I was challenged recently by reading a posting in a leadership
discussion group I participate in concerning the difference between nonprofit
and for-profit leadership. I am usually not so “professional” in the
content of this blog but this paradigm got me thinking about several
things in this area that I wanted to put down in writing.
Here are some of my thoughts for all my nonprofit and for-profit leadership friends. Comment and let me know what you think!
What we are learning in nonprofit leadership today is that nonprofits
differ from for-profits in some core underpinnings; the main one being
“the bottom line”. The bottom line for a for-profit is financial and
involves making money for a limited group of people. The bottom line for a nonprofit is its mission.
A for-profit’s “mission” is to make money for its stakeholders. A
nonprofits mission is to bring about change with the assistance of its
stakeholders. A for-profit’s stakeholders are going to push the business
to be as profitable as possible for financial gain. A nonprofit’s
stakeholders are going to push the agency to be as effective as possible
for social gain.
This line has been blurred significantly because of decades of focus
on the “Nonprofit needs to be run like a for-profit” myopic paradigm.
This has led to the death of a true mission driven agency, sacrificed to
the god of the business leader fallacy. The last two decades has taught
us that mission and business ethics have been significantly weakened in
the rush towards “business leadership” focused on profit rather than
product, customer, service, and company mission.
Here are some core issues as I see them:
Issue 1 – Mission should the primary focus of any good leader.
Because the mission is the driving focus that shapes sustainability for a
nonprofit, it should be the main focus of a leader, rather than the
financial bottom-line. If the primary focus is sustainability (having
enough money to operate a fiscally sound agency), then profit becomes
the bottom line and the nonprofit just lost its focus on its mission in
sacrifice of gaining more dollars. Sustainability is critically
important to a nonprofits survival and growth but focusing on
sustainability in deference to mission will lead to mission drift.
Mission drift for a for-profit means they are losing money and getting
back on track involves finding a way to collect more cash. Mission drift
for a nonprofit means endangering its 501(c)* status and losing that
mission focus can lead to the swift dissolution of the charter.
Issue 2 – Business risk for a nonprofit, as viewed from a for-profit
perspective, equates to poor leadership and a lack of wisdom. I prefer
the concept of “boldness” for decision-making by a nonprofit leader. The
for-profit leader can take risks that put product and services in
jeopardy and if the risk leads to failure, only products and services
(and stakeholders’ wallets) are usually affected. Failed risk-taking for
a nonprofit usually comes at a higher price where lives are affected
and, in some sectors, people who depend on the services and products to
maintain basic, life-giving assistance would have to go without. The
nonprofit leader and his/her team needs to be bold and make decisions
that might be edgy to grow the effectiveness of the services but “risky”
is not the smartest of tactics for a nonprofit to engage in.
Issue 3 – “More business leadership
is needed in nonprofits”. This has been a major paradigm in the both
fields for a while now. It is believed that a business leader can pick
up the commitment to a cause easier than a nonprofit leader can pick-up
the business skills needed to effectively lead an agency. Being trained
in psychology
and business at a Master’s degree level and with over 25 years of
experience in leading, consulting and counseling people, I have learned
that business leaders can be quite ridged in their views of the world
and how it works, and to create “commitment” outside of their particular
paradigm can cause significant cognitive dissidence and can be a
difficult interpersonal journey indeed!
But, if you have a leader committed to a cause and they catch the
true concept of the necessity of sustainability (effective business
skills that keep a nonprofit operating in the black) to keep the cause
going, business skills can be picked up quickly because a leader’s heart
and passion (character traits that cannot be taught) is already engaged
and business prowess (a skill-set that can be learned) can be taught
and learned quickly and eagerly.
Issue 4 – Business risk has its rewards and that needs to be recognized more fully by small businesses
and nonprofits. For nonprofits though, boldness in decision-making
equates to an improvement in services and meeting the mission-centered
needs more effectively. For a for-profit, risk has a financial focus
primarily.
In some current leadership circles, nonprofits and their leaders
are being portrayed as fearful and weak primarily. In my experience with
leaders in both areas, the nonprofit leader is far more bold, creative,
trust worthy, ethical, forward thinking and innovative when compared
side by side. The nonprofit leader has to be because the resources are
fewer and the opportunities greater! I have been amazed by the way many
nonprofit leaders I have worked with and for can leverage minimal
resources for maximum impact!
Sunday, March 24, 2013
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