building sustainability_earned income for nonprofit org

Upload: jiggs-labastida-luna

Post on 14-Apr-2018

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 7/30/2019 Building Sustainability_Earned Income for Nonprofit Org

    1/4

    Building Sustainability: Earned Income for Your Nonprofit?by Rosemary Bayer and Lee Gorman October, 2010

    Copyright 2010 NEW (Nonprofit Enterprise at Work Inc.), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization

    Page 1

    There is much talk these days about social enterprise and about building nonprofit sustainability withearned income. This article will discuss what these terms mean, why earned income might be importantto your organization, and what your next steps might be.

    There are many definitions ofSocial Enterprise. For our purposes, a social enterprise is an organizationthat uses its profits to further social or environmental missions also known as a mission-driven, asopposed to a profit-driven, organization. A social enterprise can have either a for-profit or nonprofitstructure.

    Earned income for nonprofits simply means compensation in exchange for products or services. If youearn money by selling goods or services, that is earned income. If you take the profits from that income(what's left after you pay the cost of getting it) and use them to further your nonprofit mission, you have asocial enterprise.

    So, how can people who run a nonprofit keep focus on their mission when they are distracted bymanaging a business and making profits?

    Every organization, for-profit or nonprofit, needs to bring in at least as much money as it spends or it willgo out of business. The question is simply whether your revenue is earned or donated. The more revenueyou earn, the more control you have, and the easier it is to smooth out your income stream and run amore predictable and sustainable organization.

    The main idea is to align your core competencies with marketplace opportunities in order tosimultaneouslygenerate earned income andexpand your social or environmental impact.

    Some familiar examples of organizations that earn income include theGoodwill,Michigan StateUniversity,NEW (Nonprofit Enterprise at Work),Architectural Salvage Warehouse,Urban Farming, theScarab Clubandthe Girl Scouts. In fact, any nonprofit that charges entrance fees, membership dues,tuition, etc. is earning income.

    There are tax rules for earned income for nonprofits to ensure that you use your profits to serve amission. If you stick to earned income programs that align with and serve your mission, you will steerclear of conflicts. It is always wise to check with your legal/accounting advisors to make sure your planswill protect your 501(c)x status.

    The movement toward more earned income for nonprofits is being driven by a number of factors:

    Macro economic conditions are driving up the need for services typically provided by nonprofits Continued growth in the number of nonprofit organizations is causing more intense competitionfor funds Funders and donors are requesting or requiring accountability Predictable revenue for bigger, longer term outcome goals is needed Organizational stability and growth is increasingly important to funders

    http://www.goodwill.org/http://www.goodwill.org/http://www.goodwill.org/http://www.msu.edu/http://www.msu.edu/http://www.msu.edu/http://www.msu.edu/http://www.new.org/http://www.new.org/http://www.new.org/http://www.aswdetroit.org/http://www.aswdetroit.org/http://www.aswdetroit.org/http://www.urbanfarming.org/http://www.urbanfarming.org/http://www.urbanfarming.org/http://www.scarabclub.org/http://www.scarabclub.org/http://www.scarabclub.org/http://www.girlscouts.org/http://www.girlscouts.org/http://www.girlscouts.org/http://www.girlscouts.org/http://www.scarabclub.org/http://www.scarabclub.org/http://www.urbanfarming.org/http://www.aswdetroit.org/http://www.new.org/http://www.msu.edu/http://www.msu.edu/http://www.goodwill.org/
  • 7/30/2019 Building Sustainability_Earned Income for Nonprofit Org

    2/4

    Building Sustainability: Earned Income for Your Nonprofit?by Rosemary Bayer and Lee Gorman October, 2010

    Copyright 2010 NEW (Nonprofit Enterprise at Work Inc.), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization

    Page 2

    The list of benefits is even longer:

    More funds means you GET MORE DONE!

    Stabilize operations and increase overall effectiveness

    with diversified funding sources giving predictable, reliable

    and sustainable revenue

    Funds are not tied to a specific program

    Invigorate your Board many have business

    backgrounds and would love to be engaged

    The planning process to develop an earned income stream is beneficial all by itself

    Funders want you to build capacity, sustainability and self-reliance

    New enterprise can spark innovation within your mission

    Coordination can be improved between financial and program areas Increase visibility to the public and your funders, enhancing your reputation

    Create jobs!

    There are two main strategies for earned income. Consider an organization-wide earned income strategy,where your entire mission or operation is involved, or a program-oriented strategy, where a singleprogram can drive revenue for itself or for the organization. Income earned can cover all or just part of aprogram's costs.

    As you think about your strategy and what services or products you could provide, it is crit ical that youchoose a strategy and tactics that align with your mission. Then not only will you avoid drifting away fromyour mission, but you will be more successful because you are still doing what really matters!

