Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Media. 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

Friday, February 3, 2012

Grant Information Through Twitter - A Starter Kit

For the past year I have been posting information about the availability of grants through my Twitter account. The grants are for nonprofit tax exempt and nongovernmental organizations worldwide. The sources of funding include government, foundations and corporations. The information is available but difficult to research.  If you do not have the time or know-how to search for grants, then here is a place to start. 

I post about 40 grant announcements every week. Each announcement features a brief description what the grant is for, a deadline if there is one (or "No DL" if there is no deadline), #hashtags to appropriate groups and a link to the grant web site. You will have enough to get started looking for grants in a little more than a blink of an eye. 

Pros
  • The information covers no more than 140 characters. 
  •   It is a fast read, a skim of the note will give you the "WOW" factor
  • It is timely
  • You have instant access to all the information to make an informed decision whether it is worth your time and effort to apply
  • The grant is available - I do not report about grants already funded
  • International and global grants are also posted
  • I read every announcement I post before doing so
  • There are no fees, costs or commercials

Cons
  • The grants are not from local funders such as United Way or state agency (although the grant may be federal in origin and funding is through a state agency pipeline)  
  • I cannot seek and find grants for specific nonprofits or nongovernmental organizations or for specific geography or country
  • On rare occasions there may be a broken link or a change in a deadline date - if you find one, please let me know so I can correct the information

The information is about grants that I believe will be of interest to NPO and NGO leaders, educators and government officials. Domestic and international issues include poverty, hunger, health, women, people of color, HIV/AIDS, persons who are homeless, the arts, literacy, domestic violence and rape, peace, environment, human rights, advocacy, employment, technology, children and youth, elderly, social justice, human rights, human trafficking, ex-offenders, prisons, migrant workers, immigration, IRS changes, human resources, management, the law and more.   

Click on any one link below and click on "Follow me."



Resources







Thursday, October 1, 2009

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

(See # 1)On September 24, 2009 I published an article on this blog entitled Nonprofit Theft – “A Few Bad Apples” or the Invisible Reality? . I also posted it on a number of social media webs sites. There has been significant discussion about the article and its contents particular at LinkedIn. LinkedIn has a number of discussion groups concerning various nonprofit issues. The discussions have been in five LinkedIn groups. It has also been mentioned in Facebook. This is a compilation of all discussions to be located in one place by groups in chronological order. I am surprised and elated by the responses and the elevation of the discussion about crime in nonprofits, theft of funds, embezzlement, corruption, fraud, health/safety violations and misconduct. I will not repeat anything from the previous article – it can be read at http://dongriesmannsnonprofitblog.blogspot.com/2009/09/nonprofit-theft-few-bad-apples-or.html Thank you all very much for sharing your time and thoughts – and please keep them coming

The discussion continues at LinkedIn and I will add them as they appear. There is a new comment under BoardSource. I have also added a comment published at this blog site to the original article.


Authors names follow the comments.

Comment to first article

Chris Gelken said... An incredible piece of work - sad and sobering as it may be. Well done.

The LinkedIn groups are –

BoardSource

Non Profit Network - MojaLink

Nonprofit Professionals Forum

Non-Profit and Charity Network

(See # 1)

Nonprofit Governance Group

BoardSource

I think one of the fundamental controls weaknesses in non-profits is that people who are well intentioned supporters of a cause just don't expect other members of the cause to act against its interest. That lack of a 'presumption of risk' can lead to a lack of proper structures and controls for managing the risks.

Another problem is the issue of personal 'sense of entitlement' where an individual feels that because he or she has done unpaid work they are somehow entitled to an informal benefit. These people just don't recognise theft as theft!

For both problems the solution lies in good risk management, an ethical and skilled board of directors that effectively leads and supervises a strong management team. Up to date accounts, cash management and thorough reporting all assist.

Julie Garland McLellan

ACORN has been a subject of investigative reporting since at least the mid-1980s. I remember when the "Dallas Observer," the alternative newspaper in Dallas, TX (and DEFINITELY NOT right-wing or conservative! ) did an extended expose of ACORN's activities in Dallas.

