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Published byMonica Gibson Modified over 9 years ago
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Should We… or Shouldn’t We… Earned Revenue
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earned revenue, earned income ventures, nonprofit business activity, social ventures, social entrepreneurship, community wealth creation, social purpose business, social enterprise, common good enterprise, mission-driven business, socially-responsible small business, double- bottom line; triple-bottom line, benefit corporation Social Enterprise
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“We don’t hire people to grow vegetables. We grow vegetables to hire people.” —Woody Woodruff, Red Wiggler Farm
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Types of Social Enterprises Fees for service Manufacturing and product sales Rent and leases Licensing and cause-related marketing activities
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Examples
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Keep in Mind It’s ok. Substantially related No personal, private benefit Fair market value After reasonable expenses, “profit” goes back into the tax exempt Charity distribution upon dissolution
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Is it ok to operate a venture unrelated to the nonprofit charitable purpose? Is it okay?
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Continuum Nonprofit Charity Nonprofit Social Enterprise Hybrids, Combos, New Forms Socially- Responsible Business Business
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We should…We shouldn’t…
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Why You Should Diversifies revenue Autonomous, predictable revenue Businesslike discipline Entrepreneurial habit Why?
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Why You Should Be Careful Organizational and cultural fit Legal and tax issues Implementation expertise Not easy money Why Not?
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Managing Expectations “For most nonprofits, it is unrealistic to expect that ventures could ever completely replace traditional funding sources. Even the most successful ventures seldom provide more than one-third to one-half of an organization’s annual budget.” Rolfe Larson
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There are exceptions.
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Profile of Social Enterprises How does your organization compare? By budget By mission By number of employees By location
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So, what could be our business? Assets OrganizationOpportunity
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What does this community need? That someone (customers) will pay for. Opportunity
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1. Extending and monetizing current practice. 2. Starting a business. 3. Cause-related marketing Three Types to Consider
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Organizational Assets
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Organizational Capacity
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Funding Reserves Customers Clients Funders and donors Investors Lenders Social venture capital Crowdsourcing platforms Fellowships Social venture competitions Web-based intermediaries
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Anticipating Impact If this venture succeeds, what might be the impact on Mission Organizational capacity Money Community Reputation And if the venture fails?
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ChangeMatters @changemtrs @amykincaid Amy Kincaid www.changematters.com www.changematters.com info@changematters.com info@changematters.com
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