A charity needs to create an environment where staff can succeed. Calm is the ideal state of a well-organized workplace, while stress is pervasive where chaos reigns.
When staff fully understand the expectations placed on them, (and the reasons for those expectations) they can maintain a productive system where they succeed, the charity succeeds and the donors feel they are achieving their philanthropic goals.
Situations undermining these goals result from too little training and lack of organizational knowledge and history, and no accountability.
Does a charity have a responsibility to its donors?
As a donor, I (and many others) want to know that a charity’s staff can use their time effectively, as well as understanding and meeting each individual donors’ goals
In many cases, however, this may not be the case. So, who ensures these responsibilities are met?
With board members and staff moving through the charity regularly, practices are often at the whim of new hires who may not have the proper guidance from the charity nor perhaps the credentials, motivation, or knowledge of the organization to enact change.
A charity must define its requirements clearly, but how can this be done with such a fluid situation? Methodologies can be ignored or lost, and accountability is nowhere to be found as job descriptions are also not clearly documented.
Is there a solution? We think there is.
1. Organization of all electronic tools. As one client stated: “A place for everything and everything in its place.”
2. Rules-based procedures so that staff members can be effective. Knowledge is power in a knowledge-driven organization.
3. Assemble a Knowledge Base where valued information is accurate and accessible.
4. Accountability to ensure all team members are working towards the same goals.
Publish a statement of a “Charity’s Obligation to its Donors,” a quality environment where donors know their contributions have value.
Charities can no longer rely on a volunteer-based approach to fundraising. Now is the time for the professional approach donors deserve.
Billions of dollars funnel through Canadian charities annually. We have yet to hear any one of them say, “We have enough money to meet the needs of our clients.”
The time has come to do better for charity clients, staff, and more importantly, our donors.
Sharron Batsch BSc is the developer of @EASE Fund Development Software and the author of "From Chaos to Control - Build a High Performance Team Using Knowledge Management" Contact her, sharron@batschgroup.com.