Why You Need Culture of Philanthropy as a Management System
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I once had a boss who insisted employee morale didn’t matter. She even sent me articles from Harvard Business Review purporting to prove this (if you read them closely, they didn’t).
Her insistence on this was directly related to her management style.
Well… A new Oxford University study is out revealing happy workers are 13% more productive than unhappy workers. Not only do happy employees work longer hours, they’re more productive in the hours they’re not working longer.
Take that former boss!
Happiness is not itself an end, but a symptom.
A very positive one.
Happiness shows you’re not just working hard, but smart. You’re not just doing things the right way, but doing the right things.
Good morale is a by-product of a culture of generosity and abundance.
A deliverable, so to speak, from what we in social benefit sector work call a “culture of philanthropy.” A culture where everyone is on board the ‘love train.’
Such a culture doesn’t just happen.
Getting everyone on board requires leadership, strategy and a great deal of transparency.
It begins with getting clarity about your own current work culture.
Do your workers say they love, hate or are merely indifferent about their jobs?
If hatred permeates your workplace, chances are good you’re operating a culture suffused with fear.
Fear is the enemy of a culture of philanthropy. It breeds mistrust, anxiety and timidity. It kills confidence and courage.
Indifference also has no place in a culture of philanthropy. It breeds apathy, lack of caring and a half-hearted approach.
Both fear and indifference are opposites of love, and silent killers of the passion required for nonprofits to survive and thrive.
Let’s reevaluate love today.
Love is the thing that pushes us to succeed.
Love is a thing that we have to feel for ourselves, for our family, for our friends, for our partners.
Love is what we want to come home to, but it’s also what we want to come in to in the morning.
We need love everywhere. And that’s the whole point.
We’re building a system with love inside.
— Hugh MacLeod, GapingVoid
Merriam Webster defines a system as “a regularly interacting or interdependent group… forming a unified whole.” Does this describe your staff and board?
First ask yourself if all your staff and volunteers are on board?
In other words, are folks within your organization:
Before you answer, review what Hugh MacLeod of GapingVoid Culture Design Group has to say on the subject:
“Most leaders are shocked to know that their employees are in the dark about their strategy, even though they’ve ‘been told a hundred times.’ The fact is that people are overwhelmed… What is needed is a system to inform decision making, that aligns behavior, and unites people with a common purpose…a purpose that drives outcomes. The answer is culture.”
Merriam Webster defines a system as “an organized set of doctrines, ideas, or principles usually intended to explain the arrangement or working of a systematic whole.”
How do you get there?
And, by the way, everyone in a culture of philanthropy is a leader.
To realize your vision, mission and values, you need to systematically manage the process.
The best management systems begin and end with culture.
“To survive and thrive in today’s market, a healthy corporate culture is more important than ever.”
— MIT Sloan Management Review, The Benefits of Framing Culture as a Management System
Researchers of MIT Sloan Management Review/Glassdoor Culture 500 collected, aggregated and analyzed more than 49 million anonymous reviews and employee insights from 900,000 organizations. They’ve been able to use this data to assess how well companies are doing and predict future failure or success – all based on their culture.
The fact that culture predicts failure or success should make you sit up and pay attention!
As interesting as these values are (and they’re a great starting point), real culture must transcend lofty statements made by folks at the top of the corporate ladder.
Culture must seep into every nook and cranny of your organization so it becomes a part of daily experience – akin to breathing oxygen.
Toxic, dysfunctional cultures poison the air, leading to all sorts of poor performance. Healthy cultures pump up the air with pure oxygen, turbo-charging performance.
When culture becomes the air you breathe, only then does it translate into actions – for good or for ill.
The decisions your people make, and the actions your people take, translate into daily experience for your customers.
Who are your customers, you ask?
Everyone in your orbit, that’s who. Everyone who breathes your air.
Staff, governance volunteers, direct service volunteers, donors, members, vendors, clients, community members and people who know them.
Think about how these stakeholders view their experience with your organization. Do you think it’s uniformly positive? Negative? Somewhere in between?
What might you do to improve your air quality?
In Part 2 we’ll review what it takes to develop a culture of philanthropy that guides all customer-centered daily decisions and actions in a manner that will positively impact your bottom line.
Hungry for some practical tools to heal the divide? Download this Culture of Philanthropy Checklist loaded with action tips to determine if your nonprofit has a culture of philanthropy in place and ways to get started creating one.
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Renee Rubin Ross
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