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Any Nonprofit that Runs Like a Business Will Go Broke

April 6, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 5 Comments

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Are you tired of being asked, “Why can’t you run your nonprofit like a business?”

I’ve written about how nonprofits can use advice written for businesses (with just a little translation).  When it comes to nonprofit finance, however, some business wisdom is just wrong.

Clara Miller, the former director of the Nonprofit Finance Fund, explains why.  In her wonderful article, “The Looking-Glass World of Nonprofit Money,” she lists seven assumptions that businesspeople make that–in the nonprofit world–are just not true.

  1. “The consumer buys the product.” False. Donors and funders buy the “product” (which may be a service, a program, or a campaign), and clients benefit from it.
  2. “Price covers cost and eventually produces profits, or the business folds.”  False.  Nonprofits are devoted to their missions and will keep on pursuing the mission as long as they  can.  They have a sideline in fundraising to support their “business”–but it also saps energy away from the reason they exist.
  3. “Cash is liquid.”  False.  Government and foundation grants are often restricted to specific purposes and can’t be used to pay for anything else.  A nonprofit can get more grants and have less money to pay its day-to-day costs of doing business!
  4. “Price is determined by producers’ supply and consumers’ ability and willingness to pay.”  False.  Since the consumers don’t pay (see #1), they don’t have the say.  Government or foundation funders decide what they’re willing to pay AND how many clients the nonprofit must serve in return for the money.  If it’s not enough, the nonprofit has to make up the difference with fundraising, or the quality of service suffers.
  5. “Any profits will drop to the bottom line and are then available for enlarging or improving the business.”  False.  Many nonprofits have spent less than budgeted only to see their budget reduced for the next year, on the theory that they must not really have needed the money.
  6. “Investment in infrastructure during growth is necessary for efficiency and profitability.”  False.  Well, actually, true, but not recognized by funders!  Many funders want to pay for program, but only a far-sighted few will invest in building capacity for the future.
  7. “Overhead is a regular cost of doing business, and varies with business type and stage of development.”  False.  As Miller says, “Overhead is seen as a distraction—an indication that an organization is not putting enough of its attention and resources into program.”  (Thankfully, this is beginning to change, but only beginning.)

Nonprofits, have you heard well-meaning but useless advice from people who think you ought to “run like a business”?  What would you want those people to know?

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Get People to Move Forward–Tell a Story!

March 31, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

where you are going

Somebody has to lead

“The best way to get people to venture into unknown terrain is to make it desirable by taking them there in their imaginations.”

-Noel Tichy, co-author, The Leadership Engine

You get people moving by telling them stories.

Storytelling can be a form of leadership. So sit back and think:

  1. Where are you trying to get your organization to go?
  2. What’s the story that shows what the world will look like when you succeed?
  3. What’s your travel story about how you will get there?

Ready? Start! “Once upon a time…”

For more about telling the story of where you are going, read http://www.trippbraden.com/2015/03/31/lead-by-telling-the-story/

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4 Things Your Organization Should Know about Facebook

March 30, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Is your business or nonprofit organization on Facebook? Chances are, you’re not taking advantage of some of its best features.

Do you know how to:

  1. Schedule your posts ahead of time? (Put a bunch of posts up when you can, then see them show up when you want them to.)
  2. Save stories that other people post, to read later?
  3. See which of your posts got the most likes, comments, and shares?
  4. Find out more about your followers?

You can use these tools to save time, reach more people, and build relationships with potential donors…but only if you know how.

How to Schedule Your Facebook Posts in Advance

On your organization’s page, you can do something people can’t do on their personal pages: you can create a post and schedule it to go up later. Here’s how:

  1. Start creating your post at the top of your Page’s Timeline
  2. Click next to Post
  3. Select Schedule Post
  4. Choose the date and time you want the post to be published
  5. Click Schedule

Scheduled posts need to be shared between 10 minutes and 6 months from when you create them. For most of us, that should not be a problem!

How to Save Other People’s Facebook Posts

Have you ever seen someone post an interesting article and thought, “I’d like to read that, but I don’t have the time right now?” If the post contains a link to a story, you can save that story to read later. Here’s how you do that, too.

In the upper right corner of the post, there’s a little down arrow: click on that. Choose “Save [the name of the story].” That’s all there is to it!

When you want to see that story later, go to the main Facebook page. On the left, you should see a menu that includes things like News Feed, Messages, Events, and the like. Once you have saved anything, you will have a Saved item on that menu. Just click there to find and read the stories you saved before.

How to See Which of Your Posts Gets the Most Likes, Comments, and Shares

At the top of your organization’s Facebook page, above the banner photo, there is a line that says:

Page Messages Notifications Insights Posts

“Page” is what you usually see, and so it’s in bold.

Click on “Insights.” You’ll reach an Overview page that shows you graphs of Page Likes, Post Reach, and Engagement. Scroll down a little further and you’ll see a list of five recent posts. At a glance, you’ll be able to see which of your posts:

  • Reached the most people (the yellow bars on the list)
  • Contained links that were clicked the most often (the blue bars)
  • Attracted the most likes, comments, and shares (the pink bars)

If you want to see more than just five, scroll down a little further and click “See All Posts.” That will bring you to a page that first, shows you WHEN your fans are online.  That’s very helpful for deciding when you want to schedule your posts! Scroll down a little more and you’ll see the list with the yellow, pink, and blue bars for all your posts.

Expert tip! You can find out the engagement rate as a percentage, if you like that better than the number of likes, comments, and shares. Just click on the arrow to the right of  “Likes, Comments, & Shares” and choose the Engagement rate option from the menu.

How to Find Out More about Your Followers

The next time you open Facebook, try searching for “Pages liked by people who like [your organization].”

Jon Loomer did.  In fact, he narrowed it down to “Pages liked by Marketers from United States who are older than 25 and younger than 50 and like Jon Loomer Digital and Amy Porterfield and Mari Smith and Social Media Examiner“–just to show he could do it!  But you should start with the pages that any of your followers have liked.

Run that search and Facebook will tell you:

  • All the pages that your followers have liked, and who liked which page.
  • How many people, total, like that page.
  • Other pages that people who like a specific page also like.
  • Which of your own friends liked that page (if you are using Facebook as an individual)
Expert tip! Here’s a set of slides from my colleague Marc A. Pitman on how you can use Facebook and other social media to find out more about your nonprofit donors.

How to Research Donors with Social Media from John Haydon

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