Leading Through Crisis: The Nonprofit Series
Allies for Good:
As we now extend our new reality, life with COVID-19 and beyond, there is much that we still don’t know or understand. What is clear is that we are in a time unlike any other.
In that spirit, we have started a blog series to share some insights and recommendations that are based on the challenges we are hearing as we work alongside you and your peers.
In Solidarity,
April 29, 2020
Before we go any further, we want to salute those of you that have spent the last six weeks directly on the front lines. Your service, commitment and sacrifice in these times is nothing short of amazing. We see you! Still, we recognize that many others have not been as directly involved and are wondering what happens next…in your organization, across the sector, around the world. While we hope the thoughts in our initial piece continue to ring true, and while social distancing is still the order of the day, we collectively believe it is time to be thinking more about how we can all prepare our organizations for the future.
Consider these 15 tips a starting point for those conversations.
1. Cast Vision. Planning is hard in the best of times; it is nearly impossible at this time, but it is arguably a leaders’ top priority. Give your board, staff and stakeholders something to see, even if it is imperfect. What do things look like today, a week out, three months out, a year out?
2. Leaders must lead. Leadership is a condition of opportunity and circumstance, not limited to title. Don’t make these decisions alone—get all the good ideas on the table by creating an atmosphere where thought leaders can emerge throughout your organization.
3. Include diverse voices and perspectives as you navigate the current situation. Be purposeful in engaging team members, and other stakeholders, who have different experiences, interests, and challenges.
4. Challenge assumptions and ask difficult questions. What if we can’t gather in person for the foreseeable future? What if we can’t serve youth/families/the community in the ways we have in the past? How does our office environment look different if large numbers of the team continue working from home?
5. Adapt and plan, then do it again. Make the uncertainty a little less cloudy by considering multiple scenarios. Particularly for the major decisions with the biggest impact on your clients, staff, and organization, come up with a Plan A, B & C. Identify how and when you will know it is time to move to Plan B or C.
6. Innovate! Create! Experiment! Doing what we’ve done in the past to “right the ship” during times of disruption may be a good starting point, but it is insufficient. This is the time for PDSAing – Plan, Do, Study, Act. It isn’t business as usual. Continually ask yourself and your staff, “What does business as unusual look like?”
7. Remain true to your mission and values. Your organization’s mission and values are non-negotiables that guide your decision-making. Now is the time to lean on these as decisions are being made.
8. Prioritize self-care for you and everyone in your organization. The last eight weeks have been incredibly draining—both mentally and physically. The path ahead appears to be equally challenging. Those you serve need your BEST TEAM and your team needs your BEST YOU. Lead by example. Make a self-care plan, encourage your staff to do so as well, and hold each other accountable.
9. Celebrate your employees. Your employees need to feel appreciated now more than ever before. Look for the victories—both small and large—and find unique ways to show you care. Have their favorite meal delivered to their house; encourage everyone on the Zoom call to wear birthday hats; feature them on social media.
10. Overcommunicate—internally and externally. When there is a lack of communication across an organization, frustration, fear and the rumor mill will ensue. Ensure you are communicating with your team and your stakeholders frequently and across a variety of outlets (i.e. Zoom, email, social media, text, one-on-one).
11. Don’t panic. It is ok (and appropriate) to show vulnerability in the right moments, but make sure you are projecting calmness and confidence as a rule.
12. Think, plan, and communicate in 3s or 5s. Leaders must (now, more than ever) synthesize. Long narratives with layers of complexity paralyze people in times of crisis.
13. Inequities can be heightened during a crisis. We know this is true in communities across our states. It is true within your organization as well. Make sure your policies and practices don't cause additional barriers and hardships for those already struggling.
14. Know your brand. There isn’t a one-size-fits-all approach to external messaging in times like these. You must know your brand and decide if/how/when your messaging fits into larger community conversations. Pushing your agenda without acknowledging current realities can make your organization seem disconnected, which will only hurt your brand in the long run.
15. Keep a journal. It doesn’t need to be fancy. A few bullet points per day will suffice. Your memories and the lessons you are learning will come in handy down the road.