    Some examples of earned income include:

    Fee for services:NEW

    Retail:Goodwill

    Software products:ardentCause

    Housing / Rent:United Methodist Retirement Communities

    Restaurants / Catering:Detroit Rescue Mission Ministries

    Search Engine:GreenMaven

    Consulting:The SCARAB Club

    Agri-business:Urban Farming, Inc.andthe Capuchins Earthworks Urban Farm

    Memberships:Printing Industries of Michigan

    Home repair:Home Repair Services

    http://www.new.org/http://www.new.org/http://www.new.org/http://www.goodwilldetroit.org/http://www.goodwilldetroit.org/http://ardentcause.com/http://ardentcause.com/http://ardentcause.com/http://www.umrc.com/umrc/index.phphttp://www.umrc.com/umrc/index.phphttp://www.umrc.com/umrc/index.phphttp://www.drmm.org/http://www.drmm.org/http://www.greenmaven.com/http://www.greenmaven.com/http://www.scarabclub.org/http://www.scarabclub.org/http://www.urbanfarming.org/http://www.urbanfarming.org/http://www.urbanfarming.org/http://www.cskdetroit.org/EWG/index.cfmhttp://www.cskdetroit.org/EWG/index.cfmhttp://www.cskdetroit.org/EWG/index.cfmhttp://www.printing.org/node/5427http://www.printing.org/node/5427http://www.homerepairservices.org/http://www.homerepairservices.org/http://www.homerepairservices.org/http://www.homerepairservices.org/http://www.printing.org/node/5427http://www.cskdetroit.org/EWG/index.cfmhttp://www.urbanfarming.org/http://www.scarabclub.org/http://www.greenmaven.com/http://www.drmm.org/http://www.umrc.com/umrc/index.phphttp://ardentcause.com/http://www.goodwilldetroit.org/http://www.new.org/
  • 7/30/2019 Building Sustainability_Earned Income for Nonprofit Org

    3/4

    Building Sustainability: Earned Income for Your Nonprofit?by Rosemary Bayer and Lee Gorman October, 2010

    Copyright 2010 NEW (Nonprofit Enterprise at Work Inc.), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization

    Page 3

    In this short space, we cannot delve into the details of building an earned income stream within yourorganization*, so we provide just this high level outline:

    Bring together your organizational capabilities, mission and vision.

    (You have done these over the course of our series!) Have a strategy in place and the means to support building this new initiative.

    Start with a few workable ideas.

    Brainstorm around your mission, what you are good at and what resources do you bring to bear.

    Who wants or needs that (e.g. if you have people who can knock things down, maybe a demo or

    salvage service)?

    Would they pay, and what would competition look like?

    Is there potential for collaboration?

    What revenue could this bring, and what would your costs be AND does the first minus the

    second come up with a positive number? If not, go back to the workable ideas and try again.

    (If this seems like a mini business plan bingo!)

    Now, communication

    Take your short list of ideas and start socializing this aroundyour organization. Get the Board into the conversation. Therecould be significant resistance this can be a big change.

    Use the list of drivers and benefits to identify the things thatmatter most to your organization and Board, and help themunderstand how this can build long-term sustainability.

    Think about a change management initiative.

    Once you have buy-in, treat this like the other strategic or operational programs we've discussed in pastarticles manage the process and COMMUNICATE!

    Here are a few gotcha's to watch for:

    Managing the business can take time and can cause distraction

    Have the right business skills: managing costs and cash flow, risk of revenue loss, getting value

    from technology and infrastructure investments, marketing and business development

    Protect your IRS status by watching legalities and taxes

    Stay true to yourself- watch for mission drift

    For many nonprofits, earned income is a great way to become self-reliant, build long-term sustainability,increase effectiveness and even create more jobs!

    See you next month for the very last article in the series!Lee and Rosemary

  • 7/30/2019 Building Sustainability_Earned Income for Nonprofit Org

    4/4

    Building Sustainability: Earned Income for Your Nonprofit?by Rosemary Bayer and Lee Gorman October, 2010

    Copyright 2010 NEW (Nonprofit Enterprise at Work Inc.), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization

    Page 4

    Rosemary Bayer is Chief Inspiration Officer for ardentCause, L3C, a company dedicated to helping nonprofits

    increase capacity through operational performance improvement and the adroit use of technology. She has 25 years

    in the Information Technology industry, and excels at inspiring varied groups of people to pursue a common vision, aswell as problem-solving and inventing. Experienced in both for-profit and not-for-profit ventures, she was a founder of

    the nonprofit Michigan Council of Women in Technology (now 650-plus members) and founder and president of the

    MCWT Foundation.

    Lee Gorman,the founder of Barton Consulting Services, LLC, is an insightful, results-oriented executive with over 25

    years of diverse experience in strategic planning, product planning, implementation and leadership. She has

    particular expertise in assisting organizations to understand and articulate their missions, visions, and values

    statements, and then to develop specific goals and strategic priorities. She has demonstrated this proficiency in

    health care, educational, automotive, and other for-profit and non-profit businesses.