Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

28+ Reasons Start-Up Nonprofits Fail


Why do so many start-up and long-term nonprofits fail?  Most start-up for-profit businesses fail, over 50%. It is no different for nonprofits. In my opinion here are 28+ reasons why a nonprofit will fail. Do you see other reasons why nonprofit groups fail and close their doors? Please add them here for others to learn what it takes to avoid failure and to enhance success. 

1.       It is started or run by a single person
2.       Leadership fails to have an appropriate, adequate and diverse board for overall governance, policy planning and development;
3.       Leadership fails to provide appropriate insurance, ethical and conflict of interest policies 
4.       Leadership fails to assess the market for need or duplication
5.       Leadership fails to develop long-term, meaningful relationships with those who share their passion for the mission, also known as “friendraising”
6.       Leadership does not want or fails to work with others
7.       There is inadequate resource planning and development
8.       Leadership fails to develop a written business plan and plan for succession
9.       Leadership underestimates what it takes financially to start and to operate a nonprofit and to maintain and sustain it; inadequate budgets  
10.   Leadership fails to translate and to evaluate what they are doing into meaningful activities and measurable goals, objectives and outcomes
11.   Leadership fails to assess and keep records of what they do that works and what does not work
12.   The organization lacks transparency in its mission, vision, values and finances
13.   Leadership fails to assess and address risk in its management, goals, objectives, outcomes and activities
14.   Leadership fails to keep and to assess business records and meaningful data
15.   There are inadequate fiscal controls
16.   Leadership fails to keep adequate and full fiscal records
17.   Leadership fails to pay attention to detail in what they are doing
18.   Leadership fails to prepare necessary written best practices, policies, procedures, forms and recordkeeping standards
19.   Leadership does not stay true to facing the need and does not alter programs when needed, inflexible and stubborn leadership
20.   Leadership pursues funding for goals, objectives and activities outside its mission
21.   Leadership fails to be advocates for the need they are addressing
22.   Leadership has inadequate skills to manage a nonprofit and its activities
23.   Leadership fails to provide reports in a timely manner to the board, to funders, to the public, to local, state and federal regulators
24.   Leadership fails to assess and use social media for the mission of the organization 
25.   Leadership fails to stay current on local, state and federal regulations and laws governing nonprofit organizations
26.   Leadership does not provide reports and data as required under contract compliance
27.   Leadership underestimates the amount of mental, physical and spiritual energy needed to start, maintain and sustain a nonprofit, they become exhausted and cannot face “no” when it comes to money or support, they fail to follow through on promises or requirements
28.   Leadership overestimates their own abilities, energy, skills and belief in the mission and they expect others will want to help without telling a clear, honest and meaningful story about the mission; they become exhausted, puzzled or resentful that others do not follow them


I do not consider those nonprofit organizations that succeed in fulfilling their missions and then close their doors or that merge with other groups as failures.


But these 28 reasons do not tell the full story. There are lessons to be learned from experience such as these below. 


Funders want to buy certain results and want to know what results a nonprofit organization offers and what results they can achieve. A nonprofit may offer certain results but can they demonstrate they can achieve them?


In the United States nonprofit world most funding comes from individuals. In 2011 73% of the $290.89 billion in charitable donations came from individuals. 35% of that went to religious organizations. 14% was given to education. Households give 1.9% of their disposable income compared to 0.9% giving by corporations including corporate foundations of pre-tax profits in 2010.


Nonprofits range from sports teams, hospitals, universities, Smithsonian Institute, American Cancer Society to volunteer fire stations, community recreation programs, neighborhood HIV/AIDS programs and so on. There are over 1.4 million tax exempt organizations in U.S.  The American Red Cross is one of the largest and spent more than $3 billion in 2010. Houses of worship, churches, synagogues, mosques and similar groups, do not have to file with the state or the IRS for nonprofit tax exempt status but some do.


Nonprofits reporting annual expenses of $10 million or more accounted for 85% of total spending on charities in 2009. Nonprofits that receive tax deductible donations have many sources of revenue. In 2009 the largest source of revenue, about 76%, was from fees for goods and services, tuition, admission, Medicare, third party contracts, etc. The rest come from government grants, and donations from individuals, corporations and foundations. Health care received 60% of the revenue and had 41% of the assets in 2009 compared to education, public and social benefit and arts, culture and the humanities.


The Independent Sector reports there were over 115,000 private grantmaking foundations in 2010 with total revenue of $43.8 billion and total assets of $582.5 billion listed by the IRS. There were also in excess of 5,000 private operating foundation which rarely give grants..Corporations that provide gifts and grants but not through their foundations are not required to be recognized by the IRS.
http://nccsdataweb.urban.org/PubApps/profile1.php  


The Nonprofit Finance Fund’s Report for 2012 had nonprofit tax exempt organizations respond to its questions about finances and service. Basically most have seen a reduction in income and an increase need for service.


