This session was led by Rachayita Shah and Ariane Hoy at the Bonner Fall Directors Meeting. This session previewed and gained feedback on aspects of the series designed to help upper class students (specifically juniors) understand the sectors (especially nonprofit) and how they might engage in building the capacity of an organization. This series also focuses on student career development, helping them identify future pathways.
2. 3rd Year Spring - Curriculum
1. Systems View 2. Capacity Building Framework
3. Fundraising 4. A Reason for Being
3. Bingo
Has worked in a for-
proďŹt company (anything
countsâŚstore, bank,
restaurantâŚ)
Has developed a
program for a nonproďŹt
Has a family member
that works in a
governmental
organization
Can name an example of
a public-private
partnership
Has written a grant for a
nonproďŹt
Has raised money for a
cause
Has bought a product
from a socially
responsible company
Has worked on a social
media campaign for a
nonproďŹt
Knows what a â¨
501(c)4 is
5. NonproďŹt Sector
Purpose: providing services and programs around a particular
social mission, intended to beneďŹt people and communities.
Voluntary/independent/charitable/
community or 3rd sector
Not under direct government
control, not for proďŹt
501(c)3 = exempt from federal
income taxes
E.g. Community Soup Kitchen, Habitat
for Humanity
501(c)4 = nonproďŹt that also
carries out lobbying or policy work
E.g. The American Civil Liberties Union,
RESULTS
Source: USC Price School of Public Policy, 2018
6. Why Work in NonproďŹt Sector?
The U.S. nonproďŹt sector workforce ranks third in size among the
18 major U.S. industries, behind only retail trade and
manufacturing. One in 10 employees work for a nonproďŹt.
There are more than 1.6 million nonproďŹt organizations in the U.S. This
includes public charities, private foundations, chambers of commerce,
fraternal organizations and civic leagues, etc.
National Center for Charitable Statistics (NCCS), 2018
Guidestar, 2018
9. What is Capacity Building?
An organizationâs capacity to
Advance its mission . . .
To grow, sustain, and maintain
quality of their programs/services
10. Community Partners Assessment
⢠How could community partnersâ
needs be met through
⢠What kinds of projects could your
students get involved in to build
the capacity of their service sites?
⢠Will students be ready to take on
these projects in their 3rd & 4th
years?
Direct Service
Direct Service
+
Service Leadership
Direct Service
+
Service Leadership
+
Capacity Building
11. Connecting the Dots
Direct Service Direct Service
+
Service
Leadership
Direct Service
+
Service
Leadership
+
Capacity
Building
13. Why Frameworks?
1.
IUPUI
Indiana University -
Purdue University -
Indianapolis
2.
Marguerite Casey
Foundation
3.
Bonner
Foundation
What to Assess?
How to Assess
&
Contribute?
From Where to Begin the
Conversation?
15. 1: Aspirations
⢠Does the organization have a clearly written mission, explaining
the purpose of its existence?
⢠Do all members of the organization have a clear understanding
of the mission?
CWS Mission
16. 2: Strategies
Alignment
Programs
Org.
Mission
Short-term & Long-term Goals
Example
UN - Sustainable Dev. Goals
Does the organization have strategies for
new program development, program growth,
and funding model?
Do the programs align
with the organizational mission?
17. Example: Strategies
Alignment
Org.
Mission
Programs
Boys & Girls Club (Spring Hill) Mission
⢠To inspire and enable young people
⢠Especially from disadvantaged
circumstances
⢠To realize their full potential as
⢠productive, responsible, and caring
citizens
Kilometer Kids
⢠Promote a healthy &
active lifestyle
⢠Fun Run
⢠Obstacle Course
⢠Healthy & Tasty
Dish
18. 3. Organizational Skills
Does the organization have
Solid Financial Plans?
- Fundraising
- Grant Writing
Does the organization have well-developed
system to evaluate programs &
performance?
- Rubric
- Criteria
- Surveys
Does the organization have
marketing plans to promote
programs & services?
- Email Marketing
- Social Media Campaigns
- Videos & Websites
19. Example: Organizational Skills
Spring Hill Community GardenStetson Center for Community Engagement
Direct
Service
Capacity Building
⢠Fundraising
⢠Marketing
⢠Identifying & Sustaining
Partnerships
20. 4: Human Resources
Does the organization reďŹect diversity
in terms of:
Talents
Experience
Field of Practice
- Academia
- Corporate
- Government
Does the organization have all its
critical positions ďŹlled without
turnover or attendance issues?
Staff
Board Members
Volunteers
21. Case Study 1
Rubicorn is a California-based organization whose mission is to help people, facing homelessness, economic
instability, or disability with achieving self-sufďŹciency. Its programs range from housing and job-training to
mental health care and money management.
