Nearly every philanthropist today has heard the refrain: Make it
entrepreneurial. If a benefactor can somehow, someway formulate a business model
for a favorite charity so that it becomes sustainable by earning revenues, the
nonprofit community, peers and the media will hail the donor as a genius, and
the needy will become at least a bit more able to help themselves.
Philanthropist Eddie Phillips has considered the
entrepreneurial model of sustainability, and he likes it. But he thinks it would
be challenging for nonprofits such as the Worldwide Orphans Foundation. In the
past, the organization has held art shows displaying works created by some of
the orphans that founder and pediatrician Jane Aronson has treated. This type of
sideline for-profit venture, like the gift shops attached to nearly every large
museum in the world, can be useful, but too much emphasis on selling can sap the
energy from a charity’s primary mission.
Adlai Wertman’s strategy is decidedly different. He gave up a
Wall Street career to join a nonprofit aimed at helping people at the bottom of
society earn money, so generating income is an important part of his charity’s
overall mission. Chrysalis has an annual budget of about $8 million. Forty
percent of the budget comes from donations, while the other 60 percent is earned
through contracts with local business-improvement districts and companies that
pay Chrysalis to supply staff to sweep streets, prune gardens or remove graffiti
from buildings. Wertman can market his company as one that rehabilitates people;
most Chrysalis workers are formerly homeless, some spent time in prison and all
lack the skills to reenter the labor force without help. But running a
charitable business is "unbelievably hard," Wertman admits. He is forced to
budget for additional staff to compensate for inefficient workers.
Simultaneously, he must compete in pricing and service with for-profit
maintenance contractors. "We go out and sell our customers on participating in a
social mission," he says, "but we’re only going to be hired by our customers if
we have the lowest price and the best services."
He has, however, received a charitable helping hand from Alan Long, president
of the Southern California division of Sotheby’s International Realty and a
Chrysalis board member, who wanted to help ensure the charity’s sustainability.
In 2002, Long devised a program that involved eventually asking the 700 brokers
who worked for him if they would care to donate $95 from each of their
commissions to Chrysalis. The idea took off, and began generating as much as
$100,000 annually. When Long sold his firm, DBL Realtors, to Sotheby’s four
years ago, he set aside $1.6 million for Chrysalis, which it used to buy a
building in Santa Monica. Over the long term, his contribution will save the
nonprofit approximately $120,000 each year in rental or mortgage
payments.
Elizabeth Harris is a staff writer for Worth. Back to Main Article: Perpetual Motion
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