“In this year’s survey, more than 4,500 respondents at nonprofits across the country shared the details of how they are adapting their organizations and finances to economic conditions.  The survey, which was supported for the second year in a row by the Bank of America Charitable Foundation, reveals that while 2011 was a year of significant organizational and programmatic changes, many nonprofits are still facing fundamental challenges that threaten the stability of the sector and the well-being of the people they serve.


Here are the facts: 

·         85% of nonprofits experienced an increase in the demand for services in 2011.
·         This is on top of years of increased demand: previous NFF surveys found that 77% of nonprofits experienced an increase in demand in 2010; 71% experienced an increase in 2009; and 73% experienced an increase in 2008.
·         88% expect an increase in demand for services in 2012.
·         57% have 3 months or less cash-on-hand.
·         87% said their financial outlook won’t get any better in 2012.

But this is just a fraction of what the data show. This year, for the first time we’re enabling you to explore the data yourself. Our NFF Survey Analyzer at survey.nonprofitfinancefund.org allows you to investigate questions that cut across sub-sectors, budget size, and geography. We invite you to share what you discover via e-mail and social media.”
http://nonprofitfinancefund.org/state-of-the-sector-surveys  


Resource development includes but is not limited to dues, grants, fee for service, third party contracts for service, fundraising (aka friendraising), volunteers, equipment gifts, in-kind donations, dinners, golf tournaments, marathons (bike-athons and other –athons), capital and building campaigns, pledges, gifts and annual giving, bequests, endowments, selling products (as with museums for instance), partnering with others on projects or for funding, and more.


Nonprofit organizations are incorporated in states and receive tax exemption from the IRS and possibly from the state for state taxes. The cost for that at a minimum is close to $1.000 for each organization. State laws usually govern how the group is incorporated although the state incorporation papers also have to meet IRS requirements. The IRS has been tightening the process for initial recognition as tax exempt and also for remaining tax exempt. The IRS is making nonprofits more accountable, transparent and more business-like.


Many nonprofits are losing their tax exempt status for failure to file annual reports with IRS for 3 consecutive years, 275,000 in June 2011. http://www.irs.gov/charities/article/0,,id=239696,00.html  


Money and other resources are becoming harder to find and receive. Demand for services has increased. There is a time when the demand far exceeds the ability to serve and nonprofits have to close or merge. Programs such as civil legal services for the poor, the arts, mental health, animal care, community-based groups, and others have felt the financial crunch the past 5 years. They have had to renegotiate grant contracts and reimbursement contracts. They have closed offices, downsized staff or prioritized services.  Some have started for-profit companies to try to help in the revenue earning. They have merged with similar programs or closed their doors.


Programs that have developed partnerships or collaborations, those that have developed an entrepreneurship concept and larger environmental groups are favored by funders. Funders are looking for demonstrable impact from their contributions.

Problems for nonprofits predate the recession. Except for the largest nonprofits many had little more than three months carry-over funding to handle a reduction or loss of donations, a grant or other income. Reduction or loss of funding in 2008-2009 had many scrambling to seek new funding and facing layoffs and closing of offices. I wrote extensively on this at my blog during that time.


Theft and embezzlement in nonprofits may be greater than in government or Wall Street. Gary Snyder, a writer from Detroit, e-mails a monthly factual scandal sheet and has a blog, Nonprofit Imperative, about fraud and embezzlement in nonprofits and government, He is not writing about 5 and 10 cent crimes but crimes involving $100,000s and $1,000,000s. These scandals have made a negative impact on peoples’ trust and on their giving. See http://nonprofitimperative.blogspot.com/2012/04/trustno-controlsfraud.html?spref=tw


In some instances local and regional organizations are suffering in securing donations because of the development of web sites assessing the work of nonprofits. There are three well known sites where anyone can access information about tax exempt organizations. The data available includes the IRS Form 990 filed annually by nonprofits with an annual income of $25,000.00 or more. The IRS features the information at www.irs.gov.


The second site is GuideStar. GuideStar does include all tax exempt organizations. It is struggling to become a place where donors can get up-to-date information and some evaluation of the work performed or not performed by charities. You can access information about nonprofits here –

http://www2.guidestar.org/rxa/news/news-releases/2012/1-26-12-new-nonprofit-reports.aspx?hq_e=el&hq_m=1517278&hq_l=7&hq_v=e08850


The third site is that of Charity Navigator. It does not include all tax exempt organizations. It includes less than 1% of them in fact. In my view this web site has a negative impact for fundraising on those groups not listed. A donor seeking information from CN will be disappointed not finding local or regional groups. That can dissuade a donor giving to those groups. I wrote about the danger of CN several years ago. I am aware of a number of nonprofits that have tried to be included in CN’s listing but were turned down because they did not meet CN’s prerequisites.CN advertises itself as the world’s largest evaluator of charities but it is not. It fails in many ways but is given credence by the news media and the few charities it lists. http://www.charitynavigator.org/


Mergers and partnering on programs and grant applications have played an important role in saving organizations


The role of social media in telling the story, securing, maintaining and interpreting data is vital for the life of nonprofits.


