donor Retention

Keeping the donors you have saves money and increases efficiency over acquiring new ones to replace them. Retention tactics come from Rachel Clemens, president of Creative Suitcase, and Sean Doles, vice president of mission advancement at YMCA of Austin. We talked at the 2016 Nonprofit Technology Conference.

 

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Oppcoll hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I’m your aptly named host. We have a listener of the week, marcus t coleman jr he tweeted, if you work for work with or support non-profits you should give twenty martignetti is podcast i listen insightful and practical interviews, marcus, thank you so much for that insightful, impractical that’s. Um, but that’s that that says it, i mean wonderful and magnificent would be would be called keeping cubine tra in context with the superlative culture that we have but insightful, impractical. I do appreciate that. Thank you very much. Non-profit radio is in the white house with marcus because he works for the white house office of faith based and neighborhood partnerships. So cool he’s at mt coleman jr marcus, thank you so much for loving non-profit radio very appreciative. Congratulations on being our listener of the week oh, i’m glad you’re with me. I’d be hit with book arai assis if you wormed in with the idea that you missed today’s, show increasing your donor retention, keeping the donors you have saves money and increases efficiency over acquiring new ones to replace them. We all know that retention tactics coming from rachel clemens, president of creative suitcase, and sean dole’s, vice president of mission advancement at y m c a of austin. We talked at the twenty sixteen non-profit technology conference and social media for year end amy sample ward returns from maternity leave with social strategies that close out your twenty sixteen and align with your critical fourth quarter fund-raising she’s, our social media contributor and ceo of inten, the non-profit technology network on tony’s take two new non-profit technology conference fund-raising videos responsive by pursuant full service fund-raising data driven and technology enabled, you’ll raise more money pursuant dot com, and by we be spelling supercool spelling bee fundraisers wee bey e spelling dot com from the non-profit technology conference. Here are rachel clemens and sean dole’s talking about donor welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of sixteen ntc the non-profit technology conference this interview is also part of ntc conversations. We’re in san jose, california, at the convention center. My guests now are rachel clemens and sean dole’s that’s very nice wave wave to sean metoo dignified coming from austin you’re supposed to do who you are. Right, it’s. All right. Rachel is president at creative success non-profit communications firm. Creative suitcase. What did i say? Creative success also. Creative success. Very successful case right there. All right, let’s. Try it again. President. Creative suitcase non-profit communications firm and sean dole’s is vice president of mission advancement at the y m c a of austin. Welcome, rachel. Welcome, sean. Thanks, feminist. You’re very welcome. We’re going to get to your topic on dahna retained shortly very shortly. But i have to shout out the swag item for this interview, which is from phone to action and a cardholder for the back of your iphone. Of course. Peel off the adhesive and stick it. Stick it to your phone, and then you put your phone toe action business card in it or your subway metro card or your whatever other drivers license, et cetera. Very practical. Goes in the swag pile for today. That’s our ntcdinosaur pile it’s pretty good. It was bigger, but it got stolen overnight. You believe that? I had an auntie. I’ll score through the scarf. Got scarf. You can’t trust these non-profit folks know who’s after hours i was here, so i was. There till six. Thirty oppcoll okay, come back and see us increasing your donor retention, rachel, when we not getting quite right, some i’m not imputing all non-profits and all practices, but what are some non-profits not getting quite right about some of their donorsearch practices that are leading to too much attrition. So the reason we want to talk about this today was we work a lot with our clients to dio urine strategies or giving campaign strategies, and what happens is a lot of the times were doing the strategy we’re doing the design, and then we asked, what you going to do to cultivate these donors after the fact and there’s not a good plan for that. So what’s happening is they’re working a lot to get new donors in the door, but not necessarily working to keep the donors that they’re getting right, which is a problem. We have very high attrition rate right? Right? I’ve heard as high as seventy percent. You have you have a different number? Yeah, we have it. The number from bloomerang that forty three percent comeback for three percent fifty. Fifty seven percent. Lost right still over. Has still high. Yeah. That’s. Terrible. After all that work, i feel like it should be, like two or five percent, right? Yeah. Only because you know how much, shawn? Because we know how much it costs, of course. Toe replace a donor than to retain one. Right? It’s it’s. Infinitely more efficient to retain that donor. Keep them happy. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Uh, let’s. Jump into some strategies. My voice just cracked again. Like thursday today. Jump. Okay. Reverse puberty. Twelve years old. Yeah. One of your wanted someone a reading from the recession description to expressing gratitude. Stewardship? What can we do better around stewardship? Let’s, start with you, sean. Well, i think first and foremost, you have to have an organized plan, and then you have to execute on that plan. You have tio be judicious. It has to be realistic in terms of its sustainability. Dahna it has to fit with your level of resource is whether it’s cost or staff time. It’s gotta be realistic. So you got you gotta. You gotta create the plan. Then you gotta execute on it. And you know if you can do that. You will see a tangible result from it, and and you have to be flexible along the way. Sometimes you you have the best intentions with a plan. And then reality gets in the way. You have to adjust your not going toe get to everything on your plan. Maybe. Or maybe you try something that you intended to do and it’s not working the way you had envisioned. You got to adjust, but donors will recognized the effort made to thank them, too. Communicate the impact of their gifts. They recognize that in it. And it is that that appreciation is manifested with recurring donation. What what types of things? Rachel belong in our are our stewardship plan strategy, right? So i think the first place is what are you going to do? What? The tastic tactics you’re going to put in place? So is sean mention thanking them so cumulative. Thank you’s, both online and off. So you might look a email strategies, impact videos, any sort of mfa graphics that might be appropriate to show impact. You also want to think about, huh? Okay, basically, the reason you want to do a lot of those things is that you want to remind them why they give in the first place. So thinking about why they might have given segmentation is also something to think about. So when they give the first donation, why are they giving you might ask them what particular focus area they have so that you can do many campaigns to them around those focus areas moving forward, so there’s air some tactics, and i think another key point is is personalization. To the extent that it is possible your organization’s may have thousands of donors, but to the extent that you can cut through and have a one to one communication to them that says, tony, thank you for your gift. Here is how you have made an impact on someone’s life, including if if we know if they’ve if they’ve given it to a certain campaign, right? We’re certain program recognizing that and and and i realize we’re at a non-profit technology conference, but in this day and age, something as traditional as a hand written note or a personal phone call such kari carries considerable currency and can be some of the most effective forms of stewardship that we could do. I’m a big fan of handwritten notes there, so they’re more effective now, then they then they were twenty years ago on the y has the benefit of having children as part of their after school campaign, so they’ll use kids will create bookmarks as part of can’t arts and crafts project. Hey, we got another arts and crafts project for you were making book bark, so we’re making placemats and we get a thousand kids making place mats and then we turn and we share them with our donors and anecdotally, those air, some of the most effective stewardship pieces that we create, people say our love, this bookmark it puts a smile on my face every time i you know, i’m flipping through the pages of my favorite novel, retouching of course it’s sweet it’s, handmade child made made in the usa what’s not to, like made in austin, texas. That’s. Right? All right, all right. What else? Stewardship meet such a broad topic? How else should we be thanking our donors and in the process? You know, as you point out, rachel were cultivating them suddenly for their next gift. So what else can we say about stuart, i think another thing to consider our reactivation campaigns or win back campaign, so for example, if if you’ve got a large database, but you’re not getting a lot of engagement from that database, segmenting those those donors in the database that you would consider an active so you would define what makes an active donorsearch o r there’s someone who’s given in the last year, they opened our emails, click right? You take the enact of bunch and you take them through reactivation campaign. So basically, you say, hey, we haven’t heard, you know, we haven’t. We’ve missed you. Um, we’d like to re a connect with you or this is the last time you’ll hear from us, and at that point you’re asking them toe op back in you’re not asking them to opt out, you’re asking them to say, i still want to get information from you on, but once you do that, you can take him through sort of a re welcome siri’s or something like that that would basically re engage them, get them interacting, opening things again before you go and ask for money can go it’s, not an effort, teo ask for money right out the gate. Okay, so it’s more just trying to get some engagement. Yeah, show that they’re still interested. Okay, okay, education. Re connect them to the cause. You’re tuned to non-profit radio. Tony martignetti also hosts a podcast for the chronicle of philanthropy. Fund-raising fundamentals is a quick ten minute burst of fund-raising insights published once a month. Tony’s guests are expert in crowdfunding, mobile giving event fund-raising direct mail and donor cultivation. Really, all the fund-raising issues that make you wonder, am i doing this right? Is there a better way there is? Find the fund-raising fundamentals archive it. Tony martignetti, dot com that’s t i g e n e t t i remember there’s a g before the end, thousands of listeners have subscribed on itunes. You can also learn maura, the chronicle website, philanthropy dot com fund-raising fundamentals, the better way. And, you know, from the outset, i think they’re several different ways you can approach this categorically one is kind of short, medium and long range, you know, the immediate recognize mission, the immediate thank you letter or communication, it goes out then what’s going on what’s going to be going out on a monthly or quarterly basis. Other other ways to conceptualize it are the online versus offline, you know, there’s a handful of things that, you know, like i mentioned the note, the phone call, you know, in in our organization, we recognize major donors by hanging banners in our wine say facilities might walk into a gymnasium or a swimming pool area, and you see a big banner on the wall many, you know, museums or schools have different sign inch opportunities so there’s there’s, you know, and then they’re they’re all the online tools now that are available. There’s obviously, emails where you can communicate impact stories, whether it’s us, short form digital videos, your email, communications, social, social media where you’re recognizing a donor through your social media channels. Dahna you’re doing much with the video in this in this category there’s a stewardship and cultivation we we do it in a way we do a lot, and it about two years ago it became ah, strategic focus for us. When we saw that, you know, we could send out an email that would have lines of lines and lines of text, and it would have a certain sort of open raid or click through rate, or we put a video there and the, you know, the open rates or the quick through rates were astronomically hyre so would much rather quick on the video watch it even if they only sit there for thirty seconds or a minute. So we put a big emphasis on video. And so we we created dahna a program that we called project fifty to which was essentially a goal of creating ah video and sending it out once a week, fifty two weeks a year that would communicate some ass aspect of impact and who was the scent, too? This would be sent to two donors or specific segmented groups within our within our donor or within our stakeholder based people that might have expressed a specific interest in water safety or childhood obesity or family that we don’t you know, we like most non-profits we don’t have tens of hundreds of thousands of dollars to buy advertising, teo, tell these stories to the community, so we had to figure out cost efficient, cost effective ways to get these stories out. And so that’s one way that we’ve done that another way, you know where i