Tips for a successful not-for-profit strategic plan
Strategic planning can be difficult at a not-for-profit.
There’s often a concerted effort among not-for-profit donors, employees, and even executives to devote every possible resource and every ounce of energy to the beneficent goal of the organization.
Yet, without a well-constructed strategic plan, resources can be wasted, and the organization may never develop the focus and mechanisms needed to accomplish its goals. Worse, an organization without a strategic plan might never even figure out exactly what its goals are.
As an organization develops a strategic plan to guide its direction, it’s important for the CFO or someone from finance to be involved, said Bob Mims, CPA, CGMA, controller and director of investments at Ducks Unlimited, a membership organization with more than 450 employees devoted to wetlands preservation.
Mims participated in a strategic-planning process with Ducks Unlimited in 2011. During a session at the AICPA National Not-for-Profit Industry Conference in June, he shared the process that was successful during approximately four months of planning.
If you ask 10 people for a definition of a strategic plan, Mims said, you are likely to get 15 answers. He likes to think of a strategic plan as a successfully implemented marriage of desired program achievement and long-term financial or budgeting goals.
“A strategic plan, already at the core of its definition, begins to have some details and some budget parameters that have to sync to [it],” Mims said. “Because if they don’t connect, it will fail.”
The early steps in a strategic-planning process can include:
The objectives are the key to the entire plan, and Mims advises keeping them simple.
“Do three objectives,” he said. “And only do three. And make sure to include every part of the organization.”
Ducks Unlimited’s three objectives for 2012 through 2016 encompassed the organization’s program, fundraising, and administrative missions. They were:
After arriving at the strategic objectives, Mims said, an organization can move toward a business plan for achieving them. Ultimately, the goal is to develop metrics that will define success in striving toward those objectives. Benchmarking with other, similar organizations may be a part of this process.
Mims said metrics should conform to the often-repeated “SMART” characteristics (specific, measurable, attainable, results-oriented, and time-bounded). Ducks Unlimited set its metrics at protecting or restoring at least 480,000 acres of wetlands over five years, reaching 700,000 members, and achieving a $2 million annual operational surplus.
“We acronymed it,” Mims said. “Mud, for wetlands. Members. And money. And we would have board members saying, ‘Mud, members, money. Mud, members, money.’ We coined it into one word for each strategic objective.”
In some ways, though, the planning is the easy part. Anybody can create ambitious goals. The challenge is to effectively implement a plan. Implementation requires building budgets that will result in achievement of financial goals and determining how to hold people accountable for operational goals.
Mary Legakis Engel of The Management Coach, a business coach who helped Ducks Unlimited develop and implement its plan, said this is where plans often fail. She said it’s important for employees to understand and embrace their duties related to the plan and be motivated to achieve the goals.
“Why do people fail to implement?” Engel asked. “Because people fail to understand what they specifically need to do and by when to make the strategic plan a reality. And why do people fail to know that? Because nobody took the time to engage their mind and heart to understand what they need to do.”
Engel said an organization’s leaders must communicate to employees the changes that the strategic plan will bring for them; make sure they understand the changes they need to make; and give employees an opportunity to figure out how they are going to accomplish the new goals and get approval on their methods.
Ideally, job duties and merit pay increases will be tied to the accomplishment of the strategic plan. At a not-for-profit, a strategic plan should successfully integrate volunteers and staff and encourage cooperation between departments.
Ultimately, the plan for 2012–16 worked out for Mims and Ducks Unlimited. This year, in the fourth year of the five-year plan, all of the objectives and metrics have been achieved.
Which means it’s time for another strategic plan and a reboot of the process that was successful before.
—Ken Tysiac (ktysiac@aicpa.org) is a JofA editorial director.
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