Keys to money: relationships x 3 or more (spheres of influence), and location x 3 or more (they are in the right place, they are the right people to do the work, they have the right tools to do the job) and character of the leaders, matching needs and ability to meet the needs to money and to givers' interest.


Nonprofits that rely heavily on contracts or grants may not have a reasonable reimbursement rate to cover the service and growing excessive reporting requirements. In a number of states where nonprofits have government contracts, reimbursement is running 6-12 months late seriously jeopardizing the health of nonprofit organizations, their cash flow, staff retention and ability to get the job done..


An important element in maintaining and sustaining a nonprofit organization is paying for staff. Most nonprofits with income of $25,000 and $10 million are not paying competitive salaries for line staff. There may be some instances that the CEO is being paid well over $150,000 a year. But the worker bees including the financial people are not paid appropriately in my view. This can result in employees with lower skills or forced turnover because of poor salaries and benefits. Most community-and faith-based health providers, for instance, do not pay their employees the same level as their government or for-profit counterparts. That makes recruiting and retention of top quality employees difficult.  The sector has to face the fact that nonprofit employees are very dedicated and are underpaid. They do not receive a fair reimbursement for travel. But both the nonprofit organization and their employees are caught in a fiscal trap. Claims of exorbitant executive salaries suggests that others are also over paid. It is a false premise but one that affects donations.    


Two recent stories of famous nonprofits either rocked by scandal or by mismanagement show the danger zones in which nonprofits exist.


Greg Mortenson and the charity he founded, Central Asian Institute, to build schools in Afghanistan and Pakistan, have been featured in books including Three Cups of Tea. The stories have been a large inspiration to many. The TV show 60 Minutes has demonstrated that stories may have fabricated.  False accounts in his books, excessive financial benefits, bad financial management, poor recordkeeping and failure of board oversight have given the charity a bad name. Mortenson has been ordered to repay a million dollars by the Attorney General of Montana for allegations of double dipping and other financial mismanagement. The charity’s board is going through a substantial change in leadership.


This story is similar to the Enron scandal which on its own has affected nonprofits requiring greater transparency. The William Aramony and the United Way scandal that resulted in Aramony going to prison in 1995 was fraught with fraud left the sector with difficulties of trust. Fame and the famous are always potential targets, such as Lance Armstrong and his Foundation with allegations of doping. University campuses have been rocked by lying, cheating, child molestation, and infidelity at Ohio State, Penn State, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkansas, all nonprofits or government entities, resulting in firing head coaches and even university presidents. .


The failure of the venerable Hull House in Chicago which was started by Jane Addams in 1889 shocked many. It was the model for social work and community centers including the one I created in Camden NJ in 1963. A report from The Chronicle of Philanthropy suggests the problems already existed when the recession hit with a debt over $2.3 million in 2007. 300 employees were laid off on January 27, 2012. There seems to be more than just failure of the board which had fiscal managers, top attorneys and other professionals available for guidance. They did not challenge the executive director and top management staff who said that nonprofits always live on the fiscal edge – and that is accurate. Most nonprofits, below $10 million annual income, live on the edge. But this time the edge was too close to live on. 

http://philanthropy.com/blogs/against-the-grain/hull-house-collapse-is-a-wake-up-call-for-boards-and-executives/28045?sid=pt&utm_source=pt&utm_medium=en  


On May 3, 2012 The Chronicle of Philanthropy reported that Public/Private Ventures (P/PV announced that it will cease operations at the end of July because of financial issues. P/PV was founded in 1978 and grew to be an influential research and evaluation organization in the nonprofit tax exempt arena. The Chronicle points to two landmark areas for P/PV research, first, Big Brothers, Big Sisters mentoring program and second P/PV’s work on job training for re-entering prisoners to society.  P/PV acknowledges they have had trouble since the downturn of the economy in securing grants to cover operating expenses and to withstand competition. They laid off 21 staffers and revised their pricing plan to reflect true cost but that was not enough to withstand the pressures. It is ironic that as funders seek more evidence-based funding and greater evaluation that the future of one excellent nonprofit organization providing those has resulted in closing for lack of financial support.   