was trying to regional it sounds like you had yeah, look like you want to say something e o i was actually going toe have him speak about how they’re doing thank you videos for their donorsearch i was the other piece of it that in addition to that, we’ve done some very, very simple. What were we no budget videos using a phone smartphone? Yeah. Ah, where we take a group of kids that summer camp we give him ah poster that says, you know, thank you, mr jones, for making our summer, you know, remarkable and, you know, it’s a one minute video that you then personally email to this major donor doing the video just for that person just for that person. Yeah. And that on social it took a minute to do that video and we were we would do twenty of those videos right to made me obviously, if you’ve got thousands of donors, you can’t do it wrong, but your major donors and it can make a huge difference. They share that with their friends, their family, and then they’re going to love that, and the production value doesn’t matter if it’s in this day and age it’s accepted, i have i have a lot of guests who say low production values find its sincerity right, hart, authentic genuineness, authentic that’s what that’s, what really grabs people not you know you don’t need to make a makeup lights. Yeah, they’re used to cat videos. I mean, we’re fine this’s that moves us, it doesn’t have to be high production value, too, to be enormously moving and a great, great choice, okay, anything else around the thank you’s? The gratitude i would just add one thing coming from a visual communications background is to make whatever you’re producing to make it his visual or as compelling as you can. So there’s a lot of especially in austin, we have over six thousand non-profits there’s, a lot of noise in our space sustaining out can be tricky e-giving people, things they can engage with or that looks like something they’d want to share goes a long way just that visual communication is really important. I think sometimes it doesn’t get the web is visual. Yeah, people stand, they don’t read you kidding this thing’s going to click video? Yeah, i think the other thing too back-up actually one of the things that’s most crucial and dahna retention is actually making that first give really simple and really easy. So making the give process online like if they’re going to come through your donation page making sure that donation page the user experience on that page is optimized for your user where they don’t have to think too hard. They have to do too much work, making it super simple no again making it visually interesting. Maybe you add delight factor. There’s organization called saturday place has a great little donation feature. You hit their donation page and is very visual. You have a sliding scale of dollar amounts so you can play with it and see how the impact changes. Oh, so you slide the scale and what happens is little pictures. Yeah, there’s little icons. The change. And so it might be like apples, so you’re you’re providing lunches for saturday place or along the other side. They have they have different categories so you can provide basics, which is the lower dollar amounts or at the very high end, you can provide futures so that i mean, wow, right, that’s pretty cool. So and so, as your slideshare seeing different icons? Yeah, you’re seeing them change based on what you’re giving her. What the impact is wonderful, it’s really good, you know, the other piece of that is at the entry point designing your systems so that you can collect information that will help you. You segment to your donor’s mohr, effectively, whether you are using an offline old fashioned pledge card that maybe has a section where people can indicate what areas of focus our of of key concern to them or in your online donation page, maybe pull down menu where they have the option of selecting, you know, identifying that, you know, out of school time or or educational enrichment is of your concern to them then subsequently, when you were we’re going through your stewardship plan, you can maybe segment that group and share some some impact stories with them that are particularly that air going toe particularly speak to that to that audience so segmentation personalization, but designed that into the process from the very beginning. Okay, surveys could be valuable there, too, if you have maybe you haven’t built into the to the process where you have some donors for whom maybe they didn’t answer the question or you weren’t doing it then. But, you know, simple, like five six question surveys i’ve heard this a couple of times from a few different guests easy, you know? But you have to keep up. You have to keep your promise if they say this is the programs i’m interested in or i only want to hear from you at holiday time, you know, don’t get them in february when they talked about, you know, december, their preferred month. I think people can also use their thank you pages after a donation as a way to get some of that demographic information. So for example, they’ve just given to you, they just engaged with you. Maybe you don’t want to do it on the front end in the donation page section because you’re worried about having more fields or whatever the case may be. So putting those making that thank you, paige, work for you. You could try testing. You know, some of the segmentation questions after the fact after the way they don’t have to open a separate email survey. You know, maybe just put it right there. Could test how many d’oh. Okay? Because the reality is, the more questions you ask up front, the more boxes you require them to check the mohr attrition. You’re going ritual saying make a donation process simple. Yes. And after now, i’ve given my gift now that was thoughtful enough to ask you, how many times a year to our do they want? Do i want to hear from them? What times of yes, the moment they feel best. Right? Right? Yeah. They’re feeling great. And they’re giving moment. Yeah. That’s. What? It could be a valuable test. Excellent. Let’s. Move. Teo yeah. I had a plan for an implement. Sustainer sustainers campaigns. We talkabout reactivation kapin about your sustainers program. What do you we know how valuable those are, right. Month after month. Just giving five dollars, twenty dollars? You know, whatever. I think the keating house, any plan is to have a plan. I mean, truly that’s where a lot of it breaks down. You know, you might have a goal to make. Increase your sustainers but it all comes down to the processes that are underlying, you know, foundation for making those things happen. So making sure you have ah, you know, a marketing template that you can work off of that you’re building a plan every time you’re getting stakeholder input into that plan, you could probably speak more to the actual implementation. Well, like, you know, in one instance, y m c a. We have facility members. We have what is essentially a sustaining member ship, that we will mark it several times. You really emphasize that toe where somebody would be paying, say, an additional ten dollars a month on top of there, traditional y m c a membership dues, right? And so in in, in order to recognize them, they get a special membership card that they swipe every time they come in, they get a special shirt there’s several other ways that we recognize them had become sort of ah, conversation piece for them and in a continual reminder of their support for the why i will run several very finite, you know, tightly plans many campaigns throughout the year like one around water safety coming up on this time of year one is we approach summer camp one is we approach after school care one at the very end of the year and will utilize the segmentation there so so that we’re only hitting those audiences that indicated we cared about water safety we cared about, you know, you know, the summer in richmond, right? And so we’re not creating donorsearch a t hg where, you know, a single donor feels like us you’ve you’ve asked me twelve times this year to give you money, you know? Wait, ideally, maybe we’ve asked them twice on specifically for the program save right expressed interest in yeah, again segmentation, yeah, for the sustainers thing i think one thing that’s interesting if you look at the younger audiences, you know, they grew up paying for things monthly, and they’re used to streaming video and paying eight dollars a month for netflix, so i think thinking about maybe how you khun specifically target that age demographic for sustainers might be an interesting test, you know, like and in it there they’re used to self where is a service? You know, it’s sort of the same model, but in non-profit world? Yeah, just excellent. Yeah. You’re right there in the habit of yeah, of being just routinely build. Okay, we just have a couple minutes left. Something about anything more around. Oh, you have some ideas about digital automation deciding which tools are best for you. So, yeah, i think the thing about data and if you’re gonna have a plan, you’re gonna be able to track and measure that plan, right? So sean always says garbage in garbage out if you don’t have a good database that’s pulling in accurate and good data, then you’re not going to get very far. Eso we you know, we talked in the session about before you look at features for databases, really looking at what your needs are, what your goals are, and you need to make sure that if you’re in development, that you’re talking to the communications department as well, you’re dahna programs anybody that’s going to touch that data needs to have some upfront say about, well, how they’ll use it why they want it. What it’s going to do for them? S o before you look at features really looking at needs and goals, what are the paint points? What the problem is you’re trying to solve with this new data base, you know? And then the other key point there is, once you have the database in place and you’re able to extract data creating reports that are meaningful that you can use in actionable way. So in other words, we create report cards, so to speak, for each of our facilities for the campaigns they run as well as for our association, where we’re tracking dahna retention, we’re tracking, you know, major major gifts, number of major gifts, number of gifts under a thousand dollars. We have all these different metrics that then we can we can analyze and see what kind of patterns emerge and then use that information. That’s really it’s not anecdotal, it’s, not a gut your level hunch, it’s riel. And then we use that to formulate strategies that will improve our performance in the next campaign. So then we owe our major donor, you know, level percentage, major give percentage. Was down. We want to formulate some strategies that are going to address that little things like that will help us create riel pathways for improvement in the future. We got some templates were goingto have up on our where slides live ones, a marketing campaign temple and then someone in the session as sean to share templates for the report card. How can we share these there at creative suitcase dot com slash sixteen and tc? Okay, they’re also in our collaborative notes, okay, people here here for people who are here subscribed to ntc conversations, but otherwise creative suitcase dot com slash sixteen and t c you okay and what’s their marketing template. Yeah, one is, ah, word template is a marketing campaign template, so it’s, like, what are we trying to achieve, who our audiences is, what our risk. So it basically ask all the questions that are hard to get to on your own sometimes seem just fill those in. It talks about tactics, you start running with that, and then shawn, is it excel docks? E think it’s actually a word i have to look and see, but well, it’ll be a template for for establishing a report card for your campaign performance that’ll be in the same place. Okay, that’s a great resource. We’re gonna leave it there. All right? Sounds. Thank you. Alright. Rachel clemens. Sean dole’s. Rachel again is the president of creative suitcase non-profit communications and sean dole’s, vice president of mission advancement at the y m c a in boston. They’re both from austin. Sounds that’s rachel too. Thank you very much. Thanks for having us over sharing. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of sixteen ntc the non-profit technology conference. Thank you for being with us. Social media for year end with amy. Sample ward is coming up first. Pursuant, they’ve got another free webinar for you. Upgrade your best donors today, it’s with pursuant consultants chris taft and christian priest and they will help you identify your donors who have capacity and interest in doing more for you. Maximize your resource is to engage the right prospects and fine tune your prospect visits it’s on tuesday, november fifteenth at twelve central and to register you go to pursuant, dot com under resource is click webinars and that when again is upgrade your best donors. Today we’ll be spelling spelling bees for non-profit fund-raising spelling bees with live music and dancing and stand up comedy and spelling monisha lt’s raising money for ugh, these air ideal for that because fund-raising is but this is all about is great fun, but it’s fund-raising as well. Check out their video we b e spelling dot com now it’s tony’s, take two, i’ve got more non-profit technology conference video interviews for you these are all on fund-raising donorsearch vase growing your sustainers revenue byway non-profit times just had a recent story from blackbaud sbi pecan unconference something like triple digit revenue hikes from sustainers, and they’re quoting chuck longfield who’s, the chief scientist at blackbaud, also a non-profit radio guest, all the smart people around non-profit radio s o sustainers revenue very, very timely and smart email marketing and dahna retention, which is today’s interview, but you could watch the video. They’re all from the twenty sixteen conference hosted by the non-profit technology network. Of course, my video on the beach introduces thes four videos and has links below it’s at tony martignetti dot com. And that is tony’s take two. The phone just rang and i know it was amy sample ward, maybe step award. How you doing? I’m doing well. How are you? I’m wonderfully thank you. Let me give you a proper introduction. Our social media contributor and ceo of inten, the non-profit technology network. Her most recent co authored book is social change any time everywhere about online multi-channel engagement she’s that amy sample ward, dot or ge and at amy r s board are for renee. Of course. Welcome back. Of course. Thank you. I’m glad to be back. Yes, that we did chat, you know, briefly on the three hundredth show, but now you’re officially back from maternity leave. Congratulations again. It’s. Wonderful. Thank you. Yeah. And and on that show, which was july twenty ninth, little lauren lewis was three months. That was his three month birthday s. So now, he’s. Just a little over six months, right? Yeah, exactly. Outstanding. Eso excited. So exciting for you and max. Wonderful. Yeah, it is exciting. And it is crazy that he’s six goes fast. I heared from all my friends who have children. I don’t know, personally, but my niece and nephew it does go fast. Yes. You have a little ah, little baby anecdote, little baby, orin louis anecdote. You want to tell her anything? Ah, that his peculiarities or anything? You sure? You know, i think every baby is different and he’s got he is certainly a product up his parents. When we meet up with other people that have babies, he is the only one who is constantly trying to talk, try to like, touch and engage all of the other big its crew. They’re all just lying there looking at him. Multi-channel he’s trying to talk to boys multi-channel engagement strategy has seen a lot of ourselves in him already. Cool. All right. That’s. Great. Multi-channel engagement. Listen. Seventeen ntc registration seventeen to twenty seventeen. Non-profit technology conference registration just opened. I note way want encourage people to go to that it’s an outstanding conference registration just opened three years ago on the first, and we’re already at record response. So we know this is going to be a really big ear. Excellent. All right. Just, uh, just he’s. Just this, like, weak or not? Even what? Today’s the fourth, right? So just in three days, you’re already ahead from this time last year, three days in last year o ahead from any year, yeah, standing, congratulations. Okay, so people goto and ten dot or ge and then i don’t even know do you have to click on the events tab? But now it just opens it and take you right there on the stage and ten dot org’s okay, go to the conference for pizza, but this one is in washington d c right? Yeah. It’s in washington, d c march twenty third through the twenty fifth and you know, dc is always our largest year whenever we go to d c because so many organizations air there or have partners there and feel like, you know, they’re they’re used to travelling there, so we know we always plan for the years that were in dc to be the biggest we’ve had, but it’s always like the biggest we’ve had until that year, so we know this year will be kind of the record that we’ve ever had until sometime in the future we go back, but yeah, it’ll be it’ll be fun. We’re planning all kinds of fun things. For this next-gen outstanding, always lots of hundreds of smart people speaking and it’s a very smart conference. So go and learn how to use technology wisely wiser in your social change work. That’s cool, i said, we want to talk about some some strategies that you have for year end social media um, and before we before we jump into, like, different strategies, i would like to start with how to evaluate whether we’re doing the right thing or not through our social engagement strategies. And you like google analytics for that? Yes, i mean, i think the biggest thing both kind of tio, this piece that you’ve brought up and more broadly to the idea of social media around you’re in campaigns it’s so frustrating and dishearten name to me when i see organizations or talked to organizations who are, whether it’s a you’re in campaign or any other time of the year and social media is like a compartment of itself it’s over, you know, on one side, and then you have, like, all these other people and and channels that you’re working on the campaign, and i feel like that’s, just setting yourself up to seo. Social media is invaluable toe, right? Because it’s not even a part of your plan and it wasn’t part of how you thought of the strategy, and it was only later that you were like, oh, gosh, we have this campaign going on let’s tweet a bunch about it, but that’s not that’s, not integrating right disintegrating social media into your campaign, you know, that still an after thought, and i think, um, just recognizing that you wouldn’t say, okay, we’re going to launch this fund-raising appeal for the end of the year, and we’re not going to tell anyone who’s going to work on the e mails related to it until, like, the day of, well, you would never do that. So why’re you doing that with all the social channels, you know, here don’t make social a step child? Thanks. Well, just don’t make it a separate no don’t help integrate. Integrate. Yeah, yeah, right. So so in our planning way want to build in analytics? Yeah. Okay. What? What? What advice do you have around specific? You are l’s? Or how would you like us to do this? Yeah. There is a lot with with google analytics. That you can do i mean, first, i always think you should go into planning campaigns with some sort of information already. So looking at your google analytics before you start planning your campaign to say, okay, gosh, what parts of the site are people using? I’m sure many organizations have a donate page that’s up year round, you know, our people even going to it to the rest of the year if they’re not then putting your year and campaign information on that donate paige is probably not going to get a lot of eyes right because no one’s going that way. So do some of your homework before you start planning using google analytics looking how people are using your site, but then also, you know, google analytics separates out traffic, evaluate what kind of social traffic you have for us, say direct links, which a direct link is often you know, that you sent him emails and someone had a direct link into your sight. We have to search or anything, so figure out what that incoming traffic flow is like now, because otherwise you’re going to spend planning your campaign, you’re going to want you and be like, oh gosh, we have all these people visiting our website. Well, maybe you already had that be visiting your website. You know you’re not gonna have anything to really inform your evaluations think doing some homework first on how people are using this i and also how people are getting to the site if they’re coming from social channels, they’re coming from email so that when you plan, you plan with those pieces in mind and then once you’re running the campaign it’s really not difficult, and there are plenty of resource is if if you want some step by step guides on using google analytics to set up what are called campaign girls so that you can instead of just always writing, for example, and tend that order, you can have a longer you are all that is still just sending people same page, but that girl has some important code, innit for google analytics, so it knows this is a link that you’re only using on social media for this specific pain, you know, here’s a different version of that code in that girl that you’re going to put in your email and that way you can say okay, we’re all obviously sending people as much as we can to the donate page or two, you know, to the ntc page. Um, but we’re able to look in guru bilich cincy, okay, a lot of the people that are coming are coming from social media, and those are the ones who are, you know, staying and going to the register page, etcetera, and then these folks coming from email, you know, they’re not coming as much or or whatever the situation is, but using the campaign you or else we’ll help give you so much more information about who’s responding, who’s coming to that page and how they’re taking action, okay? And it xero so it sorry, yeah, you’re you’re monitoring where they’re coming from and where they’re going to all in that bowling, that girl because of where you because we were in place because where you place it? Yeah. Okay. Okay. Brilliant. Okay. And there’s, of course. There’s tons to be said about google analytics. I think i think i’ve got an interview from one of the ntc on google analytics. I know we have one on google adwords, but separate. I know there’s. We could i know we could do ours on google analytics. Oh, totally. And like i said, there are resources to help give you some step by step if you’re new to using it. But it’s google analytics is free. You should be using that, and it does not take on incredible amount of technical knowledge to get it set up. You just have one little line of code you need to add to your website, and then your account is activated and you and you could do all this tracking. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Any you mentioned resource is do you know any off the top of your head that you can recommend? Yeah. I’m happy tio tweet a few and sent him to you to post up with the the archive. But with the takeaways, i could put him on the facebook page. Okay, you know, if you’re okay that you could do that? Sure. Um, okay, is there any other point you want to make about the analytics before we get into actually doing the campaign work? Well, i guess the last point that i’ll make kind of to wrap it back up to where we started is that if you don’t do that homework at the beginning to create some sort of benchmarks when you launch the campaign and you’re trying to kind of report out to staff or even your board about how well it’s going it’s going to feel really arbitrary to say, one hundred people from social media donated, right? Well, great. What is that compared to before the camera? That, yeah, so do that homework so that you could be informed in your planning, but also so that you can kind of report against that benchmark, you know? So so you’re reporting makes sense and has some context. Okay, very good. If we’re going to do this as part of a campaign, then we need to have consistency across all our all our channels, right? Yeah. I mean, one thing i always think about just in our own planning it and ten is that regardless of the age, demographic and regardless of the channel, that the donation comes in. So even if somebody is going to write you a physical check, the majority of people still go to your website before they make that donation. So even if they are following you on social media and that’s where they saw the ask and they’re going to do it online donation people are still kind of following up on your ask and and what it is that you’re potentially working on before they donate. And so the the huge opportunity there is to recognize that you’re not necessarily always going to know where they saw that ask and what is it? What other piece of your work they’re evaluating? So creating some consistent experience around that is huge, and it doesn’t take a ton of work. Most organizations are already going to create some sort of collateral or brandy material for their campaign, so making sure that you have those same images in the right dimensions, right cause, of course, every platform wants to have its own particular dimensions, but so that your facebook banner, you know, has an image that reflects your campaign. Maybe you are, you know, to use a pretty standard example for your ad campaign there’s, a family that you serve and you’re telling their story in your appeal letter, right? So making sure that maybe a quote from that story that’s really compelling as a standalone quote is in your facebook, the inner and your twitter banner has a reference of the same campaign. So wherever folks are kind of touching into the campaign and then moving around to evaluate if they do want to donate their there, seen the same, uh, appeal. Not that it’s, like exactly the same image over and over, and they’re just getting sick of it. But you’re within that same world of the campaign instead of heading over to your twitter page and having it be about your last event, hate and it is completely unrelated and doesn’t speak to the same thing. Okay, very good. Tomorrow, let’s, go out for our break, and when we come back, i’ve got live listener love. Of course, the live love has to go out and me, and i’ll keep talking, including integrating offline, you’re offline support for your social support for your year end campaign. Stay with us. Like what you’re hearing a non-profit radio tony’s got more on youtube, you’ll find clips from stand up comedy tv spots and exclusive interviews catch guests like seth gordon. Craig newmark, the founder of craigslist marquis of eco enterprises, charles best from donors choose dot org’s aria finger, do something that worked neo-sage levine from new york universities heimans center on philantech tony tweets to he finds the best content from the most knowledgeable, interesting people in and around non-profits to share on his stream. If you have valuable info, he wants to re tweet you during the show. You can join the conversation on twitter using hashtag non-profit radio twitter is an easy way to reach tony he’s at tony martignetti narasimhan t i g e n e t t i remember there’s a g before the end he hosts a podcast for the chronicle of philanthropy fund-raising fundamentals is a short monthly show devoted to getting