Sustaining
Nonprofits
During Economic Downturns
by
George L. Head, Ph.D
This
article originally appeared in the Nonprofit
Rick Management Center. Reprinted with permission.
As
economic downturns reduce household incomes and lower investors'
and consumers' confidence in the economy, nonprofits face especially
troubling times. On one hand, most nonprofits' incomes fall during
these recessionary times: private contributions decline as individual,
corporate, and foundation donors are less inclined to give; governmental
funding declines or disappears; and earnings from endowments shrink
along with their capital market values. On the other hand, economic
downturns put added demands on nonprofits' already dwindling resources:
more clients ask for increased help; fewer volunteers, concerned
about their own household incomes, willingly give their time to
nonprofit service; and budgets for many routine activities — such
as public outreach and maintenance of buildings and vehicles — are
cut so that every possible dollar can be channeled more directly
into client services. Squeezed between rising demands and falling
resources, nonprofits become unusually vulnerable to two major classes
of surprising, unexpected events. The first class encompasses threats
of unanticipated losses, either from accidents (such as fires, floods,
lawsuits, staff injuries or resignations and adverse publicity)
or from unfavorable economic or regulatory events (such as the public's
rejection of a nonprofit's new publicity campaign, tightened regulations,
or the launching of a new regional or national nonprofit that invades
the client, donor and territorial bases of many smaller nonprofits).
The second class encompasses unexpected opportunities for gain,
which often bring new uncertainties into a nonprofit's future. For
example, an economic downturn may bring to a nonprofit's door a
very talented, motivated, college-graduating job applicant who in
more prosperous times might have channeled his or her career into
the generally more lucrative private sector. To reach its full potential,
a nonprofit must be prepared to grasp opportunities whenever they
arise, whether from sudden changes in the nonprofit's outside world
or from innovations that originate within the nonprofit.
Risk
Management: Countering Threats and Seizing Opportunities in Uncertain
Times
Risk management deals with both major classes of surprises: surprising
threats of accidental, economic, or regulatory losses; and surprising
opportunities for gain from events outside the nonprofit or from
within it. Risk management is both a way of thinking and a way of
acting. It allows management to both anticipate and respond to surprises
so that a nonprofit can preserve from surprising threats all that
it has already achieved and also capitalize on surprising opportunities
to reach its full future potential. Every nonprofit's future is
to some degree uncertain, unpredictable and subject to potential
good and bad surprises. A nonprofit is particularly vulnerable to
unanticipated or other losses, as well as missed opportunities for
gain during economic downturns, because it is at these times that
a nonprofit's financial and human resources often are especially
low. At these times, nonprofits have little cushion with which to
absorb unanticipated losses or into which to dig for extra funds,
or spare people to grasp any golden rings of growth opportunity
that may suddenly appear. Hard economic times make good risk management
especially important to a nonprofit's short-term survival and ongoing
mission fulfillment. Prevailing in the long run requires surviving
— and hopefully thriving — in the short run, despite its many uncertainties.
Within this process, risk is a measure of the possibility that the
future may be surprisingly different — much worse or much better
— than the management of a nonprofit expects. Surprise can
be measured by four characteristics: direction, magnitude, probability
and variability. Risk management strives to increase the
magnitude of positive outcomes, while reducing the severity of negative
ones. Risk management focuses on making positive surprises more
probable and negative surprises less likely. Finally, risk management
works to reduce the variability of both positive and negative risks
so that their outcomes can be more accurately anticipated, their
financial consequences better budgeted, and each nonprofit's future
made more certain.
Context
Is Key
A key step in the risk management decision process is to determine
the organizational context within which these decisions are being
made. Many nonprofits plunge head first into intensive risk identification
when they begin developing a risk management program. Attitude toward
risk — ranging from paralyzing, fear-filled pessimism to resilient,
constructive, yet careful, optimism — is a key to the context within
which a nonprofit manages its threats of loss and opportunities
for gain.
Managing
Economic Downturn Risks Facing a Nonprofit's Key Resources
So far we have discussed at a general level how thoughtful, courageous
risk management of threats and opportunities sustains a nonprofit
during economic downturns. There are many risks — both threats and
opportunities — which adverse economic circumstances intensify.