The P/PV board apparently did its job through the difficult assessment. P/PV President Nadya K. Shmavonian reports at their web site –

“P/PV has worked hard for more than a year to chart a new, sustainable path forward. We enjoyed generous core support from several private funders and made difficult staff cuts. But we have recently concluded that changing trends in evaluation, as well as resource constraints among both public and private funders, will not allow us to remain competitive as a small, mission-focused agency. That has led to the decision to cease operations.”

Congress is asking for more accountability for 501 (c) (3) organizations yet individual congress people and others in the election arena start up tax exempt organizations to help get them elected. The case of Citizens United allows for invisible money to run our elections without accountability or transparency. I do not oppose more accountability or transparency for tax exempt groups but I do seek equality of others that are giving nonprofits a false bad image. There are major differences between a 501 (c) (3) and a 501 (c) (4), (5) and (6) when it comes to lobbying and political campaigns. When (4), (5) and (6) organizations produce a scandal it is handled by the media as a nonprofit tax exempt organization without detailing that they are not the same as a (3).

Starting and operating a nonprofit tax exempt organization is a leap of faith. It has to be done smartly, however, not foolishly.  The states and the IRS allow a great deal of latitude to start and operate with some but not many restrictions. There could be more. Just because someone has a good idea does not mean that person can carry out that good idea nor does it prove it is a good idea without data and facts to back it up.

For more about what I mean by the leap of faith and the origin of a nonprofit please see –


That is my assessment of what is happening to the thirds sector, the nonprofit world. I have the utmost regard for those who work in that sector and I miss working there every day.

Do you see other reasons why nonprofit groups fail and close their doors? Please add them here for others to learn what it takes to avoid failure and to enhance success. 


RESOURCES   

http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/starting-nonprofit-organization-why.html  
 

There is not universal agreement about the need for a business plan for nonprofit organizations. I am one of those who believe it can be an enormous benefit both in process and results. 

The Nonprofit Business Plan - Program Precedes Money. Planning Precedes Program

http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/nonprofit-business-plan-program.html
 
 http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/reasons-not-to-incorporate-nonprofit.html  
 
I wrote the following article several years ago at the height of the money scare for nonprofits, that still has not eased, The title may be misleading now, but I would just change the year and leave about everything else the same with the emphasis on UNLESS. 
 



http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2008/10/24-factors-in-developing-exit-strategy.html

Saturday, October 31, 2009

The Death of a Nonprofit - Kids Care in Houston TX – But Why Did It Die?

This is the story of the death of a nonprofit, Kids Care in Houston TX. Kids Care received extensive national notice, significant support, a high-profile board and national and international awards and recognition. Carol and Hurt Porter, Jr. started Kids Care in their kitchen in 1984. It grew to feeding 20, 000 people a month in the first Meals on Wheels program for hungry children The Porters branched out to provide health care and provide cultural-enrichment programs for inner-city kids. Whole families were being fed. Carol Porter was called the “Mother Teresa of Houston”. Carol spoke before the United Nations about her work as a nongovernmental organization. In 2002, however, extreme news coverage from a Houston television reporter Wayne Dolcefino on the local ABC affiliate changed everything. Dolcafino wrote 40 articles in the series. He won an Edward R. Murrow and an Emmy for his Kid Care series. The allegations included personal use of corporate credit cards, the ownership of a new car, funds spent on hair care, Italian tile for their home, unpaid taxes, expensive restaurants, hotels and a strip club – and more. But what is this story truly about?

Is this a story about

• nonprofit theft, corruption and embezzlement;

• a story of gross mismanagement;

• the failure of an influential board’s oversight;

• really bad business practices;

• a case of high performance and poorly designed structure to maintain itself;

• an overreaching mission that grew beyond the ability of its creators, staff and board;

• poor public relations;

• straight out-and-out racism;

• the story of a muck-raking self-serving reporter;

• an over-aggressive Attorney General;

• a misinformed Internal Revenue Service?

Whatever your conclusion, the fact is Kids Care died. But why?

Killing Kid Care - Carol and Hurt Porter Jr. ran a well-connected, million-dollar "model charity" in Houston—until it all came crashing down By David Theis September 18, 2009 AllBusiness

On a recent Saturday afternoon, a group of parishioners from Berean Adventist Church on Houston's near East Side gathered to fill grocery bags with donated food. It was part of a weekly post-church ritual organized by the Porters- Carol and Hurt Jr. The Porters round up donations from grocery stores and bring the fruits and vegetables to be sorted, bagged and delivered to the neighborhood's numerous elderly and shut-in residents.

As the group counted out how many bananas, mangoes and yams should go into each bag, Carol and Hurt were lively and engaged. Carol, who's 64, is a talker anyway, a dynamo of a woman. Hurt Jr. (he and his father were named Hurt because of the pain their mothers suffered during childbirth), who's 67, was noticeably more voluble here than at home, where his quiet demeanor perhaps shows the effects of the Job-like trial the Porters have lived through for most of this decade.

