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| News Brief: Nonprofit Trends |
New Year, New Trends
12/15/2006
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Nonprofit Finance Fund outlines four developments to watch in
2007.
The new year is rapidly approaching, but quicker still is the
march of predictions and prognostications of the trends we should expect to
emerge in the market once 2007 begins. According to Clara Miller, president and
CEO of the Nonprofit Finance Fund, the nonprofit world will be one sector
particularly disposed to new developments, as hundreds of both large and small
philanthropies grapple with questions that will determine whether their
organizations will thrive—or struggle to survive—in 2007 and beyond. At a
conference held in early December in New York, Miller outlined four nonprofit
world trends to watch in 2007. They are: - The “Buffett effect” will grow. Pointing to Warren Buffett’s partnership
with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation as the lodestar, Miller predicts
that a greater number of wealthy donors will focus on pooling their capital for
nonprofits, instead of fragmenting their resources. Referring to this practice
as “leverage/collective funding,” Miller stated that, “this [trend] reflects an
understanding that the available funding for nonprofits is small—relative to the
size of the problems that organizations are working to solve.”
- Even more short-term thinking will be applied to the long-term nonprofit
world. Miller cited this development from 2006 as one that shows no sign of
tapering off in 2007—and one that does not particularly lend itself to the
nonprofit world. “We will see an unfortunate movement to more short-term funding
requiring short-term measurable results from nonprofits that are dealing with
complex long-term problems,” she said.
- Wider recognition that there is a business side to nonprofits. “There is
an understanding taking root that nonprofits need comprehensive funding, which
includes infrastructure, replacement and organizational growth needs,” Miller
said. She added that these three needs often go unnoticed by the practice of
restricted funding, which, if it continues, will be a major obstacle to the
financial stability of nonprofits in the future.
- Funding decisions less influenced by the portion of funds devoted to
overhead. Miller stressed that there is no magic equation for determining
the appropriate level of overhead required for nonprofits to operate
efficiently. “Different services provided by different nonprofits require
differing levels of infrastructure and administrative support,” she concluded.
—Elizabeth Ritter
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