There's lots of talk out there about how to tell a non-profit performer from a pretender. The lack of transparency and accountability in this $1.5 trillion-dollar sector – 10 percent of our economy – has reached crisis proportions.
Truly understanding the performance of any organization, whether for- or non-profit, requires close and careful examination. While publicly traded companies publish quarterly financials and answer to hordes of inquisitive investors and analysts, non-profits undergo pretty much zero independent professional scrutiny beyond annual audits.
Witness the piece in the Tampa Bay Times', "America's Worst Charities," that shows how orgs with trust-inspiring names like "The Cancer Fund of America" really are scams that bilk people out of millions. And now, Pro Publica has exposed the brazen lies of the Red Cross.
When even venerable charities like the Red Cross are scamming their donors, whom can you trust?
Non-profit catalogues like Charity Navigator and GuideStar have official-looking ranking systems, but they only look at stuff that's easy to measure with a computer. And some of the things they measure, like "overhead," are misleading measures of performance. There are even Yelp-style communities for reviewing orgs. But these are just a scrum of opinion. In all of these models, you can drive a truck through the holes in the methodology.
There are a couple of good ranking systems that use more robust methods: GiveWell and the Social Impact 100. There's much to be learned by exploring these two fine efforts, however both of them examine only a tiny slice of the non-profit industry. We need a useful lens for looking at any organization, especially those we already know and want to help.
Here are 10 ways to get you started:
1. People
The best orgs attract and keep top talent with competitive salaries and a happy, supportive culture. It's a destructive myth that non-profit staff should martyr themselves, but most orgs still use martyrdom as a centerpiece in their HR polices.
Ask your org for its pay scales and turnover statistics. Those shouldn't be confidential – what are they hiding? And read the staff bios. Are they the best and brightest?
2. Social Return on Investment (SROI)
The best non-profits don't beg for money. They proclaim their SROI:
- Exactly who or what they change
- What the changes actually are
- Proof the changes are actually happening
- Measures of other major influences
- Percentage of the problem they are solving – no long stories, no emotionally manipulative appeals – just crisp, concise, comprehensive value statements
Ask your favorite charity for a one-page, fact-based account for these.
3. Business Plan
The org has a concise, comprehensive, compelling business plan built around its SROI – with aspirational goals that are significant against the size of the problem; milestones; key performance indicators; and a detailed, three- to five-year financial projection.
Ask the org for their internal plans – not their external brochures.
4. Dashboard
The org then boils its business plan down to a one-page dashboard with key performance indicators around program quantity and quality, financial health and revenue metrics. A dashboard with these elements is a sign of the best run operations. Download Tableau Public for the state of the art tool. It's awesome and free.
Ask the org for its dashboard.
5. Revenue
The org can comfortably forecast how much revenue it expects in the next 12 months, and updates this pipeline every two weeks. And the org has effectively explored all the revenue domains: individuals, foundations, corporations, government agencies and earned income.
Ask the org for its pipeline, its three- to five-year financial projection, and its unique strategies for raising money from all five revenue domains – individuals, foundations, corporations, agencies and earned income. Oh, and make sure it doesn't lean heavily on bad strategy: auctions, galas, bake sales, etc.
6. Financial Controls
The best orgs readily will share their financials (balance sheet, profit and loss, budget) in an easy-to-read format. Top performers have a 12-month, month-over-month budget projection that looks at income and expense every 30 days, and makes sure there is at least six months in cash in the bank.
Ask for your org's detailed financial statements, a summary of their financial reporting system and the management letter from the last audit.
7. Board
Are there at least three to four people on the board with serious chops in business, finance or accounting? Proper governance demands that skilled, experienced, high-integrity, focused business leaders spend time supervising and supporting the staff. It's not the only skill set required (look to BoardSource for a complete overview), but too many non-profit boards are comprised of folks who don't know what to look for.
Ask your org for the detailed business qualifications of its board members – the size and complexity of the companies they have managed in the past and evidence of their past managerial successes.
8. Relationships
Send a typical charity $100, and you will get a thank you letter. And then a stream of appeals for more money. But the best orgs understand that we're all people who thrive in authentic relationships. So they take the time to explain what they did with the money. Maybe they’ll ask you what motivated you to give or provide ways you can get personally involved with a community of like-minded supporters. They might even invite you to a party to celebrate the small wins.
Ask your org how it engages its partners and supporters. Better yet, give $100 and watch what happens.
9. Growth
Just like the best businesses, the best non-profits are growing. Because they have all the performance pieces described above, they're solving problems and raising money, and they are growing 10 percent, 20 percent, 30 percent a year, or more.
Ask your organization for its annual budget going back at least five years. Are they growing or are they flat lined?
10. Joy
The work of the best non-profits is suffused with joy. The lucky folks who get to work with and for high-performing non-profits aren't working – they are living out their values. There's nothing better than being part of an organization that changes the world for the better.
Pay a visit, volunteer, talk with the staff and those whom they serve – the joy should be obvious.
These points are meant to help you engage in a robust, effective, supportive manner. If you don't get clear answers, encourage the org to be more accountable and transparent. If you can help them, please do.
Donald Summers, founder and managing director of Altruist Partners LLC, is a speaker, author, social entrepreneur and management consultant with a long track record of catalyzing dramatic gains in impact, growth and performance. His clients influence state, federal and international laws and regulations, and are regularly featured in major media outlets such as The New York Times and "60 Minutes." In addition, his essays, articles and commentary have been published by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Chronicle of Higher Education and Harvard Magazine.