Until 2002, the Porters headed a nationally prominent charity, Kid Care. Started in the kitchen of their modest northside house in 1984, Kid Care had grown spectacularly, feeding more than 20,000 a month in the nation's first Meals on Wheels program for hungry children. As donations came in, the program had branched out into delivering health care and providing cultural-enrichment programs for inner-city kids.

Kid Care became well-known in short order. It was named as one of Bush 41's "Thousand Points of Light"- No. 866. Carol, a lifelong Republican, stood behind Bush 43 in the Oval Office when he signed the Faith-Based Initiatives Act. Kid Care had gone international, recognized as an NGO by the United Nations, where Carol had spoken. Carol was an ABC News "Person of the Week." Her face, along with those of needy children, adorned billboards all around Houston. A New York Times article called her "the Mother Teresa of Houston."

(Snip)

Then disaster struck, in the form of muck-raking Houston television reporter Wayne Dolcefino. In September 2002, on the local ABC affiliate, Dolcefino produced the first in a series investigating how Kid Care spent its money. He found plenty that was suspicious: money apparently spent on the Porters themselves - on fancy meals and hair salons, on personal property taxes, on friends and relatives and, as the nail in the coffin, on strip-club outings.
As Dolcefino's series ended, the Porters were sued by Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott. The AG's office shut down Kid Care and ordered another charity for children opened (without the Porters' involvement) in its place. The IRS joined in, claiming the Porters owed $550,000 for unreported income.

(Snip)

How had a "model charity" fallen so far, so fast? Were the Porters victims of a sensationalistic, ratings-hungry reporter and an attorney general who too readily accepted his reports as fact? Had their impatience with "bean-counting" and sound business practices doomed them when Kid Care went from a self-funded mom-and-pop charity to one with a $1 million budget and 15 employees? Was Kid Care poorly served by a board of directors who didn't exercise enough oversight? Or were the Porters brought down by the size of their ambitions for Kid Care - to not just feed hungry kids, but draw them out of the cycle of poverty?

The answer, in all cases, is yes.

(Snip)

At a 2002 board meeting, held after Dolcefino's series had begun to air, the board and the Porters discussed Kid Care's problematic "crisis intervention" program. Money tended to be spent wherever Kid Care staff saw a pressing need - whether it was a one-time school uniform purchase for a needy kid, a birthday party for a Kid Care volunteer who'd never had one before, or private-school tuition for a former Enron employee's child. "Crisis intervention" was a loosely used term, and it allowed Dolcefino to portray it as a way for the Porters to hand out money according to their personal whims.

(For the full engrossing story about a great nonprofit vanishing from the face of the earth in a very short period of time read on. Could it happen to you?)

http://www.allbusiness.com/government/government-bodies-offices/13144761-1.html

RESOURCES

Kid Care, Carol Porter, Wayne Dolcefino - The Kid Care story fizzles to a finish As told to Richard Connelly Published on December 11, 2007 The Houston News

http://www.houstonpress.com/2007-12-13/news/kid-care-carol-porter-wayne-dolcefino-weighing-marijuana-and-stopping-on-red/

Fed Up With Hunger from Life on Purpose, Undated

http://www.lifeonpurpose.com/index.php?task=more-info&page=66&websectionid=198

P.S. I’m sorry Published 20.DEC.07 Article from the Jewish Herald-Voice

http://kidcareinc.org/id18.html

'Mother Teresa of Houston' Fights Hunger and Government Aid by Sam Howe Verhovek, Published: Monday, February 6, 1995 New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/1995/02/06/us/mother-teresa-of-houston-fights-hunger-and-government-aid.html?pagewanted=all

Better Business Bureau Suspends Membership of Kid-Care Charity. Article from: September 6, 2002 Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Article date:

http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-91161024.html

The Stories of Nonprofits Dying

http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2009/08/stories-of-nonprofits-dying.html

Nonprofit Theft – “A Few Bad Apples” or the Invisible Reality?

http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2009/09/nonprofit-theft-few-bad-apples-or.html

Responses to Article “Nonprofit Theft – ‘A Few Bad Apples’ or the Invisible Reality?”

http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2009/10/responses-to-article-nonprofit-theft.html


Thursday, June 4, 2009

Concern for Leaders of Small and Mid-size NPOs in This Economy

How are leaders of small and mid-size nonprofits handling themselves, their people and fiscal problems? What are you facing as a small to mid-size nonprofit leader in this economy? Many executive directors and other leaders of small and mid-size nonprofit organizations are not finding much personal support for their work and needs resulting from America’s economic problems. I read many articles and see training events about how to increase funding in a bad economy. I read material about how to lay off staff and handle the human resources of the organization. There is material about finding new leaders for the future of nonprofits and baby boomers transferring into the third sector. But what do we see about how you are handling yourself? The life of a leader or executive director is a lonely job in the best of times. It does not improve in times of trouble. Here you will find a list and brief discussion of concerns you may be facing and some hints on handling them.