These tips are not meant to be an inclusive checklist nor the answer to all of your questions, but we do hope they will be helpful. We remain committed to working alongside you to learn and grow together. As we have more to share, we will certainly do so, and at the same time we challenge you to continue sharing what you know—with us and your colleagues—while striving to find more answers for the sector over time.
Part 1. Leading Through Crisis: A Framework For Nonprofits During Trying Times
March 31, 2020
As we now extend our new reality, life with COVID-19 and beyond, there is much that we still don’t know or understand. What is clear is that we are in a time unlike any other.
Consider this our attempt to bring some order to the chaos—not necessarily to answer all of your questions, but to give nonprofit leaders a framework to ensure you are asking the right kind of questions. We also hope to provide funders and supporters a view of the types of challenges nonprofits are facing. This moment calls on all of us to pose difficult questions, to recognize that decisions we are making will have an impact on our organizations for years to come, and to understand how we live our organization’s values in an ever-changing landscape defined by crisis and uncertainty.
In that spirit, these insights and recommendations are based on the challenges we are hearing as we work alongside you and your peers.
1. Prioritize caring for yourself, your family, and your team.
Offices have gone virtual, operations are disrupted, and organizational and community challenges are present that no one could have predicted. Take a deep breath, pay attention, and admit that nothing is “business-as-usual.” Don’t put unrealistic expectations on yourself, your family, your team, or those you serve. When you prioritize feelings and support, you improve your chances of bringing your organization through this. Centering your priorities will allow you to be your best self for your organization.
Because leadership is connected to emotional intelligence, paying attention also means elevating empathy, compassion, and effective communication. It’s critical to keep your head up and pay close attention to yourself and those around you. Remember, your team and their families are experiencing all the same things you are, at the same time. With your head down you may miss what people are going through, how they are feeling, and the multiple layers of stress everyone is carrying. As leaders, we are tempted to make things seem normal, but doing so now is likely to only further dampen the morale of our families, teams, partners, and donors.
So, what now? Make sure that your families and team know you CARE.
C (calm): Are you remaining calm and balanced and encouraging your family and team to do the same?
A (acknowledge): Are you acknowledging and validating feelings of discomfort and uncertainty?
R (recognize): Are you consistently celebrating family and team members for going above and beyond? For their own self-care? For being innovative?
E (engage): Are you creatively engaging your family and team in order to retain meaningful connections and comradery while practicing appropriate social distancing?
2. Reaffirm your mission with everyone – internally and externally.
Remember why you are here. If you are in the trenches, your mission is likely more critical than ever. If you aren’t, you still have a duty to consider, “What is our mission and how does it fit into this crisis?”
Now is the time to hold true to your mission, vision, and values. The danger during a crisis is that you can easily drift from your organization’s mission, enter survival mode, and start chasing money by doing anything someone is willing to pay you to do. We understand the financial stress present in the sector, but the first thing we should be asking in this moment is not “How do we survive?” Instead, we should ask, “How do we keep making a difference with the people we are called to serve?” This is, in fact, living our mission!
So, what now? If your organization doesn’t have an updated strategic plan, now is not the time to start that process. If you do have a plan, use it to answer this critical question: “Is it time for us to…
- STEP UP? Yes, if your mission includes immediately serving the most vulnerable in our communities.
- STEP IN? Yes, if you have the capacity to help your peers and share resources, financial and otherwise.
- STEP BACK? Yes, if your organizational needs are less pressing in relation to the urgency of the hour.
3. Communicate, communicate, communicate.
In the absence of clear, consistent communication, people will speculate, create their own narrative, and become more afraid. Reserve time every day to communicate with your organization and stakeholders. Protect that time. To paraphrase Dr. Anthony Fauci, “If you think you are doing too much (communication), then you are probably doing the right amount.”
To be clear, effective crisis communication is not a one-way street. It’s not about pushing out messages or endless fundraising emails. True communication requires us to ask questions and listen to our staff, clients, stakeholders, and community. It also requires us to be self-aware so that we can identify the right person(s) to deliver the right messages at the right times. Even when the whole story is not known, be transparent. Give the information you have when you have it and be honest about the things you don’t know.