over your fund-raising hartals just like non-profit radio, toni talks to leading thinkers, experts and cool people with great ideas. As one fan said, tony picks their brains and i don’t have to leave my office fund-raising fundamentals was recently dubbed the most helpful non-profit podcast you have ever heard. You can also join the conversation on facebook, where you can ask questions before or after the show. The guests were there, too. Get insider show alerts by email, tony tells you who’s on each week and always includes link so that you can contact guests directly. To sign up, visit the facebook page for tony martignetti dot com. Lively conversation, tap trends, sound advice, that’s, tony martignetti non-profit radio. I’m melanie schnoll begun managing director morgan stanley philantech management. Melanie schnoll begun is next week’s guest for the hour all right, the live listener love it’s gotta go out it’s all over the world. It’s amazing. May where we’re starting, we’re going to start a broad protest it i don’t know if i’m saying it right. Testy romania love it kayman jin germany guten tag the live listener love goes out also to norway. We can see the city but i really don’t want to mispronounce it g et u p h e norway live listen, her love to you philippines we got craze on city. Istanbul, turkey. Milano, italy, seoul, south korea, on io haserot, of course, comes a ham nida also ottawa nation’s capital canada. Checking in ottawa live listener love to you, iran. I’m sorry. We cannot see your city. But we know that you are with us. Coming into the u s st louis, missouri, rosedale, new york, binghamton, new york, new york, new york. Unbelievable. New york. Thank you for that new york love it’s going out to you. Thank you for bringing it in. It’s going out, including new york, new york. Love that. Thank you. College station, texas with us live love. Eugene, oregon not oregon. I heard i was on a bus yesterday, and somebody said she was taking jetblue to oregon and i wanted tap on the shoulder corrector no it’s, oregon, eugene, oregon live listen, love going to you okay? And, of course, on the heels of the live listen, love comes the podcast pleasantries because how could we not say thank you to its really its more than ten thousand now? The numbers are going up it’s more like twelve thirteen thousand i make it official, but i want to see if it sticks before i start boasting, but we certainly have had shows where they’ve been twelve close to thirteen thousand listeners. Yes, is that consistent? Not quite, but were spiking. So podcast pleasantries to the many tens of thousands one point three, ten thousands listening. Thank you so much. Whatever activity you’re doing whenever you listen in your time shift. Thanks for being with us and the affiliate affections to our many am and fm station listeners throughout the country, including in oregon, i mentioned yugi eugene, oregon live. Listen, love, we’re on a station in salem, oregon, so if you were listening on one of the am and fm affiliates affections to you. Thank you so much, kayman sample ward. Um, here we are and, uh, let’s move along to ah what’s your next you threw out another strategy. Go ahead. What else? You want to talk about social media wise for our year end campaign? Sure. Well, i think one thing that we’ve seen organizations kind of struggle with or unnecessarily struggle with that kind of stumble with is how to balance their own kind of full year and campaign with these e-giving days that are now more prominent so e-giving tuesday often is happening kind of in the middle of people ar e having their own urine campaign, and then sometimes towards the end of the year, sometimes at other times of the year, you know, different states or regions have their own kind of local giving day. And so how do you balance all the effort that goes into, you know, even just a single giving day and having visibility and donors on that with what we’re already running for six weeks? Kind of an end of your campaign, and i think that that is tricky. I think it it requires planning. For that day, when you’re doing your full end of your campaign, if you’re going tohave, you know, six weeks is your end of your campaign knowing okay in week three e-giving tuesday is happening, so is there may be a version of our campaign ass that we want to reserve, as are kind of giving tuesday version of the ask so that it feels like, you know, an opportunity to make an additional asked during the campaign that otherwise maybe would have felt like too many asked, right? Because you’re kind of taking advantage of that day versus feeling like, you know, okay, we’re going to create a whole separate giving tuesday campaign. I think organization should try to be really realistic about their capacity, because e-giving days in and of themselves take a lot of effort, and your primary effort is probably going to be your own and of your campaign, but not necessarily completely avoid it. If it is something that’s going to give you a little bit more attraction, or like i said before, an opportunity to maybe make a different version of the ass that gives you one more touchpoint during the campaign, so planning is important and also being realistic about what your team can do, you know, you maybe, you know, maybe you need to pass on giving tuesday or something else in your in your year and strategy, you know, be realistic. I mean, you know, it’s the same thing we’ve talked about so many times, like shiny object syndrome, you know, in in the social channels, no, you can’t do everything in your year end campaign that you might like, so plan and be realistic and, you know, obviously get the get those the input of the people who are going to be doing the work one i think the other part about being realistic there is that for, you know, the vast majority of organizations that bulk of donations for your end of your campaign aren’t coming the first week of december, they’re coming the last week of december. So the timing of giving tuesday as the tuesday right after thanksgiving may not be the most high traffic time or your donor’s anyway. So thinking about that, too, do not have unrealistic expectation that, you know, that’s going to become your your bigot e-giving day now, and if it isn’t you know what? What do you want on giving days that made on giving tuesday? Is that a day like you said, you know, to skip because for your community it’s not worth it? Is it for your community an opportunity to maybe make a really small, ask and get people that otherwise wouldn’t give to give just ten dollars, and then you can ask them again before the end of the year? You know, i think there’s different ways to kind of use giving tuesday as a test for your community, but for most organizations who are running a full end of your campaign that’s just going to be one little blip in the longer campaign, it could also be for something smaller and non non non financial, maybe it’s, maybe it’s a signing of a petition or maybe it’s volunteering, maybe maybe use giving tuesday is a volunteer recruitment day. Totally, i think that’s a great idea because it led people deal like they’re still participating in that day and they’re still contributing to the organization, but maybe those are the folks who wouldn’t give for soon, and they’re not going to otherwise respond to ask, yeah, and so leading up to giving tuesday and and that day, you’re taking a little break from from from the money asks, and then you get back to it. Okay, um, okay, anything else you got in that? In that respect? Um, i mean, no, we could we could talk. I mean, i want to be conscious of time and talk a little bit about offline, too, because i think a few great pieces from the interview earlier in the show today, okay, let’s do that. Okay? Like, let’s, go there, the piece about cards, you know, and thinking about those riel physical touches that make make it so much more meaningful. Um, i’m such a i’m such a big such a big proponent of the hand written note on dh and the small card that you can do, you know, you know, you don’t starita blanket and a half by eleven inch page on your on your screen and feel like i have to fill it with words for the next forty forty minutes. Yeah, it’s one or two sentences on a on a little note size card and then a matching envelope i mean, hand written envelope it’s it’s enormously touching me. Sean dole’s, sean and shauna. Rachel both said it, but yeah, i’ve been a fan of that for a long time. It’s quick, it’s, genuine and sincere and it’s uh, extraordinary. It just doesn’t happen anymore, so you’re standing on when that we’ve tried is specifically when it comes to kind of year end things, of course we love at and then we love sending cards and stickers and things all year round, but when it comes to the end of your things picking a threshold like fifty dollars or five hundred dollars, whatever is your makes sense as a line for your organization and saying, ok, anybody at that number above is going to get a handwritten card and then because that takes slightly more capacity, but then we’ll also pick a day, usually before people go off line for the holidays so, like, you know, maybe the seventeenth or the eighteenth of december and anyone who was donated by then we divide up among staff so that every staff person only has, you know, eight or twelve people, and everybody just called to say thank you for donating doesn’t ask for another gift, doesn’t the purpose of the call is just to say thank you and, you know, as you can imagine, eight times out of ten, you’re getting a voicemail anyway, because people are at work or whatever, but we get such incredible response. From people saying, oh, my gosh, you actually called to thank me for it just donating because otherwise donating is pretty human list, right? You just goto you got an email, you went to a website, you, you know, putting your credit card like you didn’t interact with anybody. So being able to have a card or a phone call to say thankyou makes it feel like we saw that you gave that gift right? And that i think, is a really powerful thing is that people have people recognize that someone’s paying attention, right? They know that i made this gift and i am seen by this organization. I think that for a year on campaign, when there’s so many messages out there and, you know, so many different competing asks it can make people really remember you that’s where we have to leave it outstanding. I agree the offline on, and it is fun. It could be a lot of fun. She’s amy sample ward, ceo of inten at amy sample ward, dot or ge, and at amy rs ward. You still got it. You haven’t lost it since the spring loved having you love having you back. She’s gone already you believe that you hung up on us? I think you’re cutting all the way cutting out so i don’t know if i could say anything ever having. Very welcome and i was saying you didn’t you haven’t lost it since the spring next week. Next week, as i said, melanie schnoll begun how to appeal to high net worth people also next week please vote whoever for it’s important. Get out, please vote. If you missed any part of today’s show, i beseech you, find it on tony martignetti dot com the beseech got lost the past couple weeks. I don’t know what happened to beseech but it’s back if you’re not responsive by pursuant online tools for small and midsize non-profits data driven and technology enabled, and by we be spelling supercool spelling bee fundraisers we b e spelling dot com. Our creative producer is claire meyerhoff. Sam liebowitz is the line producer. Gavin dollars are am and fm outreach director shows social media is by susan chavez and this cool music is by scott stein. Thank you for that scottie with me next week for non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. Go out and be great. What’s not to love about non-profit radio tony gets the best guests check this out from seth godin this’s the first revolution since tv nineteen fifty and henry ford nineteen twenty it’s the revolution of our lifetime here’s a smart, simple idea from craigslist founder craig newmark yeah insights, orn presentation or anything? People don’t really need the fancy stuff they need something which is simple and fast. When’s the best time to post on facebook facebook’s andrew noise nose at traffic is at an all time hyre on nine a m or eight pm so that’s, when you should be posting your most meaningful post here’s aria finger ceo of do something dot or ge young people are not going to be involved in social change if it’s boring and they don’t see the impact of what they’re doing. So you got to make it fun and applicable to these young people look so otherwise a fifteen and sixteen year old they have better things to do if they have xbox, they have tv, they have their cell phones. Me dar is the founder of idealist took two or three years for foundation staff to sort of dane toe. Add an email address card. It was like it was phone. This email thing is fired-up that’s why should i give it away? Charles best founded donors choose dot or ge somehow they’ve gotten in touch kind of off line as it were on dno, two exchanges of brownies and visits and physical gift mark echo is the founder and ceo of eco enterprises. You may be wearing his hoodies and shirts. Tony talked to him. Yeah, you know, i just i’m a big believer that’s not what you make in life. It sze, you know, tell you make people feel this is public radio host majora carter. Innovation is in the power of understanding that you don’t just do it. You put money on a situation expected to hell. You put money in a situation and invested and expected to grow and savvy advice for success from eric sacristan. What separates those who achieve from those who do not is in direct proportion to one’s ability to ask others for help. The smartest experts and leading thinkers air on tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five.