I am certainly not an expert or the last word in these matters, but the dialogue should be on the front page for you – and it is not there. This is my offering to you. Many of us care about what you are facing. Many of us, including me, have faced this one or more times in our NPO lives.

I believe the bottom line mission for most nonprofits is to comfort the disturbed and to disturb the comfortable. This is about comforting you, if you are among the disturbed.

There are three parts:
  • Issues
  • Hints to cope with the issues
  • Resources

See if any of these issues are real for you. See if the hints give you a start to handle the issues of leadership in bad times. Please feel free to add your thoughts on both the problems and the hints to confront them.

ISSUES

As the pressure of work increases for leadership and staff at small to mid-size nonprofit organizations it can exacerbate the personal problems we have always had. It can seem like an expanding downward spiral of unresolved, unsolvable issues, both old and new which can occur.

We carry our own life-baggage wherever we go. That baggage will surface more deeply when things go wrong. We have a tendency to repeat our errors. Now can be time to work on one of those pieces of luggage.

Stress at the workplace is something we all face from time to time. This is a deeper level of stress. What can be done to minimize it and its effects?

You may be finding it difficult to develop priorities in programming, funding, management, administration, filling in for former employees and personal time. There may be too much in your work plan. Cut it down to a size based on importance. Take a sheet of paper. Have one column for the most important and why and another column on least important and why.

Concentrate on the doable and the needed, not the hoped for.

So where did you find leadership training for these bad times: there is lack of training and skill development for problem-solving and reduction in funding and loss of employees. Few of us have experienced a downward spiral of funding, and loss of employees, closing of offices and reducing the numbers of customers who can be served. There has been no training offered to prepare you for this. That should not stop you. You will have to make hard decisions about money and people. You did not start the fire and you cannot put it out. You can bring your flames under control – in fact you have to.

Are staff members tense and not acting civilly with each other, with you and with customers?

Are you facing growing morale problems from staff about layoffs, salary and benefits, their fears and not enough office supplies and equipment? Expect that to happen. The employees who remain will feel guilty about having a job and others were let go. They will miss many of those who have left. They will hate picking up others’ files and working with the new customers. They will have difficulty prioritizing and decision making. Open communication wide. Look for a process that will give staff the opportunity to talk and to be heard. Your job may be simply to LISTEN. You may not be able to fix this one. In one instance they may find a breath of relief because at least someone weak has left.

Do you find you are not sleeping well, not eating well and have been losing weight?

Do you find you are not sleeping well, are eating too much junk food and gaining weight?

Have you increased the consumption of alcohol to calm you down? Or doubled the number of cigarettes you smoke?

Do you find yourself periodically avoiding staff by working at night and on the weekend? Is there a fear of facing them and complaints or guilt? You have to face your own sense of guilt. You did not cause the funding to decline. The hardest problem for a leader is not the act of making a bad decision in rough times. It is the failure to make a decision, even if it is difficult or bad. None of the decisions will be good but they will be necessary. Get back to the office on the regular clock.

The more you avoid staff the more you will lose touch. Share the facts and the implications of what is occurring to the organization and seek help to find answers.

Are you trying to figure out how to overcome the reduction in grants/fundraising? Are you spinning your wheels just looking for money and getting nowhere? Are you looking at Federal Recovery funding that may not really fit your mission? You may not be able to find new grants.

It may be that you are so used to fixing problems that here is one you cannot fix. You may simply have to make the organization functional. Seeking grants is the most difficult part of a resource development plan. The board and you may have to face factors that cannot be easily solved. You may have to consider merger, shared services, co-locating, new associations or bankruptcy.

Do you believe that out there is a foundation that will fund your program? Let me be direct. There is not. The only exceptions are if someone close to your organization has a deep relationship with that foundation and can be persuasive or through a local or community foundation. Other than that, right, now none will fund you. But do not stop applying to the very few foundations that have a direct fit with your mission, goals, objectives and grant requirements. You can try to build relationships now for the future.

Is the organization having a difficult cash flow problem because the state or other funders are late sending payment for services?

Are you trying to keep the board involved? Are you attempting to prevent board members from leaving because of the problems facing the organization?

You find yourself uncertain of the future of funding and new transparency and accountability requirements. How can you change the administration of the organization to meet those new factors?

You have thought of seeking personal professional help but you fear using the organization’s employee assistance program or seeking that help. Are you concerned about showing personal weakness?

Do you have a fear of seeking counseling at the local level where you are known and you have no contacts elsewhere?

Are you experiencing an increased sense of dread, fault, depression, anxiety, anger and personal failure? How are they affecting you and those around you?

