Category Archives: Chronicle of Philanthropy

Innovation & Effectiveness in Philanthropy

This is my most recent column in the Chronicle of Philanthropy. You can find an archive of my past columns here.

More Than Money, a Lack of Research Hampers Nonprofit Innovation
By Sean Stannard-Stockton | Chronicle of Philanthropy

The federal government will soon release guidelines to spell out how it will award $50-million through its new Social Innovation Fund, one of the Obama administration’s signature efforts to aid promising, innovative nonprofit groups.

But if the draft version of the guidelines, released in December, is any indication, the fund’s approach is geared toward a view of the nonprofit world that does not reflect reality.

Like many other donors who try to apply investing techniques to their grant making, the Social Innovation Fund operates on the assumption that the major reason the nation is not filled with high-performing nonprofit groups is that too little money goes to such groups. That may be true, but the far bigger problem is that most nonprofit groups lack the incentive or the money to measure their results and get beyond anecdotal evidence to determine whether their programs are truly effective.

The Social Innovation Fund has the potential to exert a major positive influence on the field of philanthropy, but it will need to take another approach if it expects to succeed. Its guidelines seek rigorous evidence that the programs it finances work. While it acknowledges that “in many fields and in many parts of the country, such evidence is not available,” it seems to think such cases will be the exception, when they are indeed the rule.

It is possible to hold both a constructive vision of the potential future of the nonprofit world to be based on rigorous evaluation, while also recognizing the constraints of the current reality.

For instance, Nancy Roob, the chief executive of the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation, which states on its Web site that it believes that the most effective approach to philanthropy is “to make large, long-term investments in nonprofit organizations whose programs have been proven to produce positive outcomes,” conceded in a recent post on the Philanthropy Central blog that “most nonprofits, including a majority of the Clark Foundation’s grantees, do not yet have convincing quantitative evidence of their programs’ effectiveness.”

Rather than demand evidence that by and large does not exist, foundations should seek to support organizations that base their programs on research about what works, actively collect information about the results of their programs, systematically analyze this information, adjust their activities in response to new information, and operate with an absolute focus on producing results.

Nurse-Family Partnership is the nation’s premier example of an organization that has “rigorous evidence” of effective programs.

Over 30 years, the group worked to conduct research to prove that sending nurses to teach child-rearing and other skills to impoverished mothers would help ensure that their children would become healthy, productive members of society.

In fact, Nurse-Family Partnership’s evidence is so strong that President Obama has called for its program to be expanded to cover all low-income, first-time mothers and has requested $8.5-billion over 10 years to finance the effort.

But that is not the sort of organization that the Social Innovation Fund or any grant maker focused on supporting “promising, innovative nonprofit organizations” should seek to support.

Instead, grant makers should look for the next Nurse-Family Partnership, financing management improvements that allow promising organizations to build programs that can pass rigorous studies to prove their approach works.

One of the most common mistakes donors make is that they diagnose their problems to fit the tool at hand instead of finding a tool that fits the problem. Doing so creates the illusion of success but fails to fix anything.

Much of the debate over the Social Innovation Fund has focused on the tension between supporting “innovation” and “proven programs.”

But because so little money is available to help groups conduct research and gather evidence to make their programs more effective, what would be truly innovative is giving organizations money to prove their programs work.

If grant makers want to be assured their dollars will be used effectively, they should support organizations like Nurse-Family Partnership. But if President Obama and private donors really want to make a difference, they should provide support for organizations that simply have the potential to develop proven programs.

Sean Stannard-Stockton is chief executive of Tactical Philanthropy Advisors, in Burlingame, Calif., and author of the Tactical Philanthropy blog. He is a regular columnist for The Chronicle of Philanthropy.

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Chat With Sean Stannard-Stockton Today

From noon-1pm eastern today, I’ll be answering your questions in a live chat hosted by the Chronicle of Philanthropy.

Click here to read along and submit your questions!

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My Chronicle of Philanthropy Live Chat

Remember, tomorrow I’ll be participating in a live chat on the Chronicle of Philanthropy website. You can read along and submit your own questions here. The chat begins at noon eastern on Tuesday, May 26. You’ll be able to submit your questions prior to the chat beginning.

Click here to join the discussion.

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Chronicle of Philanthropy Live Chat

On Tuesday, May 26 at noon eastern I’ll be engaging in a live, public chat hosted by the Chronicle of Philanthropy. The Chronicle’s announcement is below. Hope you can join us!

Tactical Philanthropy: Live Chat

Click here to join.

Tuesday, May 26, at 12 noon, U.S. Eastern time

Many of the nation’s largest nonprofit groups and foundations in the 20th century were top-down organizations created and supported by a small but powerful group of wealthy philanthropists.