I think the 13% number is inflated because the total GDP of the nonprofit sector is over $1 trillion. Embezzled and wasted funds come from all sources, not just from donors' annual contributions. The 4% figure is not only more realistic, it also more closely tracks the percentages in other industries and other endeavors.

This does not excuse crimes committed by people affiliated with nonprofit enterprise. My point is that we are not exceptional.

It's also important to remember how severely fragmented the nonprofit economy really is. It's a pyramid with a very wide base and a very small cap. The issues of lack of financial controls, lack of accountability, etc., in nonprofits are similar to those in small business in for-profit and governmental entities.

Nonprofits are also experiencing increased press attention for their problems for several reasons. We're hearing more about it because more people - including the press - are talking about it more than in the past.

It's important to remember that for-profit businesses have traditionally been very reluctant to disclose similar issues, for fear of a loss of consumer/lender/regulatory confidence. It's still not uncommon for for-profit employee/malefactors to be quietly dismissed rather than prosecuted or sued.

Nonprofits, like for-profits, place unwarranted reliance on financial audits as a defense against financial crimes and malfeasance. Financial audits are NOT designed to uncover fraud or embezzlement, though they may happen to discover such activity. Audits are designed to sample the organization's financial records and test them for adherence to GAAP (soon to be superseded by international accounting standards). In other words, an audit demonstrates that some transactions are appropriately recorded and, in effect, the books cross-foot. From this, one can conclude that either the records as a whole are appropriate, or that whoever is cooking the books is doing so with some talent.

Since most nonprofits have insufficient budgets for annual financial audits, much less the budget or justification for a forensic (operational) audit, much malfeasance goes undiscovered for some time. Hence, when inappropriate activity is finally discovered, it has been going on for some time and significant amounts of money are often involved.

Michael Wyland

Hi, Michael. As always you have added value to the discussion, this time about "bad apples". I do think that at whatever percentage, 13% or 4% or something in between, we are exceptional. We operate with a public duty and a public trust with public money.

We should be expected to be cleaner than business and government. We should be under greater scrutiny, held to a higher standard and should have less scandal, not about the same as other entities. Do we have an obligation to police ourselves? We know the banks could not do it. We know that Wall Street could not do it. I doubt we can either. Are we prepared to put our dirty little secret out there and have others police the sector?

I think nonprofit leaders do not like to talk about theft of funds, embezzlement, corruption, fraud, health/safety violations and misconduct. And I think that most nonprofit leaders know of at least one nonprofit that has experienced theft or embezzlement or one leader who has padded an expense account or has committed another crime. I know that over the years I have been aware of too many in legal services and other programs, most of whom were convicted.

Donald Griesmann

Great discussion points.

I am aware of several non-profits that have quietly 'released' staff from their employment contracts after finding that they were embezzlers. One of them was told by the police that, as it wasn't over $50,000, they weren't really interested in prosecuting. It is hard to get a prosecution as you usually destroy the evidence when you are busy discovering it.

The others all wanted to avoid scandal so did not consider going to the police.

In one instance the staff member who had embezzled (consistently and deliberately whilst fraudulently reporting to the board) had the cheek to ask for a reference and to threaten legal action if it was not good as she 'had performed well on all duties' and as it was 'in nobodies interest for reputations to be damaged by airing disagreements.' The reference stated that she was dismissed for gross misconduct after admitting to theft of company monies. No legal action was taken either by the ex-employee or the organisation that received the reference. Our legal advice was that it wasn't defamatory as we could prove it was true but that we should just decline to give a reference and say it was company policy.

I agree with Don - this sector is too important to allow people to get away with behaviours that are just plain wrong. We need to set ourselves the highest standards and see if commercial and government boards will aspire to follow our lead!

Julie Garland McLellan

Don:

Personally, I don't believe that one sector has a greater responsibility than any other for following the law and upholding ethical principles. I agree that the public, donors, regulators, and the media place greater emphasis on some sectors on others depending upon fashion and whatever's currently in the news.

