Top Banner
25 years, and the future Andrew Hind
32

25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Jan 22, 2015

Download

Economy & Finance

CFG

Closing Plenary at CFG's Annual Conference 2012
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

25 years, and the future

Andrew Hind

Page 2: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

597AD - Canterbury

Page 3: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

• King’s school, Canterbury 597 AD

• Order of St John 11th century

• Statute of Elizabeth 1601

• Charity Commission established 1853

• The Victorian philanthropists – NSPCC 1884

• Oxfam 1948

• The hospice movement 1967

1,400 years of charity history

Page 4: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

All change in the 1980s

Ethiopia famine 1984

Page 5: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

All change in the 1980s

A year later, Bob Geldof harnessed the emerging power of the mass media to create the world’s largest ever charitable appeal

Page 6: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

All change in the 1980s

Page 7: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

All change in the 1980s

Page 8: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

All change in the 1980s

Ernest Saunders (right) and the Guinness scandal of 1986

Page 9: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Adrian Randall 1944-2012

Page 10: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

The charity world in 1987

Page 11: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

The charity world in 1987

No SorpNo consistency in financial reportingNo transparencyNo reserves policiesNo risk frameworksNo audit committeesNo concept of governanceNo impact reports/public benefit statements No career path in the sector

Page 12: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

What a difference CFG made

• Sorp: 1988, 1995, 2000, 2005• Members’ helpline 1991 (Pesh Framjee)• Charity MSc 1992 (Prof. Paul Palmer)• Charities Act 1993• First CEO 1994• 10th anniversary 1997, with HRH Princess

Anne• Charity risk management survey, 2002• 1,000 members in 2004• The role of the Charity FD; Managing in a

downturn; Pensions maze; 2008

Page 13: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

25-year theme – Rise of the donor as consumer, or not?

• The great paradox of charity reporting:

The regulator pushed for greater transparency; the ASB pushed for greater disclosure; the best

charities were committed to more effective reporting –

But, as far as the average charity donor was concerned, ‘heart still ruled head’.

Page 14: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind
Page 15: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind
Page 16: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Despite more transparency, inertia largely prevails – does it matter?

Over the last 25 years:

• Just 15 of the biggest companies have remained in the FTSE 50 throughout. Only 40% of top 50 companies in 1985 remain in FTSE 350 today.

• By contrast 28 of the top 50 charities in 1985 remain in the top 50, and 90% remain in the Charity Finance 350 Index

Page 17: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Little change among top 50 charities

• National Trust; Nuffield Health; Oxfam; Salvation Army; Barnardo’s; Save the Children; Scope; RNLI; Action for Children; NSPCC; British Red Cross – all in top 20 in 1985 and still there today.

• Imperial Cancer Research Fund (9th in 1985) and Cancer Research Campaign (13th) merged to form CRUK (now 2nd). Age UK merger.

• A few start ups: CIFF; Gatsby Foundation; Woodard Corporation; Charity Projects.

Page 18: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Future trends?

Pension liabilities – temporary blip or threat to long-term survival of some of our biggest brand names?

Public service delivery – improving the quality of services for users, or nothing more than for-profit ‘bid candy’, leading to the emergence of a ‘fourth sector’?

Page 19: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind
Page 20: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Future trends?

• New ‘charitable’ ventures – will social enterprise, CICs, CIOs, Academies, etc breath new life into civil society, or blur the boundaries so much that the public will no longer know what a charity stands for?

• Governance – will the long-established governance model be under threat as the new ventures above push for payment of trustees and executives on the board?

Page 21: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Future trends?

• Mergers – is all the talk borne of a spirit of true collaboration, or will it prove to be instinctive Darwinism where only the biggest and strongest survive?

• Social finance – the solution to all our funding problems, or the start of unprecedented gearing in the sector which will leave charities in hock to commercial lenders?

Page 22: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Future trends? Fred Goodwin

Page 23: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Future trends?Eric Illsley and Lord Taylor

Page 24: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Future trends? James Murdoch

Page 25: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Future trends?

Page 26: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Or: Fiona ReynoldsThe National Trust

Page 27: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

David Nussbaum, WWF

Page 28: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Su Sayer, United Response

Page 29: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Nick Young, British Red Cross

Page 30: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Source: Ipsos MORIDon’t trust them at all

Trust them completely

1%

6%

3%3% 3%5%

23%

10%

5%

19%

20%

2%1%

4%

18%

11%

8%

22%22%

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

2005

2008

2005 Mean Score: 6.3 2008 Mean Score: 6.6

(replicated in 2010)

Whatever happens in the next 25 years, we must retain

public trust in the distinctive brand of charity

Page 31: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

Sector behaviour thepublic want to see

• Always focused on the charity’s values

• Transparent and accountable

• Independent, non-political

• Brave and innovative

• Collaborative, not competitive

• Providing VFM, and delivering public benefit

• Building public trust and confidence

Page 32: 25 years & the future - Andrew Hind

25 years, and the future

Andrew Hind