Know your Numbers, part 2

Know your Numbers, part 2

…and create an early warning system for your non-profit or foundation.

You can respond to rapidly changing conditions and provide nimble leadership and high-quality decision-making when you have access to timely information about the environment and the organization.  

A fundamental expectation of leaders in the for-profit world is that they ‘know their numbers.’  Non-profit leaders must know their numbers, too.  Having a process that routinely collects and analyzes data is essential.

A firm grasp of your current position in the local and regional service environment and your operational challenges and strengths will help you build on strengths, quickly locate opportunities for improvement, and open pathways for innovation in your services and operations. 

When you have timely information on how your organization is affected by external trends and internal processes, you can quickly make high-quality decisions based on facts, not anecdotes. 

There are four components to understanding and monitoring your organization’s operations and health:

  • Levels
  • Trends
  • Comparables/benchmarks
  • Level of integration of this information into program planning and operational improvement, which supports innovation and continuous improvement

Finding financial and program indicators that make sense for your organization to monitor monthly or quarterly doesn’t have to break the budget. Most organizations group indicators into two broad categories: External Operating Environment and Internal Environment

External- EconomicExternal-DemographicExternal-Attitudes and Behavior
Employment/Unemployment ratesGrowth/Shifts in target population groupsHow frequently are services used
Household income/household income distributionEducation levelsClient satisfaction with your services
Largest industries/Fastest Growing/Declining IndustriesLevels of disability/health status in the community population/target populationFavored social media platforms used by the target population
State/Federal tax transfers/flows into your community or service areaFrom your industry- who volunteers, who donates, who gives 
Internal 
Program alignment with demographics, attitudes, economic dataRevenue structure-diversity/concentration of revenue sources
Leadership alignment with community and client demographicsNew/growing revenue sources; fundraising trends
Efficiency measures-cost per hour, cost per $ raised, cost per unit of service deliveredProgram effectiveness- graduation/completion rates, employment rates, recidivism rates
Cash flow and solvency- #days cash on hand, borrowing/debt ratios 

Once you decide on a handful of internal and external indicators, you are ready to move to the next step: creating a process to collect and record the data points AND include them in your organization’s planning processes regularly and routinely.

Note that most of the external levels are available from free, widely available databases.  Some sources include

Census.gov

U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: United States

Demographics of Social Media Users and Adoption in the United States | Pew Research Center

Business Formation Statistics (census.gov)

These are YOUR numbers. They will give you a snapshot of what is changing around and inside your organization.  By tying them to trends, you will gain even more powerful insights into your organization and its operations.

Look for the next post on trends- what do the levels tell us, and what makes a trend a trend?

*Charts adapted from Recession, Recovery, and Renewal, Susan Raymond Ph.D. , Wiley, 2013