I also am not sure that I agree with your assertion that the nonprofit sector has a special responsibility by virtue of its using so-called public money. Nonprofits are no different from any other type of business enterprise in that their business expenses are deductible and that their revenues (e.g., donations) are business (i.e., mission-related) income. It's true that most nonprofits enjoy exemption from many local, state, and federal taxes. However this is a quid pro quo for the recognized role of nonprofit organizations in helping government, or in other words the public, meet well-defined public goals. Nonprofit organizations, under the law, are by definition private businesses that operate differently (primarily in the areas of the use of revenue over expense and in the ownership of corporate assets) from for-profit corporations, but, nonetheless, are corporations under the laws of their states.

Those who advocate stronger regulation of nonprofits generally look in one of three directions. The first direction is towards the Internal Revenue Service. The new form 990 includes a series of questions on governance and so-called best practice for nonprofit operation that are largely unrelated to the financial reporting which has been the traditional purpose of the form. However, the IRS has testified to Congress that it does not have the resources and does not at this point have the interest in regulating the governance of nonprofit organizations. The second place the decided is state attorneys general. All states have varying levels of regulation on nonprofit organizations, beginning with their nonprofit corporation statutes. In addition, many states require things such as a charitable solicitation registration, filing of annual reports (sometimes a form 990 is sufficient for this purpose), and payment of annual registration fees of various types.

Recognizing that both the IRS and the states may not have the capacity and knowledge necessary to impose additional regulation on nonprofits, some have recommended the establishment of a nonprofit regulatory body similar to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Such a national nonprofit regulatory body might be given authority to issue regulations, require compliance with new standards, and even be given investigatory power over nonprofit corporations. It's important to note, however, that miss seasons, malfeasance, and nonfeasance occur in the for-profit and governmental sectors now even with the structures in place.

While we can hope for a crime free world, reality says that most people are honest. A few are determined to be dishonest, and most of us are ethically challenged from time to time. Honesty is usually its own reward, those determined to be dishonest required the intervention of the criminal justice system, and ethical structures need to be put in place to assist those of us who are ethically challenged from time to time. Of course, many of those ethical structures are ready in place in the form of the various nonprofit societies and fundraising professional societies that already exist to serve our sector. There is strong agreement among these various organizations as to what constitutes ethical and unethical behavior, particularly as it involves the handling of finances.

Michael Wyland

To me, the larger problem in nonprofit misfeasance, malfeasance, and nonfeasance is the inability or unwillingness of a nonprofit organization to pursue its mission related objectives in an efficient and effective manner. Unfortunately, most of the lack of efficiency and effectiveness are unrelated to the propriety with which the finances are handled. Regulators focusing on financials neglect whether the organization is actually accomplishing any social good.

The IRS believes that nonprofit organizations that follow good governance best practices are less likely to have criminal other deficiencies in their operations. Of course, assuring good governance practices is not guaranteed that organizations are being run appropriately, much less effectively and efficiently. In the same way, it is assumed that by focusing on finances, regulators will assure the public that nonprofit organizations, and the donations that fund them, are well used. Of course, the absence of criminal activity does not guarantee efficiency and effectiveness of an organization.

Michael Wyland

Great discussion. This is a common topic that Board members and CEOs of nonprofits often talk about in our Masterclasses, and two key points always drop out:

1. There is no such thing as a small fraud-it is only a fraud that has not had time to grow...

2. The single biggest determiner of fraud in a nonprofit is when someone has not had 2 or more weeks, in a block, away from their desk on holidays or some other sort of leave.

Lisa Bundesen does a great blog on Fraud in nonprofits, found at

http://www.lisabundesen.com/page1.aspx

Steve Bowman

Maybe the sector doesn't have any special obligations to act ethically - one colleague with whom I have had a similar conversation argued that there should be one, high standard, not some special standard just for nonprofits. Maybe it isn't an obligation, but wouldn't it be compelling if we SET the standard instead of falling into some "average behavior" range? If the sector, as a whole, stood up with one unified voice and said "we want to be the leaders in how corporations can behave ethically" rather than "we have no more or no fewer ethical breaches than our neighbors"? My kids have no obligation to be more respectful, more empathetic, or more giving than any of our neighbors - but by G*D I will do everything in my power to ensure they are leading the curve, not doing "ok" compared to others. I expect nothing less from my nonprofit clients.

