Title: Whats Research Got to Do with It
1Whats Research Got to Do with It?
- Katherine Mandusic Finley, CAE, CFRE
- ISAE Annual Convention
- July 16, 2003
2Types of Research
- Applied or internal done by association or done
for a specific association - Academic done by professional researcher
examining issues related to all associations or
nonprofits
3Benefits of Applied Research
- Provides an association with information about
its members needs and wants - Helps an association design effective programs
and services - Helps an association provide assessment of
marketplace trends - Provides an assessment of image
- Limited use beyond one association
4Benefits of Academic Research
- Many academic centers, universities, and students
studying this area - Not all of this research is useful, but
- Some research can give credence to various
theories of leadership and governance - Can provide insight into various problems so we
can better manage our association
5Benefits of Academic Research
- Contributes to better understanding of a
particular topic - Can help an association institute a program or
form of governance - Gives the entire field credence
6What is Being Studied?
- In one word EVERYTHING!
- 460 papers at one conference alone
- Over 245 programs in nonprofit management (either
degree or certificate) - Numerous think tanks devoted exclusively to
this - Doctoral program in association mgt.
7Sampling of Research
8Effectiveness of Board Training or Development
Programs
- Study by Thomas P. Holland and Douglas K. Jackson
of University of Ga. - Study of 10 boards that had three-year
developmental programs - Identified these board competencies contextual,
interpersonal, analytical and strategic - Boards that employed developmental training
improved effectiveness significantly
9Effectiveness of Board Training or Development
Programs, cont.
- Competencies that improved most were ones
specifically targeted for attention - Boards will not change if change is imposed must
want to develop - Board development has to be considered a
long-term investment
10Why Do Nonprofits Fail?
- Study by Mark Hager, Urban Institute Wolfgang
Bielefeld, IU and Joe Galaskiewicz, University
of Arizona - Studied Minneapolis area from 1984-94 to see why
nonprofits failed - Found that size and age related to organizational
survival. The older, larger and more established
organizations were more likely to survive
11Why Do Nonprofits Fail, cont.
- Reasons for closure were organization too small
too young instability (personnel loss or goal
changes) lack of managerial acumen (financial
difficulties, personnel capabilities, conflict
among staff, power struggles on board, unclear
mission) and success (mission completed)
12Why Do Nonprofits Fail, cont.
- Under managerial acumen, financial difficulties
and personnel loss were major reasons for closing - Some closed because executive director died or
left founder left or died
13Effectiveness of the Carver Governance Model
- Study by Patricia Dautel Nobbie, University of
Georgia - Carver model board drives organization through
policies related to ends, executive limitations,
and governance policies - CEO allowed to advance ends without violating
means
14Effectiveness of the Carver Governance Model,
cont.
- Data collected from 234 board members of 32
organizations using model control groups of
those not using any model and those using another
model - Those studied were those that totally implemented
and understood model - Study found that perception by board was that
they did operate more effectively
15Effectiveness of the Carver Governance Model
- However, there was no evidence to support that
performance is actually higher under this model
as compared to other models - The effectiveness really depends on training of
board members and length of using the model
16How Well Do Boards Approach Executive Transitions?
- 1998 a study conducted by CompassPointe in San
Francisco Bay area. - Looked at 28 organizations
- Executive directors in 501-c-3 stayed three
years most first-timers (Leadership Lost study)
17How Well Do Boards Approach Executive
Transitions, cont.
- Study found that boards underestimate risk of bad
hires - Also, boards are woefully unprepared for task
- Moreover, board does not use transition as an
opportunity
18Weird Management Techniques that Work
- Robert Sutton of Stanford University, School of
Business and Engineering - Research on what techniques spark innovation
within organizations and companies - Wrote book outlining 11 ½ techniques that work in
companies found three work in nonprofit setting
19Weird Management Techniques that Work, cont.
- Hire people who make you uncomfortable. Seek
competent people with different beliefs and
skills. This tends to spark innovation - Find happy people and get them to fight.
Conflict over ideas is good, especially in
creative organizations. Study showed that when
fighting over conflicting ideas, employees
provoked to weave ideas together to come up with
best idea
20Weird Management Techniques that Work, cont.
- Reward success and failure, punish inaction.
Study found that you cannot generate good ideas
without bad ones. Reward smart failures not
dumb ones.
21Is a Merit Pay System Always Good?
- Study by John R. Deckop, Temple University and
Carol C. Cirka, Urisinus College - Study of a private northeastern college that is
religiously affiliated - 126 responses to questionnaire
- Implemented a merit pay system in mission-based
organization
22Is a Merit Pay System Always Good?, cont.
- Study found that implementing a merit pay system
in a mission-based organization can cause a
decline in intrinsic motivation - Plan to implement this must be communicated
- If organization cannot continue merit pay
increases, this poses a danger to organization
23Are Nonprofit Organizations Ready for Downsizing?
- Study by Russ Cargo and Deborah Barfield of
Nonprofit Enterprise Institute at Virginia
Commonwealth University - Study found nonprofits unprepared for downsizing
- Nonprofits need strategy to address structure
(staffing), communications and to assist affected
employees - Nonprofits particularly lack legal knowledge to
make right decisions
24Is There a Tie Between Strategy and Financial
Performance?
