Bag om Financial Leadership for Nonprofit Executives
Guide your organization to financial sustainabilityMaking sure that your nonprofit is going to be around long-term requires financial leadership. This means creating a financial vision for your organization and planning how you’ll get there. Financial Leadership for Nonprofit Executives gives you the framework, specific language, and processes to lead with confidence. With it, you’ll learn how to protect and grow the assets of your organization and accomplish as much mission as possible with those resources.The good news is you don’t have to be a trained accountant, earn an MBA, or have run a for-profit business in another lifetime. You already have many of the skills it takes to be a financial leader. This useful guide makes the process understandable and doable. Logical, clear, and well-writtenYou’ll find clear, logical steps to learn how to Get accurate financial data—in a format you can understandUse financial data to evaluate your organization’s healthPlan around a set of meaningful financial goalsCommunicate progress on these goals to your staff, board, and external stakeholders. You’ll also find five foundational financial leadership principlesthree overarching questions every financial leader needs to be able to answer (and where to find those answers)two fundamental budgeting principlesfive steps to building a strong annual budget. Case study brings concepts to lifeThis hands-on guide includes a recurring case study designed to help you understand the book's concepts in real-world terms. You can also use the sample statements and formats to improve your own organization's financial reporting."Red, Yellow, Green" evaluation keeps you on trackAt the end of each chapter is an evaluation tool. You can rate how your organization is doing relative to the component of financial leadership covered in each chapter. Each attribute is scored as being red, yellow, or green. “Red” items are below standard and require immediate attention; “yellow” items are widely practiced though not generally ideal; and “green” items are considered best practice. Over time, as you and your partners on the board and staff move the organization toward “green” in each of these areas, you will create an environment in which financial leadership can flourish.
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