Nonprofit Radio for October 28, 2016: Get The Most From Your Board

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Eugene Fram: Get The Most From Your Board

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Hello and welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I’m your aptly named host. Oh, i’m glad you’re with me. I’d be stricken with calla boma lo bill, i if i heard that you missed today’s show, get the most from your board. Professor eugene fram returns to discuss his latest book going for impact the non-profit director’s essential guide book we’ve got the critical things your board needs to know and pitfalls to avoid. What’s your boards most important job how do you use your board members? Time, wisely and a lot more on tony’s, take two non-profit radio on youtube, responsive by pursuant full service fund-raising data driven and technology enabled, you’ll raise more money pursuant dot com, and by we be spelling super cool spelling bee fundraisers. We be spelling dot com my pleasure to welcome back dr eugene fram he’s, professor emeritus at saunders college of business at the rochester institute of technology. He’s served on twelve non-profit boards and consulted with dozens of others. Jeez, first gene’s first book policy versus paper clips brought him to non-profit radio in twenty thirteen he blog’s at non-profit management, d r fram dot com and there’s hyphens in between those so non hyphen profit hyphen management hyphen d r hyphen fram, dot com and he’s at eugene fram that’s what she’s your twitter jean welcome back. Well, nice to talk to you again. Pleasure to have you back with your with your new book going for impact. What what did you feel? It was necessary with this book versus the policy versus ah paperclips book. Well, i’ve had a lot of experience between then and now, and i wanted to talk about that experience, especially in the movement towards impact, as you well aware, that funders air looking for impact. Ah, or governmental organizations, they’re looking for impact and a lot of non-profits really don’t i understand that, especially non-profit board members, they think if you meet objectives and on develop outcomes, that impact but it’s really not, as you well know, right impact reporting. I’ve heard rumors to that effect. That’s. Okay, that it’s critical, uh, the the, uh, the classic case on that is the newark schools that you’re probably familiar with. So it’s not too far from you in new york city. Uh, is that, uh ah. Sucker burghdoff gave one hundred million dollars. Forty and five years later they had reached their their objectives. But there was no impact on students. Okay, so that’s, the classic lesson that there is a difference between out comes and impacts. Yes. Okay, you’re echoing what a ah, another two time guest has been on well saying it sounds like he’s two timing the show not thirty two times a show, but another guest has been on twice. Dr robert penna makes the distinction between outcomes and impact. Yeah, and more people are. But if you look at the total of non-profits that i meet, some of them will argue that this is only a fad. I had that argue with a a fellow colleague, boardmember uh, just about a year, six months ago on that she was claiming this is just another fad. Let’s forget about it. But actually, this has been, um, around for eight or nine years. At that time, the really thoughtful people in in the non-profit area were saying to me, forget about outcomes. It’s impacts that air that are very important. And where it’s coming really into the four right now i remember in nineteen ninety four or nineteen ninety five. I had a friend who who said that the internet was just a fad hey wouldn’t get an email address felt that that was unnecessary wouldn’t get a website for his company. I don’t know. I don’t know if he’s coming to the i know if he’s coming to the modern age, we don’t talk anymore. I know. Yes, i cut him off. They’re not kill those people around. And unfortunately there on non-profit board. Yeah, ok. Well, yes, i think it’s if it’s any kind of a fad. It’s a critical fad, but i don’t believe that it is. Yes, lots of funders, including individual donors, won’t want to see impact, impact investing. We’re talking about donors as investors. Well, they want to see the impact of their investment. Okay, all right, i i hope listeners, i mean, i need to pay attention to that indeed. Borden metoo okay, so you didn’t feel well. That was really not the emphasis of policy versus paper clips. That was mohr making sure. I mean, i’m summarizing an entire book and we listened to go back and check is you were on to talk about it in twenty. I believe it was november twenty thirteen, but i know it was twenty thirteen. You could research, uh, jeanne franz name at tony martignetti dot com and you’ll find it. So i’m summarizing. So forgive me for trying encapsulate a whole book into a sentence. But it was basically you don’t want your board micromanaging and dealing with details that are not appropriate for them. But rather they should be dealing. It hyre more strategic levels. Yes. That’s. Exactly it. Thank you. You remember? Well, cool for dr. Okay. Professor? Yes. Professor from dahna in rochester institute. Technology. That’s. Pretty good. And it’s. Pretty good that i went to that schlocky carnegie mellon university. So that’s. Another it’s in the same category. I don’t know. I think in a and rochester maybe, maybe, maybe. Ah, well, i guess. Why would you say that? Tonight’s debate that one, okay? Know what would be a seat so that we could be going the other way? Okay. All right. So now what i like about your ah, you’re going for impact. You have you have takeaways at the end of every chapter. I appreciate a little more than a conclusion. It’s a. You know, i like to take aways like not tonight, not that i only read two takeaways. I don’t not that people should buy the book and only metoo takeaways. You’re going to miss you a ton, but i like, you know, it’s a nice touch. I appreciate that, and also short chapters, you know, you’re in, you’re out like two, three pages. I mean summer longer chapters, certainly, but the most are, like two, three pages or so four pages, you know, in a topic and onto the next, because this is for board members, they’re volunteers. They don’t have time for treatises, that’s, right, exactly. All right, it’s. Only one hundred four pages total reading, but it also has a, uh, on index at the back with one hundred fifty different items on it. And if you really need a specific topic, all you need to do is to go to the index and you’ll find out where it’s mentioned throughout the book. Okay, okay. Um, a little more than one o four, though you cut yourself off. You got these? Yeah. You kept making your cut yourself short, it’s actually, like one hundred eleven and ah, one quarter i would say thank you. I’m glad. Because last seven. Glad your fact checking. Yeah, we’re all about and what some people did last night on the phone. All right? Yes. Last night was the last debate we’re pre recording. Yeah, i know. You know, those last seven and a quarter page is air important don’t don’t all right, um okay. So we’re going to talk about some of the things that were, you know, we only can hit highlights because i want you to listen to shit by the book for going to say, uh, we’re going to talk about you got six essentials that board members need to know we’re going to talk about that, of course, uh, we got some pitfalls to avoid way got the most important job that you’re bored has on, then using your board members time wisely and and utilizing an advisory board. So those that’s what we’re going to cover, i’ll tell you what, let’s, go out a little early for our break. Now, i’ve just tease the whole show, and when we come back, you and i have the whole hour together remaining talk about that and i know you’ve got some stories to tell. So jeanne, i know you’ll stay with us every else doing that i’ll be here, i know everyone else do the same. You’re tuned to non-profit radio tony martignetti also hosts a podcast for the chronicle of philanthropy fund-raising fundamentals is a quick ten minute burst of fund-raising insights published once a month. Tony’s guests are expert in crowdfunding, mobile giving event fund-raising direct mail and donor cultivation. Really all the fund-raising issues that make you wonder am i doing this right? Is there a better way there is? Find the fund-raising fundamentals archive it. Tony martignetti dot com that’s marketmesuite n e t t i remember there’s, a g before the end, thousands of listeners have subscribed on itunes. You can also learn maura, the chronicle website philanthropy dot com fund-raising fundamentals the better way. Welcome back to big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. Okay, dr fram. Let’s. Uh, hi. Yes. Okay. Let’s, get, uh, let’s. Get into this. We got we got six essentials. And, er, the first one is be aware of rose colored glasses what’s your what’s, your concern there? Well, there are a number of different concerns there. One i find that quite often, uh, that, uh, non-profit boards will tolerate a mind this size store type of ceo, uh, because they’re comfortable with the media. Ocracy in other words, they want to be good, but not great. And you hear that expressed every once in a while that says, well, when something goes wrong, well, you really can’t expect that of a non-profits yeah, this is not the same as for-profit mediocrity mediocrity, andi. And if you take a look at it from the point of view of some board members and remember, i only speak as a boardmember i’ve never been a needy, never been in the management of a and non-profit giving you the board members point of view. So when you do that here, you’re really, uh, moving towards the bottom, all right instead. Of the top. And so you gotta expect excellence from your ceo and the management staff as much as they can do within the finances that they have or to develop creative ideas. Uh, that will take the organization to the to the future. Okay, now, but you’re also speaking as a as a professor of business former retired professor of business. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So you bring in that room that respect you see and like in policy versus paper clips, i only seat major differences between the non-profit on the prophet and that is the non-profit has, uh, mission, vision and values as as their objective. The for-profit obviously has to have is the profit motive s o that is the major differences i see and and everything else to me is very much the same. Okay, excellent. All right, so so you’re you’re your your experience as a a business professor. Converts, i mean, and and i’ve also had, uh, for-profit board experiences too. Okay? Yes. Not quite as many, though you aren’t twelve non-profit points in only four or five of them, for they range from ah, national corporation listed corporations. Tio start up. Okay. You credentials are unquestioned. Don’t worry. Okay, you’re you’re on non-profit radio your bona fide. Okay, good. I want to make sure my non-profit bonified are clear. Yeah. No, no, you’re, you’re good. Okay, um, let’s talk about the next one. You have, um, being wary of the silent boardroom, or when i call it, i that’s what you call it? I’m calling it that god. Yeah. I’m concerned about deference to directors. Yeah. That’s mine. I’m adding that what? What? What’s the problem here. Too much deafness, what’s what’s the problem? Well, this all started a couple years ago when i was doing some consulting work and a young boardmember said to me, hey, you said, you know, i wished we had mohr uh what he said, conflict of discussion, he didn’t need to say me, i mean, to say in the extreme but he said more discussion in in the board room of the issues because what he was seeing in that particular situation is that the, uh, the executive committee er would make a recommendation from people’s would ask, um, passive questions. And then they would pass the emotion on de so he didn’t see any, uh, any riel discussion going on there or real probing of the issues? S so you know, when he said that i developed this idea of the silent board board room and this is very typical, and i ask your listeners if you’re a non-profit director when’s the last time you saw a person say, i’m going to give a no vote to that ah proposition, because i don’t want to be liable either personally or professionally for what the majority has saved in here on dh make sure you put my no vote in the in the in the minutes, okay? I had to do it about a year or so ago, and i stopped the whole the whole process with that statement, but typically, if the president wanted a ceo wants it, or the board chair wants that people exceed to that very, very easily, yeah, alright, too much difference given right? Not not robust, the conversation not really duitz not real due diligence and, of course, your point about liability that directors are potentially liable for them, the deeds and misdeeds of the failing to upper failing to act and misdeeds of the of the organization there, there, fiduciaries they have a legal. They have legal duties. Uh, yeah. Now ah, this all comes, then becomes part of a culture. You know, the typical even business person will say, well, i really don’t want to go against the board chair or i don’t want to go. I don’t want to go against the ceo on this on duh on and it just becomes a part of, for instance, the university trusty came to me once. And he said, we were asked to comment on a particular program which happened to be in the business area. And you can, uh he knew that i had some expertise in that area. And he said, i when i listen to the, uh, to the people there, uh, they were all saying, yeah, let’s go with it, he says, but deep down in my heart, i felt that this was actually reducing the quality of the program. And he said, but early in the hand, i didn’t want to be negative, so i went along with it. So she’s kind of doing a confessional to may, right? But that’s, what you will often find in these situations why should i cause conflict? Why? Should i be the outstanding a negative person in the area. So forth in the situation i said in the committee meeting, i says, if you pursue this and my ass and i gave my reasons for it, i’m going teo a vote no on it. Okay? And then i never heard another thing about it after that, right? But you you have to make the vote that that you’re you believe is right that your conscience guides you two. You have my conscience there, right? Right? Right. Because i felt instead of putting the money and for what they were planning to do with it was a legitimate type of thing. I’ve felt that it had been a it should have gone into programs. Now you can overdo that, okay? And really cut out the over set, uh, down the overhead. But on the other hand, sometimes that overhead is needed, the payment is needed. I want to move to the next one. But before i do, i just want to point out you mentioned deference to the board chair. The ceo, um another. Another together. Pardon me, nto and each other. And i wanted to mention also something you point out the book is about difference, teo major donors who may be on your board that’s always right, that that could be a real problem. That’s a tricky one putting putting big donors on your board. You know, nobody wants to upset the apple cart risk-alternatives bing risk the payment by the pledge payments that have been promised, etcetera, um, you have to you have to tread carefully. Alright. Yeah, very, very carefully, andi. And you might have to compromise your values in some instances, but there’s only so far. You you should go because you still have the mission that needs to be achieved on this let’s. Move her in kapin a typical question teo typical type of donation is people will may offer you property, but the property has value, but they may pace restrictions on it, and you can’t necessarily sell it and you might be able to use it. But who’s going to pay for it in the long run out that property so far that’s a typical situation really real estate khun b could be a tricky issue, a lot of due diligence required around that, whether whether to even have that, whether to accept it in the in the first place on we’ve got i’ve got a video about that on the youtube channel, which i’m going to talk about tony steak too. I’ve got i’ve got a video on yeah, about the due diligence required for real estate gifts. Okay, jean, we need to move on because i want to i want to make sure we get everything in this hour. Next of the six essentials you described, what makes a non-profit board great? Go ahead to find to find great for us. Well, i’ve handed it something. One is the quality of the board dialogue and discussion on duh that’s. Uh, and it should be at the policy level or this or the strategic level at all time would say should be ninety percent at that level, and but you’ll find that boards get quite comfortable with discussing operations because they’re more interesting. Well, that’s the policies in policy that’s the policy versus paper across our street strategy, i have yet to find the person who goes on ah goes home and says to a significant other or her significant other oh my god, we had a just of tremendous evening. And she lt’s a he or she will say, what did you do? Oh, my god. We just discussed policy and strategy and fascinating. Yeah. Find that person, will you let me know? All right. What else? What else? Hallmarks of greek board. Tough questions. The ability. Teo, drill down. And teo, talk about things that might be had happened with the decision. Okay, andi, what air the unintended consequences of the decision. Ok, so these all need to be laid out and that’s where the tough questions there. Okay. And what else? Uh, well, you need a board diversity and experience. Unfortunately, many non-profit board members are made up of for friends, family and neighbors. Okay? And you rarely see intra prin nouriel uh, board members, people who haven’t an enterpreneurs, rials streak in them or willing to take some some modest risks. When it comes to risks, the typical board will back off because they don’t want to be risked in a situation in which they might be liable. So so those are the three top things, as i see out out of that area. Okay, hallmarks of a great board on. Okay, let’s. Move. Teo, our fourth are our fourth essential straight straight talk about the board members responsibilities. Go ahead. Okay. One is she obviously have used fiduciary responsibility. Uh, overviewing the board, but at the same time not micromanaging it on dh. Also understanding the difference that we talked about between outcomes and impacts is one thing. Shall i go on? You have another one? Yeah. Yeah. Fund-raising yes. Boards have a responsibility for fund-raising, but you have to have, uh but, uh, except if you might delegate it to a foundation to fundraise for you and that is that is a perfectly legitimate approach, but boards totally have a responsibility for fundrasing, but there. But as a group, they’re really not effective. Okay? It usually takes about three or four people who are comfortable with fund-raising on are willing to drive it. Okay? No. And, uh, you know, that’s kind of the facts of life of jean. Do you like to see these? These expectations about director responsibilities in a written document for new board members off course. And, for instance, i saw one for a, uh, for a human service organisation in which their expectations for the board we’re all listed and pretty much followed. What? I had a policy for what i have in policy versus paper clips, but they they left off the fund-raising, but they had a separate foundation set up to handle fundrasing. No. Okay, so that’s, that that’s acceptable. That’s, that’s. Perfect that’s find acceptable. Okay, so they’re difficult when you get into foundations. You have to, you know, and and can lead to a lot of problems where the foundation says what we raised the money. We want to determine how it’s spent. Oh, that, you know, the way it works, right? Okay. But you even if you know, even if there is a foundation the the organization’s board members may have ah, ah, personal fund-raising, you know, give or get requirement to the foundation. Yeah, but i just want to point the example i gave you a hundred. A zing was not listed in the area of board’s responsibility. Okay, right. But they left it all to the foundations. They see. It is the board responsibility. But there might also be a personal requirement to give. Yeah, there might be a personal environment for the board. Teo getter give type of thing way that we can talk about later. I have here. Okay. Now, there’s there needs to be a good amount of trust between the board and the staff. Yes. And the board in the ceo? Yeah. Yeah, well and okay. That’s hinting at something we’re gonna get to write. But now another thing. I’ve kind of abstracted what i think they’re the important ones. You have a legal responsibility that quite often boards don’t even know about, uh uh for non-profits they have to live better different from a four for-profit board in a legal way. Otherwise their quarter, their corporations the same as a for for-profit businesses. And one is, of course, in the non-profit area you have the annual iris form nine ninety and the board has a legal responsibility. Teo to review that and make sure it’s correct before it is submitted to the irs. Uh, they will even have a system for getting e-giving extensions. If you can’t meet the data on on this. The other one that few people know about are the intermediates is the, uh i r s is intermediate sanctions act, and they know about it in the sense that if you pay above average wages to the ceo uh, you can be really responsible and fine for you, but what they don’t know there are a whole host of other things related. Teo uh, the intermediate sanctions act. For instance, if you sell a piece of property below market value, the board and the management can have and i additional taxes paid on their personal texts that bills for for the for doing for voting, for improving it and doing it something something below market fto sort of an insider is insider trading basically, uh, it’s equivalent to the insider trading? Oh, it doesn’t even have to be insider. For instance, if if you sell a ah a ah, a piece of property below value to a let’s. Say a person who serves on a committee on the board. Ah, serves as a volunteer to the organization you can. You can, uh you can define you took this. Have at a tax bill added to your bill. They’re contributing writer. I have an article thoroughly explaining that if any of the people were interested in it, if you send it to my ah requested on my at eugene fram and send me an address. Where i can? Well, i can send it through regular e mail. I’d be happy to send it to them. Okay. Okay. Cool. That’s your that’s. Your twitter id. All right. Okay, i need you. I need you to sit tight for a minute while i take a little business for our sponsors and delighted who’s. Hang on, just hang on right there because we got more with professor fram coming up first. Pursuant, they’ve got another free resource for you this’s. Their donor line report card. It will help you evaluate the health of your donor pipeline spot. Possible weaknesses and identify