Community Wealth Ventures
13Feb/12

Changing the Conversation

As Amy Celep noted in an earlier post, “changing the conversation” can be a powerful tool toward creating the change we want to see in the world. 

I was reminded of the validity of Amy’s claim during a recent lunch meeting with Jim Down, a wonderful strategic thinker who led Mercer Management Consulting until retiring at age 50. Since then he has played a critical role in the nonprofit sector, advising organizations ranging from OxFam to the Centers for Disease Control.  Jim is on the board of OxFam and I asked him what he thought their most impressive accomplishment was so far. Read More & Contribute Your Ideas...

26Jan/12

Dear Social Sector: Did you hear the President call us to action?

In the words spoken and unspoken during President Obama’s State of the Union address, I heard three strong calls to action for the social sector.

1. Put our differences aside in pursuit of the mission.

In his speech, President Obama pointed to the military’s ability to put aside differences and focus on the mission.  On many military missions, it’s life or death for those involved. For much of our work in the social sector it’s life or death, too. While there are some bright spots of organizations coming together in pursuit of a common agenda, we still have a long way to go.

The call to action for all of us, social sector or not, is to do the hard, personal work that brings our individual, unconscious biases and fears into consciousness so we can move beyond them and join with others to accomplish our missions.  As I explored in my post earlier this week, those who have successfully created big, transformative social change have been skilled at finding common ground among unlikely partners. Read More & Contribute Your Ideas...

24Jan/12

Seeing and Seeking Common Ground in the New Year

As I reflect upon my recent trip to Turkey, where I celebrated the New Year with family, I'm reminded that, at the most basic level, we are all the same.  In so many ways, Turkey is a country marked by stark contrasts. The most visible manifestation of this is the dress of the women: everywhere you go you can find Muslim women fully covered from head to toe sitting side-by-side with Turkish women wearing miniskirts. Yet, as you interact with these women, you find they fundamentally want the same things for themselves and their families: health, happiness, safety, and love. Read More & Contribute Your Ideas...

11Jan/12

New Year’s Resolutions: Our hopes for the social sector in 2012

Coming off of a restful and happy holiday season, the CWV team has spent the last few days contemplating what lies ahead in 2012. Inspired by the resolutions of other nonprofit leaders, such as those in a recent Chronicle of Philanthropy article, we decided to put together our own New Year’s resolutions for the social sector in 2012. Overall these resolutions represent our hopes for a social sector that is more outcomes-oriented, collaborative, innovative and opportunistic.

2012 Resolutions for the Social Sector:

  1. Funders make decisions based on outcomes over relationships.
  2. Nonprofits increasingly consolidate and partner with each other to achieve greater community outcomes.
  3. Organizations value community-wide impact more than their individual outputs.
  4. Leaders set time aside to stop to think about their long-term goals, and consider how their daily actions contribute to those goals.
  5. Nonprofits take more control of their financial future and think boldly about new revenue streams such as earned income.
  6. The social sector achieves greater integration with the public and private sector, which leads to better sharing of capital, skills, and understanding of community needs.

We are excited about the possibilities for 2012 and our team is eager to do its part to make these resolutions a reality.

What are your resolutions for the social sector this year?

22Dec/11

Before Fundraising, Focus on the Case for Evaluation

This is the third in a three part series of posts exploring the key ingredients for sustaining an organization’s evaluation capacity.

We underscored in our last post the centrality of culture and leadership in building an organization’s evaluation capacity. But sustaining evaluation capacity also depends on an organization’s ability to sell the value of their evaluation efforts to its stakeholders.

Effective evaluation depends on the engagement of numerous key stakeholders: you need staff to collect and use data; you need funders to support the costs of evaluation; and you may depend on community partners to collect and share their data that affects your outcomes.  Unfortunately, a strong evaluation system alone does not automatically translate into greater support from these stakeholders. In particular, in our assessment of the funding environment for evaluation, we have learned that funders differ significantly in their views of what evaluation means, the degree to which it is valuable, and what it should cost. Read More & Contribute Your Ideas...