- Study by William Crittendon of Northeastern
University study done over three-year time
period of 31 organizations - There is a definite correlation between success
of organizations and degree to which they engage
in strategic planning - There is a definite correlation between success
of organization and those that have financial
orientation
25Is There a Tie Between Strategy and Financial
Performance?, cont.
- There is a correlation between success of
organization and degree to which organization has
a marketing orientation - Unsuccessful organizations are basically unfocused
26Do Organizations Engaged in Formal Strategic
Planning Perform Better than Others?
- Study by Julie I. Siciliano of Western New
England College in Springfield, MA - Based on 240 questionnaires from YMCAs and 66
telephone interviews - Factors identified with more formal strategic
planning strategic planning committee of board
takes responsibility, use of consultants and
financial performance
27Do Organizations Engaged in Formal Strategic
Planning Perform Better than Others?, cont.
- Findings The more formal the strategic planning
process, the higher the organizations
performance - In particular, activity of setting goals,
objectives, action plans and monitoring linked to
better performance - Formalizing analysis of environmental trends
associated with better social performance
28Do Organizations Engaged in Formal Strategic
Planning Perform Better than Others?, cont.
- Formalizing competitive analysis was associated
with better financial performance - Development of a unique mission statement was not
associated with any performance measure - Less formal strategic planning done when an
executive committee involved rather than a
strategic planning committee
29Do Organizations Engaged in Formal Strategic
Planning Perform Better than Others?, cont.
- No evidence that use of outside consultant
resulted in more formal planning process - More financially stable organizations are more
likely to engage in formal process, rather than
those in financial crisis who need planning the
most
30Philanthropy - 2002
- American Association of Fund Raising Counsel
(AAFRC) prepares Giving USA each year - Giving is at record 240.9 billion, an increase
of 1 percent. Adjusted for inflation, this
represents a decrease of .5 percent - Giving by individuals increased slightly
- Bequests increased to 18.1 billion
- Giving by foundations decreased
- Giving by corporations increased
31Philanthropy 2002, cont.
- Most giving comes from individuals (76.3),
foundations (11.2), and corporations (5.1) - Most giving goes to religion (35), followed by
education (13.1), foundations (9.1), health
(7.8) and human services (7.7) - Environmental/animal rights, arts culture and
public-society-benefit get least
32New Studies
- Executive transitions in associations (Union
Institute Doctoral Program) - Diversity in associations (Union Institute
Doctoral Program) - Best practices for small associations (Union
Institute Doctoral Program) - Volunteers the cost of hiring UPS Foundation
and Urban Institute - Indiana nonprofit database study (all nonprofits,
economic impact mapping the sector IU study) - MORE
33Journals and Magazines with Latest Research
- Center for Association Leadership launching a
new journal - Chronicle of Philanthropy
- NonProfit Times
- Philanthropy (AFP)
- Nonprofit World
- Board Member (BoardSource)
- Voluntas
- Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly
- Social Science Innovation Review (Stanford
University) - The Nonprofit Quarterly (Third Sector New
England) - ARNOVA News, E-News and abstract database
- Snapshots, Aspen Institute
- Nonprofit Management Leadership
34New Books
- William B. Werther, Jr and Evan M. Berman, Third
Sector Management The Art of Managing Nonprofit
Organizations (Georgetown Univ. Press, 2001) - Robert B. Denhardt, Janet Vinzant Denhardt, and
Maria P. Aristigueta, Managing Human Behavior in
Nonprofit Organizations (Sage Publications, 2002)
- Ronald A. Landskroner, The Nonprofit Managers
Resource Directory, 2nd ed. (John Wiley Sons,
2002) - Paul C. Light, Pathways to Nonprofit Excellence
(Brookings Institution, 2002) - Byron L. Tweeten, Transformational Boards (Jossey
Bass, 2002)
35New Books, cont.
- Lester M. Salamon, The Resilient Sector The
State of Nonprofit America (Brookings
Institution, 2002) - Bruce R. Hopkins, The Law of Intermediate
Sanctions (John Wiley Sons, 2003) - Michael ONell, Nonprofit Nation A New Look at
the Third America (Jossey Bass, 2002)
- John Carver, John Carver on Board Leadership
(Jossey-Bass, 2002) - Robert I. Sutton, Weird Ideas That Work (Free
Press, 2002) - Peter Frumkin, On Being Nonprofit A Conceptual
and Policy Primer (Harvard, 2002)
36Research-Related Organizations
- AFP Research Council
- Center on Philanthropy at IU
- Aspen Institute
- Urban Institute
- Brookings Institution
- BoardSource
- Institute for Nonprofit Organization Management,
San Francisco
- Center for Association Leadership
- ASAE
- Independent Sector
- Amherst Wilder Foundation
- Mandel Center
- Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations, Harvard
37Research-Related Organizations, Cont.
- Mandel Center for Nonprofit Organizations
- ARNOVA
- International Society for Third-Sector Research
- National Alliance for Nonprofit Management
- National Center on Nonprofit Management
- Academy of Management
38 THANK YOU!