areas of your greatest opportunity. It is an infographic, and it’s under resource is at pursuant dot com. Check out their infographic. The donor pipeline report card. We’ll be spelling spelling bees for non-profit fund-raising they’re not like any other spelling bee that you’ve seen or been to there’s live music and dancing and stand up comedy fund-raising, of course and spelling you could check out their video. These are ideal events for millennials. Great fund. We be e spelling dot com now, tony steak too. Have you checked out? Non-profit radio on youtube? There’s there are over two hundred videos on the real tony martignetti channel. Lots of interviews over a dozen playlists. Some of them are event fund-raising dahna relations playlist, social media, standup comedy, bi weekly videos and there’s. A bunch of others. Yeah. Find what you need. Look for it on the youtube channel. Subscribe my channel israel r e l tony martignetti you could just go to youtube and search twenty martignetti on the only tony martignetti doing anything substantial on youtube. I regret, though, that you have to put in marketmesuite eye, and then you still get like martin martinez. You know, marketmesuite and then i pop up, so but i’m the only tony martignetti pops up, but you got to get that g in there. That’s tony’s, take two. Thanks for checking me out on youtube. Okay, gene, that was okay. Appreciate your indulgence. Thank you know, uh uh, the other a couple more issues. Okay, only one more because i see we’ve covered the trust point here. Go ahead. One more on board members really have to understand who who the board represents. And the borg does not represent the staff quite often. They think they have to look out for the welfare of the staff. Obviously they have to look out for the welfare of the staff that they want to be productive. But their obligations are made to the various stakeholders. It could be the community. It could be the trade association. It khun b to the, uh to the mission of the organization. Obviously, esso and and the people related to the mission is ah, is the one that’s most most common for enough for non-profit not to the staff. Okay, okay, i understand that. And that’s ah, you know, we don’t weigh can’t have staff doing and runs around their vice president or their ceo and going to the board members that’s, that’s all no, no, i want to move on way. Tio, your last two are what the board should expect from management and what management should expect from the board. So i don’t know if we can maybe deal with ease the same time. But wait, let’s, take the first. You know, doing the order. You got it in the book. What? The board should what the board should expect from management and you start with, you know, no surprises, no spin on bad news must rise. So just say a little about no surprises, no spin. Well, let me, uh, let me no surprises there. Spin. Let me start that with a war story. I was on a board of a non-profit which was a very active non-profit and serving its clients well and serving, uh, it’s mission well, however, the executive committee decided that they wanted to acquire a for-profit in another city, and they had enough finances to be able to do that, and so they went ahead and do that did it? And then they came to the board and ask them teo, to approve the acquisition after they had already signed the contract and every everything else and the reason they did it, they felt there was a banker on the, uh, on the executive committee who knew all about these things, and it turned out the banker did not know our about it. For instance, the banker didn’t tell them you don’t give the buyer full payment, and until you can see that they can fit into the nonprofit organization when you you stretch the payments out so forth. So what happened is that i went for ah state on the on the board for oh, maybe another month or two. And i resigned and used the usual excuse of work pressures because i just didn’t want to abolish the whole whole thing up, actually, you. Could have. You could have had a a legal situation there if you really wanted to pursue it on. And it worked out that way. It was just a terrible act was acquisition, but let me ask you wait. Owner, the former owner wanted to run the er the division, the way she wanted to run it instead of the way the acquiring non-profit wanted to run it. That seems so i don’t know what happened beyond it. But there was evidently a lot of conflict there. What? Why? I have to ask you a question. Well, hold on. Hold on. Altum. Why? Why did you not tell them directly? What the reason for your resignation was ok. I took the easy way out. Ok? Why wine? Because, uh uh, you got me all right. I took these because i felt that they were doing well enough, and i didn’t want to muddy the water. Okay? Okay. Okay. And that’s typical of of, uh, of a poor who looks out for the welfare of what they’re doing. They were doing a good job in the base organization. But the expenditure for the, uh, for the acquisition just turned out terrible. Ok, i appreciate you’re appreciate your being honest now under on it. Okay. Thank you. Thank you for that. Okay, now wonder what the board should expect from management. We don’t have time to cover all the points that air that are part of that. So it just one more? I just couple. Okay, now i just want to cover one more in this, and then we’re gonna move on to what? What management should expect from the board. But talk about bad news must rise. Well, well, often, uh, people board members will keep bad news from the ceo or the staff will keep bad news from the ceo and s o uh, cia management has toe actually seek bad nose on this. For instance, one of the things that i recommend the people right now eyes make sure you have a whistle blower hotline for years. You owe your staff or even perhaps board members who don’t want toe get involved with, uh, causing conflict within the organization, but feel something needs to be checked out there. Ok? Eso eso you you have to. If you’re a wise ceo or board chair or boardmember you look for these things on dh you have to have the venues opened for them. All right, let’s, move to what management should expect from the board of the last of the last of our six essential wait, hold on. We don’t have again. You know, we don’t have time to cover everything listeners. You gotta buy the book. Of course. You know, we can just summarize, i wantto suggestion. I want e i want to focus on i wanna focus on something we just touched on. Briefly trust, trust and confidence. The mutual, the the that the management should expect the trust and confidence of the board. Yes, you have to have that because quite often, uh, the attitude is, well, they’re not-for-profits people. They’re not for-profit people aside talked about before. And you have to have to trust and confidence that the ceo is a competent manager. And there are ways of doing that. One of them when we get to advisory committees, uh, can talk a little more about that, too. But there has to be the trust that the ceo and his direct reports and others are competent managers, depending on the size of the agency, because the traditional point of view is that they’re not competent. If they were competent, they could be working for for-profit organised, i think that i hate that nonsense. I do two on, i’ve seen very competent people, wonderful people, you know, my traditional comment about the people in the nonprofit world, especially these there that they figured really stand ten feet tall rule that’s, the way i always look at it, no matter if their their case worker or if they’re a ceo when they do their job well, they tend to stand ten feet tall and there are a lot of people in that category, of course, no that’s, not it love that. All right, all right. We’re going to go. Teo. Teo, the pitfalls you’ve got, you got many chapters on potential pitfalls. We’re going to talk about the the the bad poor practices for border for boards. So why don’t you want to just start us off? Go ahead. Okay. One is dumbing down board with croup. Mint uh, where you take, uh, what who’s available and, er on that khun b anybody? For example, i recently encountered a situation, and i saw it myself with that board chair. In the nominations committee recommended a particular person who may accepted simply on the basis that his wife recommended he be aboard nhis no do deal is it’s so far, by the way, he lasted about two years burghdoff had a lot of problems, is and that is just, in my estimation, is just terrible. Okay, i understand. Wait, hold on, hold on. Because again, you got so much in this chapter. There isn’t time to cover. What do you remember? Everything you see and hear? Oh, yeah. Get they get stuff. Yeah, yeah, come on. You okay? You know, haley paid a fancy prices this. You know, this is a prepared show. Come on here. So, that’s our failing to this. I hear this a lot. So that’s why i’m flagging it, failing to delegate sufficient managerial responsibility to the ceo because this gets sticky. This gets to your policy versus paper clips so don’t can’t recite ceo and see him as her as a competent manager. Yes. Alright on that. That goes to what you were just saying about presuming competence and excellence not you know you’d be somewhere else if you if you want, let me give you a story on that one? When i was head of a, uh, board chair of a non-profit in rochester, we also had on the board of ah, the human human resource director of eastman kodak at that time. And so i wanted to make sure that we and i felt we had a competent person and but i was receiving static from other board members such as, well, his response. They had one hundred. The the organization had one hundred employees and hay on the comment. Wass well, hey, has the responsibility of the system pastor at my church. You know, uh, so but fortunately, i had the hr director from eastman kodak, and he says no. He said this man’s responsibility is equivalent to what a good, uh, middle level manager at kodak would have. Okay? And he should be paid accordingly. Ok. So as a result, i was able to get the salary that i wanted for for the ceo. But it took that in order to that power to get it right. All right, all right. And there’s there’s a lot more in there. There’s. Not more in that chapter pitfalls. But i want to get teo, don’t make sure we cover everything. I want to get to the most important job for a bored. What is it? What is it? The most important job for the for the board, uh, is ah eyes, i think ceo selection and overviewing okay. Hiring hiring the right ceo, hiring the right ceo and overviewing the person making sure that he looks at you as a partner. That’s. Why? I like overviewing the ceo and the board is a partnership. A relationship? It is not a boss. Subordinate relations look any good ceo no knows that. Uh, hey, here. She can be fired by the board. But if you give a develop a culture where the two are working together as partners and that both people will make mistakes from time to time. Okay, but that partnership is very, very important. Okay, okay. We’re going to go out for break, gene. And when we come back, you’re not going to talk about the last two. Will have just about six minutes or so to do that. Ondo? No, little bloomerang that like a little more than nine minutes or so to cover our last two. How to use the board members. Time, wisely and when and how to utilize an advisory board. Stay with us. Stay with us. Like what you’re hearing a non-profit radio tony’s got more on youtube, you’ll find clips from stand up comedy tv spots and exclusive interviews catch guests like seth gordon. Craig newmark, the founder of craigslist