Rubicon also owns three social-purpose businesses - a bakery, a landscaping service, and a home care business
for individuals with disabilities and the elderly - that employ adults with disability or low income.
Rubicon has adopted an innovative approach to human resources to run these businesses successfully. It is crucial
for Rubiconâs social enterprises to compete in the open market place successfully, so the other programs can be
supported. As a consequence, Rubicon places a great value on ensuring that it hires professional staff with
relevant business skills and experience - MBAs and the like. It compensates these people well above the standard
nonproďŹt rate, with its human resources department conducting regular salary surveys of comparable jobs in the
area. Additionally, it gives its managers a great deal of autonomy to run their own departments and it carefully
monitors performance.
Processing Questions:
â˘What type of challenge did this organization face in context of capacity building framework?
â˘How did they identify the challenge?
â˘What kinds of approaches did they take to address that challenge?
â˘How successful were these approaches in meeting the goals / addressing the challenges?
â˘Do you think itâs important to have a framework in mind, while implementing organizational capacity building
initiatives? Why?
â˘How are these case studies relevant for you as Bonners?
22. 5: Systems & Infrastructure
Does the organization have physical &
technical
infrastructure to
document and disseminate
information?
Does the organization make decisions
on ad hoc basis or involve clear
processes and broad participation?
23. Case Study 2
Robert Enterprise Development Fund supported Rubicon with systems initiative: a social impact
tracking system. This system would allow Rubicon to quantify how well it was delivering in terms of
changing lives. The central feature of Rubiconâs measurement system was database to track client ďŹows
and outcomes. Before beginning to develop the software to manage this database, teams mapped the
client ďŹow through the Rubicon system and deďŹned the key indicators that the database would track.
The management consistently communicated about the system with the staff, so they all clearly
understood the purpose behind learning and managing a new software program. Once the system
was ready, Rubicon invested signiďŹcant time training its staff in running the system and securing
organizational buy-in to its value. Similar thought went to testing and actual software development.
The software served the purpose and Rubicon could clearly demonstrate the impact it had made in the
community by serving more people (800 in 1994 to 4,000 in 2000). Participants reported increase in
their income and lifestyle (housing) and decreased dependence on public assistance.
Processing Questions:
â˘What type of challenge did this organization face in context of capacity building framework?
â˘How did they identify the challenge?
â˘What kinds of approaches did they take to address that challenge?
â˘How successful were these approaches in meeting the goals / addressing the challenges?
â˘Do you think itâs important to have a framework in mind, while implementing organizational capacity
building initiatives? Why?
â˘How are these case studies relevant for you as Bonners?
24. 6: Organizational Structure
Board governance, individual job design
Do
organizational
entities complement
each other?
Do all members
have clearly deďŹned
roles?
Do all members
have opportunities to
take initiatives?
25. 7: Culture
Does the organization have
shared Values (e.g. performance)?
Are the shared values reďŹected in
hiring and promotion practices?
Does the organization have
common set of references?
E.g. Traditions, language, symbols,
logos to drive performance
Bonner
Common Set of
References
???
Bonner Values
???
26. Framework 2: Organizational Capacity
Source: Adapted from Marguerite Casey Foundation
Leadership Capacity
⣠Board Governance: Bylaws
⣠Leadership Vision & Organizationâs Mission
ŕši.e. document analysis study
⣠Clarity of Short-Term & Long-Term Goals
ŕši.e. program evaluation study
Adaptive Capacity
⣠Strategic Planning
⣠Program Growth & Evaluation
ŕši.e., community impact study
⣠Program Development / Modifications
ŕši.e., writing curriculum, developing training, starting new
initiative
⣠Research
ŕši.e., of a policy or a program model
Management Capacity / Human Resources
⣠Management Team
⣠Staff
ŕši.e. retention study, organizational culture study
⣠Volunteer Management
ŕši.e. volunteer recruitment study or manual,
volunteer management handbook
⣠Community Relations
ŕši.e. needs assessment of a local population
Operational Capacity
⣠Financial Management
ŕši.e., business plan
⣠Fundraising
ŕši.e., grant research, grant writing, revenue generation
project
⣠Communications & Marketing
ŕši.e., website, social media platforms, marketing materials
⣠Technology
ŕši.e., computer program
⣠Managing Database
ŕši.e., for clients, for donors, etc.
27. Framework 3: Organizational Capacity
Source: Bonner Foundation
Communication
Volunteer
Program
Dev.
Fundraising Research
28. Considering the frameworks and Bonner categories of Capstone Projects,
where and how could you mobilize students to
make an impact?