16Dec/11

Sustain Your Evaluation Capacity, Sustain Your Impact

This is the first in a three part series of posts that will explore the key ingredients for sustaining an organization’s evaluation capacity.

As a part of our work studying transformational initiatives, we recently had an opportunity to speak with Geoffrey Canada, President and CEO of the Harlem Children’s Zone (HCZ), about his organization’s efforts to break the cycle of poverty in Harlem.

 

We were eager to learn how HCZ has managed to adapt, grow, and ultimately sustain its programs over the long term. There have undoubtedly been many keys to HCZ’s success, but Geoffrey was quick to stress one factor: Using data to drive impact is critical to achieving HCZ’s short-term and long-term goals. Read More & Contribute Your Ideas...

6Dec/11

Finding Courage in Nonprofit Leadership: Center for Families and Children

Every single day the CWV staff is inspired by the courage of our clients. The CWV team strives to help nonprofit and foundation leaders make decisions that are logical, strategic and based in data, but building solutions to solve social problems is not an exact science.  Consequently, the most successful social sector leaders are able to take confident steps forward within a forest of ambiguity.  And that takes courage.

Earlier this month I explored the courage of Cuyahoga Valley National Park Association (CVNPA). Today, I want to share the story of the Center for Families and Children, a large provider of quality family services throughout the Cleveland area with a budget of about $34M. Read More & Contribute Your Ideas...

23Nov/11

Why We’ll be Thinking of our Clients this Thanksgiving

Later this week, as I sit down to Thanksgiving dinner with my family, I will do so with a new perspective on the things I have for which I'm grateful.  That’s because I recently had the opportunity to work with the inspiring folks at Miriam’s Kitchen.

Miriam’s Kitchen has been serving homeless men and women in Washington D.C. since 1983, but recently recast its work by putting forth a bold new vision for the organization: ending chronic homelessness in Washington, D.C. This type of compelling articulation of how the world will look different is one of the common elements we have uncovered in our research on social transformation. Read More & Contribute Your Ideas...

21Nov/11

Learnings from a Community of Social Problem Eradicators

The Gates Foundation recently hosted a forum in Seattle with 300 scientists from around the world to release the latest information about its campaign to eradicate malariaThe lessons this community is learning and documenting during their fight to end malaria have profound takeaways for others who are waging similarly ambitious efforts to solve social problems at the scale they exist. Read More & Contribute Your Ideas...

3Nov/11

A foundation trustee, a young nonprofit ED, and a lobbyist walk into a hotel…: 10 Provocative Thoughts from IS (Part I)

2012 Independent Sector Conference

Our country is shaken. Our sector is anxious. Disparity is growing. Apathy is the norm. And we’re grasping for a new social compact.

It’s a tough time to be working in the nonprofit and philanthropic community.  It’s also a thrilling time. More than ever, we need to think creatively, build innovative solutions to social problems, and grow, grow, grow what’s working.  This tension between fear and fervor catapulted throughout the walls of this year’s Independent Sector conference, making for an exhilarating, poignant and provoking gathering of our nation’s top social sector thinkers and doers.

The following ideas stuck most vividly in my head.  I’ve included 5 below and will include 5 more in another post next week:

1. Don’t collaborate for the sake of collaboration. Don’t collaborate just because the New York Times wrote an article about “Collective Impact.” Collaborate when the act of collaboration is a necessary ingredient in the creation of the intended results. All too often funders and grantees alike try to fit their work into the buzzword framework of the day. But frameworks by themselves do not create or guarantee positive social change.  Collaboration is costly – it nearly always takes more time, energy, and money than originally planned.  If the cost is $1+$1=$2.50, the social impact better be at least 1+1=2.75. Read More & Contribute Your Ideas...