Expanding programs is on the two-year horizon for nearly 50% of nonprofits, yet many organizations may lack the financial strength to fuel sustainable growth. This is among the top findings of Nonprofit Standards, a benchmarking survey designed to give nonprofits a useful barometer to measure performance across a variety of areas including strategic planning, human resources, operations, scope and impact and governance matters.
The BDO Institute for Nonprofit Excellence’s second annual nonprofit benchmarking survey reveals that nonprofits’ hearts may be bigger than their wallets.
Managing growth registers as a concern for 2 in 5 nonprofits, but the sector overall could be underestimating the road ahead. Some of the financial warning signs in the survey findings include:
“Program expansion is not always the right choice for nonprofits. A desire to demonstrate impact and growth can sometimes lead nonprofits to divert resources away from their core mission-focused services,” said Laurie De Armond, partner and co-leader of BDO’s Nonprofit & Education practice. “Maximizing impact in a sustainable way often comes down to making smart choices about which programs are right to fund.”
Other top findings include:
Mergers & collaboration
Nonprofits could be dismissing mergers or strategic partnerships as an avenue to achieving financial sustainability too quickly. Nearly 4 in 5 nonprofits say merging with a similar nonprofit is not at all likely.
Collaboration is not at the forefront of nonprofit’s future plans, but more than one-third of nonprofits say it is somewhat likely or very likely they will enter into a strategic partnership with a similar nonprofit in the next two years.
Human resources
Compensation remains the number one employee satisfaction issue: 59% consider it a moderate-to-high level challenge.
Recruiting and retaining nonprofit staff and employees are a high or moderate challenge for 3 in 5 nonprofit organizations.
Technology
A nonprofit’s ability to keep pace with changing technology is a growing employee satisfaction issue: About 3 in 5 nonprofits say it is a moderate-to-high level challenge.
Cybersecurity and changing technology are among the top challenges for nonprofit boards, identified by 54% and 48% as a moderate-to-high level challenge, respectively.
Scope & impact
Tax reform and the myriad of accounting changes (lease accounting, revenue recognition, changes to the presentation of nonprofit financial statements) are top of mind. More than 2 in 5 nonprofits consider the time and effort required to deal with government regulations and legislative changes a moderate-to-high challenge.