The Life-Cycle of a Non-Profit Organization: Creating Opportunities for Success 2015 DIAPER BANKS IN AMERICA CONFERENCE FACILITATOR, VICKI CLARK, BUILDING.

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The Life-Cycle of a Non-Profit Organization:

Creating Opportunities for Success2015 DIAPER BANKS IN AMERICA CONFERENCE

FACILITATOR, VICKI CLARK, BUILDING THE CAPACITY OF ORGANIZATIONS, MEMPHIS, TN, VECLARK@AOL.COM

“Leaders must create an environment that embraces change not as a threat but as an opportunity.”

-- Warren Bennis

Different Thinking About Your Diaper Bank

Peter Drucker’s 5 Questions for Nonprofit Leaders

1. What is the mission? 2. Who is the customer? 3. What does the customer value? 4. What are our outcomes/results? 5. What is our plan?

Logic Model

Nonprofit Systems: Priority Areas

1. Programs and Services

2. Staff Leadership/Management

3. Staffing

4. Governance/Board

5. Administrative Systems/Operations

6. Finances and Fund Development

7. Marketing/Community Awareness

ADAPTIVE CAPACITY 1. Needs Assessment

2. Organizational Assessment

3. Program Evaluation

4. Knowledge Management

5. Strategic Planning

6. Collaborations and Partnerships

LEADERSHIP & MANAGEMENT CAPACITY

LEADERSHIP CAPACITY

1. Board Development

2. Executive Leadership Development

3. Leadership Transitions

MANAGEMENT CAPACITY

1. Human-Resources Development & Management

2. Internal Communications

3. Financial Management

TECHNICAL CAPACITY 1. Service Delivery Skills 2. Evaluation Skills 3. Outreach and Advocacy Skills 4. Marketing/ Communication 5. Legal Skills

6. Fund-Development Skills 7. Earned Income Generation 8. Accounting Skills 9. Facilities Management 10. Technology Skills

The Model of Nonprofit Life Stages

Stage 1: IMAGINE and INSPIRE“START-UP”

This is the vision or idea stage, where the organization is not yet formalized and where imagination and inspiration abound. The primary question at this stage is “Can this dream be realized?” This stage is characterized by lots of enthusiasm, energy, and creativity, but at this point, the organization really is merely a dream of a better world that is inspirational and worth striving for.

Stage 2: FOUND and FRAME“ADOLESCENT”

This is the start-up phase of the organization, when it receives its official nonprofit status and all the activities of founding and framing an organization occur. The key question at this stage is “How are we going to pull this off?” Like Stage One, this stage is characterized by excitement and high levels of interest by many people, accompanied by the fear that formalizing the dream will result in the loss of its magic. The act of incorporating formally establishes the organization.

Stage 3: GROUND and GROW“MATURE”

In this stage the organization is concerned with building its foundation by grounding its activities and growing the “business.” The overriding question is “How can we build this to be viable?” Organizations in this stage are focused on establishing systems of accountability; however, the need for growth on multiple fronts may be overwhelming to those running the organization. The Ground and Grow Stage has a mundane feel of “taking care of business”; but it also has numerous enticing intersections, choices, and challenges.

Stage 4: PRODUCE and SUSTAIN

“MATURE”

This is the mature phase of the organization’s life when production is at its peak and sustaining the organization is a high priority. The primary concern, “How can the momentum be sustained?” The organization is very stable, yet that same stability may make it stale as concerns for procedure slow creativity and growth. Stage Four is a productive place that, at its peak, feels a little like automatic pilot. Staff are doing their work effectively and enthusiastically.

Stage 5: REVIEW and RENEW“STAGNANT”

In this stage the organization is reinventing itself in some way, shape, or form through a process of review and renewal. The primary question is “What do we need to redesign?” It can be a time of large or small, exciting or stressful, but always necessary, change. Proponents of chaos theory will recognize that in order for organizations to be as viable as possible, they will need to operate in modes that promote chaos and therefore create possibilities for new patterns of interaction to form. Mature nonprofits revisit one or more aspects of their organization—mission, vision, products, services, structure—sometimes changing them drastically, sometimes only making slight innovations, as they rediscover who they are and how they fit in the changing world. Relative to the scope of the modifications, organizations may cycle back to an earlier stage. For example, if the change relates to the primary mission of the organization it may find itself back in Stage Two, while minor alterations in the organizational structure may simply mean revisiting Stage Four.

Decline and DissolutionDEFUNCT

Sometimes it happens—an organization is forced or chooses to shut its doors. In this model, decline and dissolution is not considered an inevitable stage of an organization’s life cycle but rather one of the routes an organization can find itself taking. An organization can face dissolution at any stage.

Preventing Premature Organizational Death: Risk

Factors

Board and staff stagnationReliance on a single funding sourceFailure to pay attention to external factors

Take Action Avoid the “we’ve always done it this way” syndromeFrequently ask: “is there a better way to do this?”Add new Board membersPay attention to staff moralePay attention to financial trends revenues, expenses available fund development strategiesHave a strategic plan. Use it and monitor it daily.Ask yourself whether you may be part of the problem? Are you challenged, are you having fun?

Fight stress and encourage others to do the same. Do we enjoy working together staff/vols?

Rather than guessing how receptive people are to a change, we find it is sometimes better to ask them directly. One approach to use is a tool called the passion meter. A passion meter can be as simple as asking people how they feel about the change: “red light, yellow light or green light?”

The “PASSION METER” Measures Receptiveness to Change

*Negative Skeptics

*Positive Skeptics

*Cautious Fence Sitters

* Indifferent Fence Sitters

*Promoters

*Sponsors

The Change “PASSION METER”

Adjust the Sails in Your Organization: Move the Mission

Forward

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