So, what now?
How often are you communicating internally—with your management team, staff, and board? Have you provided others in your organization the proper training to share the communication burden?
Are you being clear and timely in your external communication or are you just adding to the noise? Are you the right messenger?
4. Recalibrate relationships with your board.
Board members are more distracted than ever, with their own businesses and families to care for—just when you need them the most! This moment requires you to change expectations of board engagement. At the same time, it calls for you to be vulnerable and admit you can’t do everything. You need help, and it’s OK to say this out loud.
Truthfully, the leadership needed at this moment isn’t likely to come from boards. Waiting on board members to call a meeting or bring your ideas is not a rational approach. This isn’t a criticism, nor the promotion of a power struggle. It’s just reality. Having limited access to your board right now provides an opportunity to remind them why they hired you. This is the moment for you to lead, and your primary tasks as a leader are to make sense in the midst of chaos and provide direction. Board members will step in and contribute when expectations are reasonable, thoughtful, and clearly communicated. They want to help, but you need to tell them how and when.
So, what now?
Have you communicated clearly to your board what you need at this time? How often will you meet? How will you stay in touch?
Are you able to forecast and predict the needs of your organization and those you serve? Are you, as a result, able to take solutions (rather than problems) to the board?
5. Face reality. Be transparent about short-term revenue implications and long-term sustainability.
While there are many models for decision making in crisis, decision-making fatigue can bring you down. Be vulnerable. Engage others to help triage your work and resources. Look first to your immediate team, but don’t rule out the contributions of others. Leverage relationships with finance committee members and open up lines of communication with donors.
Most importantly, have a plan. Who is most important to involve and engage? How will you determine what is most important when seemingly everything is? Remember, this is no longer business as usual, and the situation is fast-moving. If we wait too long to make tough decisions, our organizations may never recover. Reality tells us critical decisions will need to be made in real-time for the foreseeable future. As a leader, you can either lean into this realization or continue in denial.
What about fundraising? Some think there is too much philanthropic “noise” to raise money right now. Others think now is the precise time to ask. We believe both approaches are correct, depending on your mission (see #2). And, no matter, decisions made today will have a lasting impact.
Swift action still must be informed and thoughtful. Make programmatic and financial moves with long-term viability and sustainability at the forefront. Focusing solely on short-term, emergency fundraising and budgeting is complicated because we still don’t know how short “short-term” is on this hazy horizon. Remember to balance short-term and long-term decisions with information, time, careful thought, and collective action.
So, what now?
Does your organization serve vulnerable populations most affected by this pandemic? Are you clear on how you will use additional support to enhance your services?
Are the needs of the populations you serve less urgent? This could be a step-back moment. You may choose to save resources now and focus your decision making on long-term sustainability.
What can you do to protect your assets? If you choose to suspend programming, how will you determine when to reinstate it?
COVID-19 has thrown nonprofit leaders and those who support them into an unknown land without a map or script to follow. Know we are in this place together, doing the best we can. While there is more than one path forward, we only find the best answers by asking difficult questions, like the ones we have posted here. Each of us must commit to applying what we know now and striving to find more answers over time.
Our group is committed to asking more questions but also searching alongside you for answers. As we come up with some, we’ll share, and we hope you’ll do the same.
Contributors: Forrest Alton, President and Co-founder of 1000 Feathers
Cayci Banks, Vice President of Strategy and Communications at 1000 Feathers
Patrick Jinks, Certified Leadership & Strategy Coach, and President of The Jinks Perspective
Tom Klaus, PhD, is President of Tenacious Change, LLC
Charles Weathers is Founder and Principal Consultant of The Weathers Group
Leading Through Crisis Webinar Series, hosted by Patrick Jinks
-New Challenges Presented to the Nonprofit Sector by COVID-19 with Together SC President, Madeleine McGee; May 6, 2020
-Self Care During a Crisis with Tom Klaus; April 29, 2020
-Nonprofit Governance During a Crisis with Charles Weathers; April 22, 2020
-Communicating in a Crisis with Cayci Banks; April 15, 2020
-Reaffirming Our Missions Amid Crisis with Forrest Alton; April 8, 2020