Social Currency

Attendance at the TCG Fall Forum on Governance is comprised of primarily executive directors and board members, with a sprinkling of representation from artists and staff members from the nonprofit theater world.  So, after a day of terrific conversations, it was with great pleasure that I gathered a handful of them together for a panel discussion: “So You Have a Deficit, Now What?”  What followed was a refreshingly frank discussion punctuated with practical lessons applicable to the work of any nonprofit administrator: 

Preliminaries
We began with a few general concepts:

  • Talk of deficits demands a consideration of assets, but some valuable assets don’t appear on a balance sheet.   Assets can also include intangibles such as:  audiences, knowledge, staff members, a board of directors, openness to change, technological tools and savvy, diversity of background and age among your staff, board and stakeholders, civic and business partners, your “brand”, organizational self awareness, and, critically, when seeking to overcome deficits, knowing your impact. 
  • When considering “health” metrics at NFF, we think in terms of “months of cash” on an Unrestricted Liquid Net Assets (ULNA) basis.  If you strip away all of the buildings, property, equipment, temporarily restricted, and permanently restricted items from your Net Assets, how much cash is left for operations?  It can vary, but a rough starting point for an ideal is a 3 month cash/ULNA reserve.  
  • Deficits can be “financed” through a variety of means including: accounts payable, mortgage debt, drawing on reserves, foregone wages, employee furloughs, and over-extended lines of credit.  It can be difficult to ascertain whether an organization is operating at a deficit, and structural operating deficits can be masked by a period of operating at sub-par capacity levels in order to keep expenses in-line. This will not be sustainable.

Managing Costs and Revenue

Tracy E. Long, General Manager of Adirondack Theatre Festival started off the panel by describing an initiative to overcome a $29,000 shortfall on a prior year’s performance, an 8% deficit on the annual budget.  While the scale may seem relatively small, the deficit posed a significant challenge to their cash flow and was an ongoing concern.  Long took on the deficit by addressing both revenue and costs: 

Revenue side

  • Increase ticket revenue on the margin by raising ticket prices by $3 each.
  • Develop theater projects with partners to share costs but generate new and increased revenue.
  • Respond to board member interest in hosting a “Brewfest” with board member spouses and another nonprofit to generate fundraising revenue. 

Cost Side

  • Decrease rehearsal periods for plays that could still be produced effectively with shorter advance time,.
  • Change the design on printed materials to result in lower printing costs.
  • Cut the full-time production manager and move to a “variable” staffing method – hiring as needed for theater tech and sharing the management tasks among the remaining staff.

Accumulated vs. Structural Deficits
Michael Gennaro, Executive Director, Trinity Repertory Company, began by making two important points:

  • Even well managed companies are beginning to fail.
  • Accumulated deficits and structural deficits are different and managing them requires different strategies. 

Michael drew from his experience with the Pennsylvania Ballet as his first example.  When he went there he found an accumulated deficit of $2 million on a $6 million operating budget.  In that instance Michael suggests the first step is to analyze what makes up the debt you are inheriting and evaluate any creative strategies you can employ to get rid of it.  At the Pennsylvania Ballet, the debt was almost completely financed through accounts payable, so Michael negotiated a “work-out” with the vendors to pay a percentage on the dollar of outstanding bills and thus retire the deficit.

In his current tenure as the Executive Director at Trinity Rep, he inherited a more challenging scenario:  Three separate lines of credit were maxed out or frozen, and the building required an expensive update to meet fire code standards.  Together, they amounted to more than $3 million dollars of accumulated deficit with the cost of deferred upgrades to the building generating a structural deficit.  In this instance he took the following steps:

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Editor's Note: This post originally appeared November 4th, 2011 on NFF's Money and Mission blog at the Chronicle of Philanthropy. 

The economy’s slow recovery has prompted many nonprofit leaders to wonder how to prepare for what could be an even tougher and longer road out of the recession than anybody expected. While concerns about the possibility of a double-dip recession come and go, it is probably wise to follow the old adage to prepare for the worst and hope for the best.

Here’s what it means to prepare:

Shore up the revenue and find your weak spots

Don’t assume that because you have always received a grant from a particular donor that you will continue to receive one next year.  Reach out to your longtime grant makers, arm them today with real information about the value of your work. Do it now even if your annual report is not due until December. Look for reasons to remind them why your work—and hence their money—is essential.

Listen and try to understand how your grant makers are thinking about this crisis; it affects them, too. Virtually every foundation has gone through a reduction of sorts. Sharing is helpful and builds different kinds of bonds.

Seek out information that can be helpful, which means asking your grant makers and your clients for constructive feedback.

If you are not measuring your results, start now. Don’t worry about being perfect or starting a rigorous 10-year longitudinal study. Push yourself to move beyond the anecdote. Jim Collins, the author of Good to Great and other books, had it right:  “It doesn’t really matter whether you can quantify your results. What matters is that you rigorously assemble evidence—quantitative or qualitative—to track your progress. If the evidence is primarily qualitative, think like a trial lawyer assembling the combined body of evidence. If the evidence is primarily quantitative, then think of yourself as a laboratory scientist assembling and assessing the data. … What matters is not finding the perfect indicator but settling upon a consistent and intelligent method of assessing your output results and then tracking your trajectory with rigor.”

Take advantage of networks you have but don’t use.

Think broadly about your networks. Look at your competitors as comrades-in-arms and find ways to complement and enhance your work through partnership. Don’t just say you’ll collaborate because you’re supposed to.

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Organizations that can clearly and accurately articulate their financial story and resource needs are better positioned to make a strong case for support. In both good times and bad, your stakeholders will be more engaged if you can provide a data-driven assessment that links your nonprofit’s financial health to its impact and accomplishments. This can inform strategic planning and guide leadership in making mission driven, financially sound decisions.

We've created a worksheet divided into six core areas of nonprofit finance, described in detail in the document available as a pdf here or embedded below:

  1. RevenueNonprofit Finance Fund's Enterprise Platform
  2. Expenses
  3. Probability and Savings
  4. Health of the Balance Sheet
  5. Liquidity
  6. Financial Planning

Use the worksheet to capture a snapshot of your nonprofit’s strengths and weaknesses. Together, these areas help you balance the three critical components essential to your organization’s long-term viability: Mission, Capacity, and Capital.  

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