Social Currency

Summer is a great time to step back from day-to-day activities and think about the big picture for your organization. We've assembled some fresh, practical resources to help:   
   
Obtaining a Loan or Line of Credit  
If you missed last month's web chat with NFF's Nima Krodel and Barbara Libove, you can replay the conversation here and--as we promised!--see answers to the questions we couldn't get to during the live event. Of course, if you're getting ready to apply for a loan, whether from NFF or another lender, you will likely find our webinar "Preparing your organization to apply for a loan" extremely helpful. And as always, for some of the more obscure language that arises during the process, you can always visit our glossary of nonprofit finance terms.     

Is Your Nonprofit Three Months from Disaster?   
Alice Antonelli and Rodney Christopher provided expert advice in a web chat with our friends at the Foundation Center on how to build and maintain operating reserves. You can replay that conversation here. Just to whet your appetite:  Within the first two minutes, Rodney says "I have something controversial to say..." Click here to find out what that is!    

Know Your Strengths and Weaknesses   
How about a simple worksheet to help you review your nonprofit's financial fitness? If you’re a regular reader of Social Currency, you might already have used this handy tool for examining the six core areas of nonprofit finance. As with many fitness programs, it's all about the core!  Click here to download the worksheet.    

Financial SCAN  
Everything checks out on the Strengths and Weaknesses worksheet? Step up to the Financial SCAN! This new tool--produced in partnership with GuideStar--focuses like a laser on your organization's finances, gathering your core metrics into easy-to-use trend charts and comparing them with peer organizations. Learn more about it here, and watch an engaging walk-through of this innovative diagnostic here.      

Thinking about how to grow?  Change Capital in the New York Times   
We're big fans of the Fixes column in the New York Times' Opinionator blog, and a couple of weeks ago, they wrote up a really nice description of the work of NFF Capital Partners around the idea of Philanthropic Equity or Change Capital. Click here to read "For Ambitious Nonprofits, Capital To Grow." Fixes also mentioned us in a column on Social Impact Bonds-a fascinating idea we've been exploring at our Payforsuccess.org learning hub. We're obsessed with getting organizations the capital they need to grow and thrive, one way or another!      

One final tool
Keep in touch!  You can sign up here to have new posts to Social Currency sent automatically to your e-mail address, and if you’re interested in hearing more from us on a variety of topics, visit our Contact Us page and sign up for our e-mail list. 

As always, let us know if you have any questions!

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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