Emily Hall

(See # 1)

Emily: I agree with your passion and resolve. My only point would be that we are all human, and that the best of us fail to be excellent and exemplary all the time. My point was not that we should settle, but, rather, that we should not beat ourselves up for failing to be perfect, set ourselves up for failure by seeking to impose an unrealistic standard on our sector, and that we not raise the expectations of the general public based on an unreasonable standard we set for those in our sector.

Through law, regulation, and professional societies, we already have significant standards of conduct and practice set upon us. The media, donors and other stakeholders, the people we serve, etc., seek to hold us to those standards and chastise us when we fail to meet them.

The answer isn't more standards, but more adherence, enforcement, and understanding of the standards that already exist.

Michael Wyland


Julie Garland McLellan's first post, for me, opens up the underlying issue - especially with charter schools. US Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said that charter schools, which are nonprofits, have exposed themselves to substantial risk by allowing "second and third rate" schools to continue operating. He called on those within the charter realm to begin "cleaning house" of those that should not be in operation.

When funds go awry, those nonprofits are quick to point out how "important" or "worthy" their cause is and what they are doing for children. the prevailing assumption is an admission (sometimes) of wrongdoing but that their good work will outweigh the bad choices made. However, when you are taxpayer funded, you accept public accountability.

I did a training last week for charter developer groups that may be writing charter applications in this state. I told them very clearly the following: 'if your school is closed, it has nothing to do with the children or your cause but everything to do with poor choices made by the adults in charge." For instance, if the school misappropriates money, who did it? If the school does not deliver on the results promised in the charter, who taught the students? If the school does not turn in reports, who is to blame? This goes back to a belief whose origin I really do not know where to find -- being "sorry" means that I am absolved of consequences for my actions.

I am excited to be a part of this group and hope to learn a great deal that I can then pass on to my schools.

Joel Medley



· Non Profit Network - MojaLink

Trust should always be an earned commodity, one that requires constant topping up. But this alone should not entitle NFP's to a low rate of fiscal abuse. Accountability Transparency and Accessibility MUST be managed to provide the most secure base for continuance.
This unfortunately must also include the prosecution of those who break faith.

Rick Relf

I don't think being a nonprofit should mean throwing out common business sense. Like any entity, certain precautions should be put into place to ensure these things happen less often. You trust those who have earned it, I certainly agree with that. But beyond that, even with the earned trust, there should be precautions.

Judy Anne Cavey

I agree that those who break the trust and steal from their organizations should be prosecuted. Hopefully, it would be a deterrent, although some people are so confident that no one will catch them that it may not help. But, for others, I think it would.

In any case, there certainly SHOULD be precautions, such as clear policies that are consistently followed and checks and balances.

Kayza Kleinman

Hi Donald,

If those who donate, showed a little more interest and got involved, whether by volunteering time and doing ground level work or by serving on boards of non-profits, there would be greater checks. Personally I think, there are only a handful of bad apples in the NPO sector, most of us participate in a big or small way because we do want to contribute.

Best,

Lubna

http://writerscyberslate.blogspot.com

Lubna Kably

· Nonprofit Professionals Forum

Don,

Excellent observation! A few years back over 40% of the general public thinks that charities are neither honest nor ethical in the use of money. That's also why many younger donors today do not trust the nonprofit inst. Instead they want hands-on involvements. They want to see impact measurement.
Many nonprofits are ill-equipped to meet their demand entrenched in the old way of doing business.

Don, back to your point--board independence and strong governance are the answers. Unfortunately nonprofit boards are not always well informed about their responsibilities and liabilities. In all organizations I have served, check signing and payment authorization policy is enforced and audited.

