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| Thought Leaders: Philanthropy | ||||
| Out on a Limb
Clara Miller 10/01/2006 |
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Even a talented staff, compelling social mission and strong support are no guarantee of success for a nonprofit. Consider the case of the Milwaukee Public Museum, which went broke in 2005.
The increasingly common spectacle of a nonprofit flameout like that of the Milwaukee Public Museum is at one end of the spectrum. At the other end are thousands of cash-starved nonprofits quietly withering and even dying with little or no fanfare. As different as they may seem at first blush, both extremes illustrate the same point: It is a devilishly difficult balancing act that allows nonprofit managers to maintain quality and service levels while operating a business that the commercial sector will not and cannot take on. Always delicate, that balance is virtually impossible to strike in the absence of accurate financial information that can be readily understood by management, board and funders alike. Getting such information is often complicated. Most executives in the nonprofit world are focused on mission—not on capital structure, revenue strategy, lines of business analysis or cash flow. Nonprofit accounting itself tends to obscure rather than clarify. Board members are often awash in extensive spreadsheets and unfamiliar financial terms. Of the museum debacle, an auditor for Milwaukee County told The New York Times: "A lot of information they were getting was modified, adjusted, confusing. The weekly financial reports . . . were 80 columns wide, but the three numbers you’d need to really get the picture weren’t there."
Capital Clues The symptoms of undercapitalization found most frequently in our reviews include:
These are do-or-die days for America’s nonprofits. Even the best and most high-minded organization operates in a state of uncertainty, teetering on the knife’s edge of success or failure. But nonprofits increasingly understand there is such a thing as a nonprofit business, with its own rules and dynamics. The growing acceptance of that reality is good news for the rest of us. We get to live in a world of hardier nonprofits that can grow faster, survive longer and use dollars more efficiently to accomplish the good works that make our communities better places to live. Art by Matt Mahurin.
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