Each of these threats and opportunities call for heightened, enlightened
risk management to help sustain nonprofits in these trying days.
To appraise these
economically sensitive risks, consider the four broad categories
of resources that, from a risk management perspective, are crucial
to mission fulfillment for any nonprofit.
These resources are its people, its
property, its income, and its reputation. In the
midst of economic downturns, each of these types of resources present
special threats and opportunities, special risk management challenges.
People
During economic downturns, nonprofits tend to lose staff, particularly
as organizations reduce their payrolls in response to funding losses.
Those employees and volunteers who remain with a nonprofit are placed
under greater stress due to increased responsibilities and longer
hours. In some cases, these lead to greater fatigue and more accidents,
particularly as staff attempt activities unfamiliar to them or for
which they have not been properly trained. Work injuries and careless
job performance may result and must be countered by paying attention
to this often-overlooked threat. But on the opportunity side of
risk, economic difficulties may benefit a nonprofit in an unexpected
way. In many cases nonprofits that need to reduce staffing levels
due to funding cutbacks take the opportunity to revisit the division
of labor within the organization. A nonprofit may seize the opportunity
to streamline functions, cross train long-term employees or combine
functional areas to better serve clients. Or the organization may
learn that one of its entry- or mid-level staff members is capable
of taking on increased responsibility and is well-suited to a more
responsible — and more fulfilling — position within the nonprofit.
What was initially viewed as a negative — the loss of one or more
staff positions — should have positive effects on morale and personal
fulfullment.
Income
Nonprofits' incomes from virtually all sources are clearly threatened
by economic downturns. Income from donations, revenues from sales
of goods and services, investment earnings, revenues from governmental
contracts and foundation grants are all in jeopardy. Good risk management
suggests that economic downturns also offer special opportunities
for truly innovative nonprofits to increase their incomes above
normal, prosperous levels by, for example, broadening the client
base to embrace people newly distressed, appealing to new groups
of contributors, or marketing new types of goods or services that,
when prosperity inevitably returns, can be important new sources
of significant income for a nonprofit that proved itself innovative
in difficult times.
Property
Recessions threaten nonprofits' property as aging buildings and
equipment are less adequately maintained or replaced. These are
threats against which nonprofits must be especially prepared. Simultaneously,
some nonprofits will find that economic downturns offer opportunities
to expand their property holdings. Equipment which was previously
unaffordable may become available at distressed prices, as may real
estate that its owners must sell to meet their own debts. In depressed
times, some people may be increasingly willing to bequeath property
to a deserving and stable nonprofit.
Reputation
During economic downturns, a nonprofit's conduct may come under
especially close scrutiny as the overworked staff make errors that
attract negative public attention or as disgruntled clients seek
a public forum for imagined or exaggerated wrongs. Allegations of
fraud or inappropriate conduct by senior management may be especially
damaging to a nonprofit's long-term reputation when it is pressured
due to economic conditions. This damage is true even when such allegations
prove to be baseless. On the positive side, a nonprofit can greatly
enhance its reputation by being of special public service to others
who are in economic trouble or by being upfront about the challenges
it faces. One Washington, DC-based nonprofit recently decided to
counter widespread criticism of its former leadership by unveiling
a banner reading "Under New Management" at its headquarters.
The organization also posted detailed information on its Web site
concerning the nonprofit's internal reorganization and efforts to
restore the community's trust in the nonprofit.
Conclusion
Economic downturns bring both threats and opportunities to which
a resourceful nonprofit can and should respond constructively —
both for its own protection and for the greater well-being of its
clients and of the general community of which that nonprofit is
a contributing part. In hard times, it is easy to find and bemoan
the threats. It is more rewarding for everyone, however, to seek
out and seize the opportunities. In all of these circumstances,
the discipline of risk management can provide resources and tools
for sustaining a nonprofit and the clients and communities it serves.
#
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George
L. Head is director emeritus of the Insurance Institute of America
in Malvern, PA and special advisor to the Nonprofit Risk Management
Center. He co-authored the Center's book, Enlightened Risk Taking:
A Guide to Strategic Risk Management for Nonprofits. Read about
the book at www.nonprofitrisk.org.