I think if nonprofit boards and auditors are legally liable, you will find improvements in nonprofit accountability.

Richard Wong

I think that your article makes some good points. However, I think that there are some issues with your data. Firstly, it's important to realize that the deluge of news reports does not necessarily reflect reality. For instance, I have seen headlines where the Feds alleged that certain non-profits were simply shams that existed to launder money. While I don't know if the money laundering really happened or not, I do know that at least one of the organizations mentioned by name is genuine and does a good deal of service within its community. In other words, the fact that something is in the headlines does not mean that that is the reality.

You also mentioned studies that claim that a huge percentage of non-profits have major issues with ethical / legal handling of money. I'd love to know these studies reached such conclusions. While it's true that too many organizations don't have the governance they should, that does not necessarily actually translate into funds being stolen.

My experience simply does not match those claims. I've worked with dozens of organizations over the years, and my program has actually worked with approximately 850 of them - most fairly closely. You quickly get a good sense of what is going on with a place. We have had some cases where money was clearly not going where it was supposed to - sometimes mis-allocated to the wrong program (bad enough) and others simply going into private pockets, but very, very few. In a few more (again, very few) we've had our suspicions, but no proof. (Most of our people, especially the fiscal ones, have a very sharp nose for these types of issues.)

So, yes, I know perfectly well that the bad apples exist. On the other hand, I am sure that it's not anywhere near as widespread as it sometimes seems.

I will add that I agree good governance, and strong, involved (but not micromanaging) and educate boards are essential. So is transparency. But, I think that as long as some of the rules and regulations that non-profits operate under remain as convoluted, balkanized and arbitrary as they are, that is going to be very hard to accomplish.

Kayza Kleinman

(See # 1)

Stanford did a good review. I would like to share this with you.

http://www.ssireview.org/site/printer/ethics_and_nonprofits/

Richard Wong

Excellent review. I think that they make some very valuable points. The discussion of distortion of decisionmaking due to inappropriate measures and the linked issue of over-emphasis on low overhead, is excellent. And, I wanted to cheer when I read the item, small as it was, about standardizing accounting practices. I think that this is something that is way, way overdue.

The main question this article raises is how we define ethical vs unethical. While some of the examples raised were clearly unethical, others were more a matter of perception than real ethical concerns. And, some, as noted are a matter of unclear - sometimes unrealistic - expectations.

In some cases, however, I question whether the actions described are truly unethical, given the situations they are responding to. For instance, in the face of regulations that are not reality based (eg unreasonable caps on overhead, arbitrary classifications of expenses or inappropriate limitations on appropriate expenses) and which actually may be counter to the aims of the funder, is it really unethical to use "aggressive accounting tactics"?

Of course, even if we were to agree that this is not unethical, it does raise some serious concerns, because it does distort the decision making process, makes the audit trail more murky, accustoms people to figuring out how to get around the rules, and certainly lessens the transparency that we agree is necessary. The problem is that sometimes even when organizations manage to avoid those ethical questions, the byzantine requirements of different funders can have all of the side effects mentioned (except perhaps for getting people into the habit of bending the rules.)

I think that the answer to this particular dilemma is fairly simple (although not so easy). What needs to happen is for reasonable, reality-based standards to be implemented, so that organizations have no need or reason to use practices that obfuscate the process of allocation of resources. I think that everyone will "win" in such a scenario.

Kayza Kleinman

· Non-Profit and Charity Network

Thank you for sharing this.

Chris Gelken

Your two rules are dead on, Donald. We've never compared notes before, but I promote both in workshops and have for many years.

However, I add a third:

"Put good financial controls in place while trustworthy people are in office. It's part of your legacy, and it's too late once there are issues of trust."

It's important for the current treasurer, CFO, etc. to understand that new controls are not a reflection on them but a risk management process for the future when others will hold their offices.

And yes, the new controls may reveal that the current people aren't as worthy of trust as we thought, but that is rare. The many abuses are very real, but the majority of nonprofit volunteers and staff are honest and doing their best.