Do you find yourself working harder and long hours with little accomplished?

Do you have a growing poor sense of self-worth and self-esteem and an increased personal uncertainty about your abilities?

Do you find or have a sense that staff is having or showing less confidence in you and your leadership?

Are you finding it very difficult getting up in the morning and looking forward to going to work?

You love your job, but this new world is eroding that love. You feel this is not what you signed up for.

Are you finding it very difficult talking to family and friends about what is going on at work and your reactions to it?

HINTS TO COPING, OVERCOMING

Face the fact it is normal to be abnormal in a crisis. The times are insane but that does not mean you have to be. There is so much you cannot control or change. So spend some valuable time deciding on what you can control and change.

Go back to your core being. What brought you to this nonprofit world and this job? What were the attractive parts? What did you anticipate you would work on to improve the organization, its service and product and yourself? What did you want to work on to improve the organization and yourself? How did you want to grow on the job? Can you still do these things? How can you make them happen? It is a time for some self-reflection about why you are here. It is difficult but it is still the job you want. Let your core being – your soul - help you face today’s realities. Check in with you and look for what you are failing to see.

Exercise. Find a routine that fits you. (This is easy for me to say since I am the founder, owner and sole resident of the PSLS, the Principality of the Sedentary Life Style. However, in the past century when I did work exercise was an irregular part of my life.)

Look at your sense of trust in yourself and others. Have you allowed doubt in your abilities and the abilities of others creep in? Why? What happened? Begin working on your self-trust. You do have the abilities and the sense of mission, vision, values and passion to keep the organization performing. Trust that sense.

Make one small change in your schedule, your life. Always shower in the morning (or evening) at the same time. Take a lunch break away from the office at least three days a week. Make a commitment to have dinner with your family every night. Develop one new routine that allows you to think about that change and commitment.

What could you have controlled that would have changed or prevented things? Is there anything you really could have done? If not, then do not take on that guilt and sense of fault. It is not yours. Let it go. You do have to handle the results and adjust but not with guilt and fault. Guilt and fault finding will not solve a darn thing.

Go back to organizational basics. What are the mission, vision and values of the organization? Are you still on mission? How are you with your personal mission? Are you still on pace? Go back to the mission and see if there has been a drift and see what you can do about it. Are the board and staff still focused on the same mission? Plan the future on that mission.

Learning to cope with stress – we have all faced stress before and we handle it in different ways and rather well mostly. You can do that here also. Is it developing a routine you can depend on that relieves the stress? Is there someone you can talk to about the stressors? Perhaps only to listen to you, not to solve or fix them for you

Listen. Listen more intently, eye to eye, not eye to Twitter. Listen without interrupting. Listen at home and at the office. Take a tickle lock. Listen to others.

Review how decisions are made in the organization. Review the strategies being used. Can they be tweaked to be better under the current problems?

Maintain civility within staff and within the board. Show your leadership in the way you all talk to each other.

I am not a fan of the statement “Do more with less”. The current crisis is about doing more with even more less. That is unrealistic. You, the board and staff have to look at what you have been doing and determine what the best process is to reduce the work to a meaningful and reasonable level. With less resources and more demand for services, you cannot meet it. The fact of the matter is you have never had enough resources to serve everyone in need. So you made choices about who received service. That decision has to be made again in keeping with grant requirements and talent and availability of staff.

What are you doing to adapt to change? We have constant change in our lives. There is a corporate culture of change in every nonprofit that we do not face and do not encourage as a status for staff. Now is an opportunity to look at change and how it can be positive, not always negative, and can be part of the culture. People do not like to be changed but they can accept reasonable changes.

This is not the time for leadership-is-correct thinking. It may take improvisation through a group development plan and activities.

Should there be an open review of the goals and objectives and activities of the organization with staff and the board? What should or could be changed to relieve stress and become workable? You do not have to fix everything. You do have to make the work functional and reasonable, however.

This is a real opportunity for developing a business plan for the organization for the next 3-5 years. What would you and the board do differently if most of the funding were restored? How will the organization face its future for its customers? Planning can help. This is a real opportunity to consider restructuring the organization. Including customers in that planning is a necessity. Your planning may help you see what the future can look like and it may lead you to make honestly some hard decisions such as bankruptcy, merger, co-location, carry on or other options.

Facing adversity – leaders like to talk about how they like taking on challenges and adversity. You are a leader. Here is a real opportunity to show your leadership in new ways. Go back to your leadership styles, your abilities, and your weaknesses and mend them to this new dynamic in your life and the life of the organization.

Communicate, don’t isolate – do not withhold information from the board and staff. It may need some sense of timing, but board and staff need to know what is really going on. You will also want to work on overcoming the tendencies for rumors.

Be receptive to others’ ideas.