But changes in technology, demographics, and ideals are challenging that traditional structure in profound ways. Sean Stannard-Stockton, a wealth adviser, has been exploring this change through his popular blog, Tactical Philanthropy, and through his monthly column for The Chronicle of Philanthropy.

Mr. Stannard-Stockton believes American philanthropy is in the midst of a change that will lead to new approaches to solving social problems.

"The philanthropists of the 21st century will be smaller in size, but much larger in numbers than the philanthropists of the last century," he writes. "From researching what organizations to give to, to demanding accountability from the nonprofits they support, to utilizing sophisticated giving methods, the new donors want to make sure their giving is having the most impact it can."

Is philanthropy really undergoing a sea change? If so, is this change a good one for the nonprofit world  — and for society over all? And, if this change is occurring, what should foundation and nonprofit leaders do to influence the direction of philanthropy?

Mr. Stannard-Stockton will be available to answer these and other questions about philanthropy’s past, present, and future during a one-hour live discussion with Chronicle readers.

Click here to join.

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Sharing Information to Drive Impact

The first edition of my new monthly column in the Chronicle of Philanthropy is out today.

It’s Time to Share More Information About Worthy Charities

By Sean Stannard-Stockton
March 26, 2009|Originally published in The Chronicle of Philanthropy

I have a daughter in public school and a son who will be there in a couple of years. As a parent and citizen, I care about the quality of the public schools both for the sake of my children’s education and for that of our nation’s children. Millions of other parents just like me also care about education and are making charitable donations to benefit it.

But only a tiny minority of those donors know how their contributions can best improve education and make a real difference.

Given how many professional grant makers work on improving education, it is a shame that a parent who wants to support education does not have easy access to their accumulated knowledge.

This lack of information about what works and what does not is a major obstacle to the most-effective nonprofit organizations of all types receiving the money they need.

After all, for-profit investors don’t make decisions to invest major sums without good information. But philanthropy will need to create an entirely different information-sharing system than in the for-profit world.

In for-profit investing, if you come across a great investment opportunity, you do not run around telling the world about it. You make the investment yourself and hope to make a profit.

In philanthropy, however, the value of information increases as it spreads.

Unlike in the for-profit market, nobody wins when just a few people know about a good idea. Instead, the more people who know about opportunities to give money to an effective charity or project, the more effective philanthropy as a whole will be.

That is why everyone in philanthropy needs to capitalize on the ways technology has made it easier and cheaper than ever to share information.

For grant makers, both institutional and individuals of any size, it has become incredibly cheap to share what they know about making a difference. Social-networking tools, often referred to as Web 2.0, offer numerous ways for lots of people to contribute information about specific issues.

It is not just data that will form the information base for the social-capital markets that are evolving to finance nonprofit groups. For social-capital markets to truly thrive, they must be supported by participants who see sharing knowledge not as a regulatory or moral requirement but as a way to get the most out of every dollar spent.

What that means is that big foundations should view communications as a main element of their approach to grant making. The key is to recognize that information that enhances the ability to make smart grants is the real currency in philanthropy. It is the unit of value that converts financial capital into real-world results. By identifying these units of value and making them broadly available, grant makers can exponentially increase the good they do.

In the past year or more, a growing number of organizations have taken steps to build that kind of network of support for donors. Among them are groups like GiveWell, an organization started by hedge-fund analysts to figure out whether nonprofit groups are achieving their intended results. GreatNonprofits asks clients and others who have encountered an organization to share their thoughts, almost like restaurant reviews.

This month GuideStar, which collects the federal tax forms of charities and puts them online, added GreatNonprofits reviews to the information available to donors — another step in the growing sophistication of the donor-information marketplace.

Other groups that used to focus mostly on providing financial data are also starting to offer donors information about results. Charity Navigator, an online charity evaluator with an ambitious new chief executive, Ken Berger, has recently started focusing on the results a group achieves.

Professional grant makers control only a small minority of the financial capital put to charitable use each year. But making a difference does not require ownership of financial capital. Difference comes when financial capital is deployed in a knowledgeable way.

While no magic formula or ranking system will ever exist, the big opportunity for professional grant makers is to share their knowledge so that individual donors, who control the vast majority of charitable capital, can really make a difference with their giving.

But unfortunately when people in philanthropy talk about disclosing information to the public, they focus on demands from regulators and others to provide the kind of information that guarantees nonprofit groups are operating accountably.

Instead, we must reimagine openness and information sharing as key elements of effective philanthropy.

Let us not get bogged down in the details of exactly what information should be shared. There are valid debates to be had over what information can be usefully shared and what information might do more harm than good if it became public.

It is time to recognize the reality that the core unit of value in philanthropy is not financial capital, but the knowledge needed to transform making a donation into making a difference.

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