Jane Garthson

· Nonprofit Governance Group

Great article! I'd add that we have a tendency to want to give people a chance to make things right. We offer the option that we'll keep things quiet if they pay the money back on a defined schedule. However, this opens us up to charges of collusion and/or blackmail. We need to report all incidents to our insurance companies and the police. Let the experts handle it!

Terrie Temkin

· Start-Up Non-Profits

I do agree with what you say’

Unfortunately this happens in all businesses across the world. Non-Profit Foundations do have that loop-hole to get away with more than others, for some reason they have not and are not questioned?
I have had my non profit for fourteen years, it's rather small, but I have kept it that way. It does what it is supposed to do with me at the head of the realm.

I do see a lot of foundations going by the way side and the present time, I hope we do not lose the good ones. Life is life, the good, bad and the ugly.

I have a new book out. "Joyful Volunteering" read more about it at: www.kidstalk.org

Ninon de Vere De Rosa


  • Facebook

Valerie A. Nelson Interesting and sad article, Don.

Pamela Grow likes your note Nonprofit Theft – “A Few Bad Apples” or the Invisible Reality?

OTHER COMMENTS

Thank you, that was an incredible article and so important in these times. It is true that one bad apple can spoil the tree and stewardship of donors dollars requires scrupulous ( word?) transparent measures and accountability. kudos on the time and work you must have spent getting that together to share,

Kelly Hutchinson

Donald, really enjoyed your article. I've been tracking embezzlement at non-profits in the Richmond Va. area for the last couple years and have been astonished at the amout reported $2.4 million reported in the paper.

That number has got to be significantly smaller than the actual loss, as I bet most are not caught, and of the ones that are caught only a fraction are charged, then a smaller number make it to court and are then reported.

Do you think most non-profit managers and board members realize how much of this theft is going on?

Thanks for sharing all this information its really amazing what's going on.

Also, I grew up in Amherst, went to Canisius High, St. Bona and Canisius College. Really miss Buffalo !

Dan Healy


I work in the security department of IT. Every once in awhile I will help out with the IT security side of non-profits. And yes, it is sad to say, that crime and theft runs very high in non-profits. Great people who start these charities are carelessly trusting people to get there cause out and in return the people who they trust to support their causes, and yes even bookkeepers, are stealing right underneath their feet. Since a lot of charities work with cash donations, it is hard to track the funds if not monitored carefully.

Ya'll have a good day.

James Henderson


Your blog entry makes a great read. I have a Fraud in NFPs blog which I update weekly with small tips on fraud prevention, detection and investigaiton for NFPs. If you would like to contribute at any time, I would appreciate your input. My website is www.lisabundesen.com and my blog is www.lisabundesen.blogspot.com. I turn the blog post each week into a weekly Fraud in NFPs newsletter.

Again if you would like to contribute articles, they are always welcome and if any of my posts are useful to you please feel free to use them.

Also on my website you will find the 2006 and 2008 BDO NFP Fraud Surveys which I authored before leaving BDO in May this year to join PPB.

Hope to hear from you.

Lisa Bundesen
  • Comment from previous blog

Don,

Just caught up with your posting. Thanks for acknowledging the NYT article that scratches the surface of an ever-growing, yet denied, $40 billion problem facing the charitable sector. I too give frequent updates on this insidious issue at Nonprofit Imperative, an twice monthly e-newsletter. Unless this problem is addressed, it with consume all of the good will that the sector currently enjoys.

Keep up the good work. There can't be too many venues in seeking a solution.

Gary Snyder
gary.r.snyder@gmail.com

http://nonprofitimperative.blogspot.com/

End of comments.

What do you think? Is there an ethical and moral issue about nonprofits being held to higher standards than government and the private sector? Is crime in nonprofits just a few bad apples or more insidious? Will appropriate, efficient and effective policies, procedures, forms, recordkeeping and retrieval systems help? How often have they appeared to be aspirational and not operational? How does it appear in the nonprofit(s) with which you are associated (but not necessarily working for today)?

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