Consider talking with a few other NPO leaders in your community about what they are facing and how they are coping. There may be a way to start a group healing process with a pro bono counselor as facilitator.

Prepare a succession plan with the board. It does not matter if you are thinking about leaving. It does matter that you help provide a positive look at the future for the board in the leadership of the organization.

Perhaps it is time for you to move along. You have done all you can. You will work to leave the organization in the best possible light to find new leadership.

Perhaps it is time for the organization to fold its tent and close down. There are state and IRS legal processes to follow in that event. Work with the board and an attorney to do this properly.

If needed seek out personal professional help. This is not an admission of fault or guilt or neurosis. It is an admission that perhaps you need additional reinforcement to handle your life and the job, to look at alternatives within yourself. Most leaders fear this decision that others will find out. If your organization has an employee assistance plan, you may find that too open. You may be saying to yourself this is a small community and everyone will find out. I say, baloney, They are excuses. Talk to your personal medical provider about options. How long has it been since you had a full physical examination? Seek assistance from a job counselor, psychologist and/or psychiatrist or spiritual advisor. Once you take that first step you will wonder why you feared it. You may find that talking about your issues, adopting breathing exercises and/or medication help you stay focused and clear headed.

There are many of us concerned about how you are doing. It is my hope that you find at least one thing here that will help you. Please be open with me. If I am missing the target for you please add your thoughts.

Thank you for what you are doing.

RESOURCES

STRESS...At Work (May 19, 2009)
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/99-101/

Recession Is Bad for Health - Americans Are Taking Grave Chances With Their Health Because of Recession and Money Fears (May 21, 2009)
http://www.webmd.com/news/20090521/recession-bad-health

Managing Job Stress - What to Do About Job Stress (Last Updated: July 10, 2008)
http://www.webmd.com/balance/stress-management/tc/managing-job-stress-what-to-do-about-job-stress

Work, Stress and Mental Health (June 09, 2008)
http://blogs.webmd.com/anxiety-and-stress-management/2008/06/work-stress-and-mental-health.html

How to Reduce and Manage Job and Workplace Stress - Coping with work stress in today’s uncertain climate (Last modified: November 2008.)
http://www.helpguide.org/mental/work_stress_management.htm

Finding Leaders for America's Nonprofits from Bridgestar (April 20, 2009)
http://resources.bridgestar.org/Documents/FindingLeaders.pdf

How to Cope When Coworkers Lose Their Jobs - Layoff Survivors Experience Feelings of Guilt, Sadness, Loss, and Fear by Susan M. Heathfield, About.com
http://humanresources.about.com/od/layoffsdownsizing/a/survivors_cope.htm

Leadership Guide by Brian Fraser (March 2009)
http://www.transitionguides.com/newsltr/Full%20Articles/LG_March%202009%20Resiliency%20Corner%20-%20Brian%20Fraser.pdf

Six Ways to Manage Leadership Stress by John R. Ryan (January 9, 2009)
http://www.businessweek.com/managing/content/jan2009/ca2009019_489882.htm

Facts about Terminating or Merging Your Exempt Organization (IRS May 2009) http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-tege/p4779.pdf

State Nonprofit Incorporation Forms and Information (Including those for mergers and termination)
http://www.irs.gov/charities/article/0,,id=167760,00.html

The Mission Statement - The Spiritual Rudder
http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2008/08/mission-statement-spiritual-rudder.html

In Praise of Small and Mid-size Nonprofits - On the Side Streets of America
http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2008/09/in-praise-of-small-and-mid-size.html

The voice says, who will go for us, who will speak for us, who will care for us, who will show us?
http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/voice-says-who-will-go-for-us-who-will.html

24 Factors In Developing an Exit Strategy for Nonprofit and Nongovernmental Organization (A Business Plan in Reverse)
http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2008/10/24-factors-in-developing-exit-strategy.html

The eighth international conference on occupational stress and health. “Work, Stress, and Health 2009: Global Concerns and Approaches” will be held at the Caribe Hilton Hotel, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on November 5-8, 2009, with Preconference Workshops on November 5. This conference is convened by the American Psychological Association, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, and the Society for Occupational Health Psychology.

The Work, Stress, and Health conference series is designed to address the constantly changing nature of work and the implications of these changes for the health, safety, and well-being of workers. This year the conference will highlight work, stress, and health as a subject of global concern affecting developed and developing countries alike. Numerous topics of interest to labor, management, practitioners, and researchers are covered in the series, such as work and family issues, workplace violence, long hours of work, the aging workforce, and best practices for preventing stress and improving the health of workers and their organizations. Expert presentations, panel discussions, and informal get-togethers with leading scientists and practitioners will provide an exciting forum for learning about the latest developments on an impressive range of topics.

http://www.apa.org/pi/work/wsh.html

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