marquis of eco enterprises, charles best from donors choose dot org’s aria finger do something that worked neo-sage levine from new york universities heimans center on philanthropy tony tweets to he finds the best content from the most knowledgeable, interesting people in and around non-profits to share on his stream. If you have valuable info, he wants to re tweet you during the show. You can join the conversation on twitter using hashtag non-profit radio twitter is an easy way to reach tony he’s at tony martignetti narasimhan t i g e n e t t i remember there’s a g before the end he hosts a podcast for the chronicle of philanthropy fund-raising fundamentals is a short monthly show devoted to getting over your fund-raising hartals just like non-profit radio, toni talks to leading thinkers, experts and cool people with great ideas. As one fan said, tony picks their brains and i don’t have to leave my office fund-raising fundamentals was recently dubbed the most helpful non-profit podcast you have ever heard. You can also join the conversation on facebook, where you can ask questions before or after the show. The guests were there, too. Get insider show alerts by email, tony tells you who’s on each week and always includes link so that you can contact guests directly. To sign up, visit the facebook page for tony martignetti dot com. I’m jonah helper, author of date your donors. And you’re listening to tony martignetti non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. Time for live listener love we’ve got to send out the love because love is always in the studio through the internet and interweaves of the of the nets and the woman’s and the weaves the love goes out phone lines i don’t know, you know it goes out so if you’re listening live love to you, i’m very, very grateful that you’re with us if you’re in japan, which is a very good chance you are because there’s always japan japanese checking in konnichi wa for our chinese listeners and also taiwan, always checking in ni hao and south korea also very loyal listeners on your haserot comes our ham nida, if you’re listening in the us, the love goes out just thank you. What more can i say? Glad you’re with us following quickly on the heels of live listen love it’s got to be the pod class pleasantries did i just say pod classed? I think i just iconoclast the podcast pleasantries. They always go out to our over ten thousand. I think we may be pushing twelve thousand. I gotta look at the stats. God, don’t let me look at this every week or even every month but ah, down with the the download bandwith has been expanding, so it may be more than two, but podcast pleasantries if you listening via podcast doesn’t matter how many thousands there are pleasantries to you and the affiliate affections for our many am and fm station listeners seated strategically throughout the country in carefully selected markets, our am and fm station listeners affections to you, our affiliate listeners. All right, jean, we’re going to get teo. I’m well, thank you for checking in boardmember time should not be squandered. Is that correct? That is, that is absolutely correct. Because they need thio understand you appreciating what you are doing and making sure that, uh, that they’re spending their time wisely. Okay. That’s not always the case. Uh, for example, boards tend to want to a culture eight new board members to the culture of the board. For example, if you have a financial analyst it’s likely that they might ask the person to help the bookkeeper instead of saying, why don’t you help us develop a long term financial plan for the organization? The culture is that the finances, finances, bookkeeping, not financial analysis that will take you. To the future. Okay, that gets into the micro management a bit too, if you’re having a boardmember look over the shoulder, have a staff member. Oh, all right, you have some very simple tips, but i think, you know, worth repeating because because i’ve been to board meetings that this is not done so the stuff needs to be reminded board meetings should begin and end on time. That’s right on dh er people respect that, and they they respect what what that means to them and things of that nature go ahead as we’re not just talking about these old tapes, i don’t i don’t think you specifically mentioned agendas, but nor do i like to see in agendas is is a time limit for each discussion item on the agenda, and you take a step further. You don’t just keep it there in parentheses next to the item on the agenda you appoint a timekeeper, a timekeeper. He’s not was not running definitively, not agendas should be sent out well ahead of time with the briefing materials. Most ofthe that i’ve seen is, uh, the agenda in the briefing material come to you day before or sometimes. Two days before so if you’re busy, really don’t have a chance to really study and and know what’s happening. As as a plant e-giving consultant, i am occasionally invited to board meetings to present on status, you know our plans and dance and, you know, you can tell first of all, some board members come in and they’re studiously going through the folder that was sent to them of the binder that was sent to them. You can tell that this is the first time they’re looking at it. That’s right? That’s, right. That’s done a robbery. That’s not how you make robust. Good decision. Yeah, yeah. They’re flipping through pages in the ten minutes before the meeting opens. That’s, that’s. Awful, but oh, yeah, but you see that all the time, you know? Well, it’s, uh, you’ll even see that sometime in for-profit boards to go on. But that gets kind of dangerous there because you might vote on something that will yield some fancy liability for you. Fancy liability. All right. So you like to see things? Not only before the meeting like a week in advance, but also minutes, minutes done within a week of the meeting ending? Yeah. That’s right. That’s right, because contemporaries me contemporary iss meeting’s minutes are very, very important to cover you and to make sure that they are all correct is very important. For instance, if i wouldn’t wantto i don’t want to emphasize this. If i were to vote no on something, i want to see it there at that time. So i’m on record that i didn’t think that this is a good idea. Okay, so you don’t really like waiting until the package for the next board meeting to get those units to get the minutes from the last meeting? Yeah, wait, what we have with the internet and with email and whatever, uh, there’s no reason for it except for the ceo will say, well, i just don’t have the personnel to do that. Well, uh, you auto find ways of getting that done. Okay? Uh, in each ah, and for getting it done. Yeah, so that, you know, the ceo always say, well, we don’t have the money for it, but when you press hard enough, if it’s really important, the ceo will find it. All right, we need to move to our last topic. How and when to use an advisory board. Now we just have about two minutes or so to cover this. So please bear that in mind. You have you have shortened long term purposes for an advisory board. Pardon? You recommend that advisory board to be either short term or long term? Yes. Okay. All right. Uh, it’s, your term you need people for a specific project, maybe building a on extension on the bill aboard. So you need construction people or people like that who can help you on that? That short term? Ah, long term. You want people who get to know you on and get to know the mission of the organization over over a time period. And that should be a person who is not it’s, not advisory to the board, but should be advisory to the ceo because the ceo has the responsibility for taking action. And if it’s advisory to the c e o of course, he’s going to read rejects some of the ideas except some of the ideas. And you want teo have somebody who can take action and initiate some of them. Now he has. The ceo has an obligation to report what the advisory board is saying, but i think the ceo needs to be left alone with the advisory board so he or she can let their hair down in terms of what they’re thinking about long term and what their current problems the are today, we’re going to leave it there. Gene the okay, the book is going for impact the non-profit directors essential guide book. You’ll find it on amazon. You can tell it’s packed with information we could just scratch the surface. Dr jean fran, i want to thank you very, very much. Well, thank you very much for the invitation. And i look forward to listening to it. My pleasure. And again, you’ll find jean at eugene fram fr am and his block is non-profit management d r fram, dot com and there’s a hyphen in between each of those items. All right. Okay, fine. Go. Thank you. And thank you for the questions. My pleasure, jean. Thanks for being with me. Okay. Bye. Next week. Amy sample ward returns. She’s been on maternity leave. She’s coming back alive. You bet that i guarantee you she’s coming back if you missed any part of today’s. Show. Find it on tony martignetti dot com. We’re sponsored by pursuant those online tools for small and midsize non-profits data driven and technology enabled, and by we be spelling supercool spelling bee fundraisers. We be e spelling dot com. Our creative producers climb meyerhoff. Sam liebowitz is the line producer. Gavin dollars are am and fm outreach director shows social media is by susan chavez. On our music is by scott stein. Stuck. My voice is cracked again. You with me next week for non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. Go out and be great. What’s not to love about non-profit radio tony gets the best guests check this out from seth godin this’s the first revolution since tv nineteen fifty and henry ford nineteen twenty it’s the revolution of our lifetime here’s a smart, simple idea from craigslist founder craig newmark yeah insights, orn presentation or anything? People don’t really need the fancy stuff they need something which is simple and fast. When’s the best time to post on facebook facebook’s andrew noise nose at traffic is at an all time hyre on nine a, m or p m so that’s when you should be posting your most meaningful post here’s aria finger ceo of do something dot or ge young people are not going to be involved in social change if it’s boring and they don’t see the impact of what they’re doing. So you got to make it fun and applicable to these young people look so otherwise a fifteen and sixteen year old they have better things to do if they have xbox, they have tv, they have their cell phones me dar is the founder of idealist took two or three years for foundation staff to sort of dane toe. Add an email address their card it was like it was phone. This email thing is fired-up that’s why should i give it away? Charles best founded donors choose dot or ge somehow they’ve gotten in touch kind of off line as it were on dh and no two exchanges of brownies and visits and physical gift. Mark echo is the founder and ceo of eco enterprises. You may be wearing his hoodies and shirts, tony, talk to him. Yeah, you know, i just i i’m a big believer that’s not what you make in life. It zoho, you know, tell you make people feel this is public radio host majora carter. Innovation is in the power of understanding that you don’t just put money on a situation expected to hell you put money in a situation and invested and expect it to grow and savvy advice for success from eric sabiston. What separates those who achieve from those who do not is in direct proportion to one’s ability to ask others for help. The smartest experts and leading thinkers air on tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent.