July 31, 2009, 11:56 AM ET
Friday's Roundup: Latest Perspectives on the Nonprofit World
Here are some of latest blog items and opinion pieces on the nonprofit world worth noting:
- Writing on her smArts and Culture blog, Maryann Devine lists “eight signs that your arts organization isn’t quite ready to use blogging to connect with your patrons.”
- What’s the difference between a “high-performing” and a “high-impact” nonprofit group? Sean Stannard-Stockton, a donor adviser and columnist for The Chronicle of Philanthropy, discusses that question on his blog Tactical Philanthropy.
- On the New Philanthropy Capital blog, John Copps writes about why more charities don’t acknowledge that their ultimate goal should be to put themselves out of business.
- The Nonprofit Technology Network’s NTEN blog offers a long list of resources for nonprofit groups that want to put technology to use for their cause.
- Beth Kanter blogs about why Planned Parenthood has...
July 30, 2009, 10:21 AM ET
News and Notes From Around the Nonprofit World
Here are some of latest blog items and opinion pieces worth noting for the nonprofit world:
- Herve Delhumeau examines the different ways business and charity have worked together and what the future may hold for businesses with a social mission.
- The Fundermentalist wonders if some Jewish philanthropists could sell their extensive art collections to support more charity work.
- The consulting company McKinsey looks at how businesses measure the financial value produced by their philanthropy and social-responsibility practices. (The article is in the company’s quarterly business magazine, which requires a subscription.)
- Social media has made it easier for people to organize for a cause, but is it also encouraging “slacktivism” and “bumper-sticker philanthropy,” wonders Kristin Ivie on the Social Citizens blog.
- On his Nonprofit Board Crisis blog, Mike Burns...
July 29, 2009, 09:36 PM ET
Independent Sector Meeting Draws Fire
As Independent Sector holds a meeting in Colorado this week to discuss the future of the nonprofit world, questions are being raised about who has been invited to the event.
Seventy-five nonprofit leaders and others are attending the Washington charitable association’s gathering, including Stacy Palmer, editor of The Chronicle of Philanthropy.
Rosetta Thurman, a charity consultant, writes that the effort could be “very groundbreaking” but says it has not done enough to include people under 30. “For a country that is teeming with millions of Generation Y leaders (the second largest generation behind Baby Boomers), this is a huge oversight on the part of a group that seeks to examine trends in the nonprofit sector and develop a plan for the future,” she writes on her blog.
On The Chronicle’s Web site, other charity officials have written similar concerns about whether the...
Read MoreJuly 29, 2009, 11:53 AM ET
Latest Perspectives From the Nonprofit World
Here are some of latest blog items and opinion pieces worth noting for the nonprofit world:
- The Nonprofit Quarterly‘s Rick Cohen examines the potential impact on nonprofit organizations of cuts approved by the House Appropriations Committee. (The Chronicle reports, meanwhile, that a Senate appropriations subcommittee voted yesterday to restore President Obama’s national-service budget).
- Sticking with the government theme, White Courtesy Telephone challenges California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to stop being a “girly man” and raise taxes to protect the programs of charities in that state.
- On the GiveWell Blog, Holden Karnofsky writes about how one small charity, VillageReach, is proving that you don’t need to be big to effectively achieve your mission.
- Bill Huddleston offers advice to the nonprofit leaders who are meeting with Independent Sector in Colorado...
July 28, 2009, 04:49 PM ET
Nonprofit Leader Questions Google Ad Program
Is Google doing enough to provide free online ad space to nonprofit groups led by blacks and Latinos? Andrew Sears, a nonprofit leader, says no.
Mr. Sears is director of TechMission, a charity in Boston that seeks to help minorities gain access to the Internet and other digital technology. On UrbanMinistry.org, a Web site his group manages, Mr. Sears details his concerns with Google Grants, a program that offers valuable Internet advertisements to charities.
He writes that Google often awards free ads to organizations that are run by people who reflect the technology company’s own racial make-up and background. Google employees “give grants to organizations with interest like theirs and people they know, which most often are also white or Asian and from elite schools.”
A Google spokeswoman, who declined to be identified, told The Chronicle that the company does not collect...
Read MoreJuly 28, 2009, 10:46 AM ET
Perspectives From Around the Nonprofit World
Here are some of latest blog items and opinion pieces worth noting for the nonprofit world:
- The Daily Tell offers a look at how Twitter is being used to raise money for charities.
- On Major Gifts Guru, Tom Wilson explains how organizations can improve the efficiency of their major-gifts officers.
- The lawyer Jack Siegel explains on Charity Governance why donors should read a recent court decision involving Fisk University before they make restricted donations to nonprofit groups.
- Kivi Leroux Miller has some suggestions (courtesy of Alia McKee, of Sea Change Strategies) for translating news-media coverage into donations.
- Now the Details, a blog on the news-media, asks whether public broadcasting’s fund raising will be harmed if more news operations start soliciting donations to pay for their reporting.
- Susan A. Barry, chief executive of the Community...
July 28, 2009, 10:26 AM ET
Does the Nonprofit World Need a 'Reboot'?
Will the recession force the nonprofit world to work together better and be more focused? Or will the continuing economic losses simply hobble charities and foundations?
Sidney R. Hargro, a senior officer at the Columbus Foundation, in Ohio, is raising these questions on his blog. He says nonprofit groups are failing to deal with the bleak situation, similar to a how a person copes with a terminal illness.
“Nonprofits have experienced denial, anger, bargaining, and depression due to this most difficult state of affairs,” he writes. “But who will issue the call to move to ‘acceptance’ and beyond by saying, ‘True –- this traumatic state of affairs sucks –- but now what?’”
He says the nonprofit world needs to ask itself three questions: What services are most crucial to the country’s long-term health? How do charitable efforts become more efficient? And how will organizations deal ...
Read MoreJuly 27, 2009, 11:18 AM ET
Give & Take Daily Blog Roundup
The Chronicle today kicks off a new daily digest of some of the nonprofit world’s most thought-provoking, controversial, or simply entertaining blog items.
If you’d like to have your blog article mentioned in our daily roundup, send an e-mail message to giveandtake@philanthropy.com.
Here are some of latest blog items that are worth noting:
- On his Aid Watch blog, William Easterly, a professor of economics at New York University, is debating with World Vision UK about whether the group is unfairly using children to advocate for increased foreign aid. In a letter to Mr. Easterly, World Vision defends its tactics as appropriate.
- Has the reality television show “NYC Prep” tarnished the image of high-school community service, asks Carolyn Rubenstein on The Huffington Post. Ms. Rubenstein is the founder of a charity that assists children with cancer.
July 24, 2009, 09:32 AM ET
Fund Raiser Defends Obama Plan to Reduce Charitable Tax Deduction
While a conservative commentator has accused President Obama of declaring “war on philanthropy,” Peter Golio, a California fund-raising consultant, offers a robust defense of the president.
In a wide-ranging response to an essay by David Billet, associate editor of Commentary, Mr. Golio agrees with Mr. Billet that nonprofit efforts are crucial to America. But on his blog, L.A. Philanthropy Watch, he argues that Mr. Billet is off the mark with his attack on the Obama administration’s plan to reduce the charitable deduction for wealthy Americans.
“The language, tone, and focus of Billet’s essay reveal a greater concern with tax policy as it affects Americans in the top tax brackets, than for the strength and vibrancy of ‘American nonprofits’ or ‘American philanthropy,’” says Mr. Golio.
Mr. Golio writes that the president’s tax proposal, which is supposed to help pay for changes...
Read MoreJuly 23, 2009, 11:35 AM ET
Gathering Seeks to 'Reinvent' Nonprofit World
Next week nonprofit leaders will gather in Colorado Springs to discuss the future of philanthropy and how it can meet the emerging global problems triggered by the economic downturn.
Independent Sector, a Washington association of about 600 charities and grant makers, is organizing the three-day event. Given how hard the nonprofit world has been hit by the recession, it needs to “reinvent itself” in the next 10 years or so, Diana Aviv, Independent Sector’s chief executive, said in a phone call with reporters and blog writers.
She promised that the discussion would be wide-ranging, including global and national trends and specific issues facing nonprofit groups. Topics are likely to include whether there are too many charities in America; how business, government, and nonprofit organizations can work together better; and how foundations should rethink their grant making to meet...
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