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Nonprofit Newswire | Funders on Your Board?

Rick Cohen
October 1, 2010

September 29, 2010; Source: Fast Company | A couple of years ago, NPQ sent a minor temblor through the nonprofit sector when it quoted a powerful foundation leader—at the time, the chair of the board of directors of the Council on Foundations—predicting (and advocating) that future philanthropy would be “sector agnostic,” that nonprofits should have no presumption of exclusive or even primary access to foundation dollars. In the wake of that pronouncement, we’ve seen plenty of foundations funding social entrepreneurialism that seems to be all but for-profit business except for the (c)(3) status we assume that the grant recipients hold or held.

This Fast Company blog post by Alice Korngold, author of Leveraging Good Will: Strengthening Nonprofits by Engaging Businesses, lauds the philanthropic giving of eBay founder Pierre Omidyar’s eponymous foundation for its openness to funding non-profits. “Half of the funding we provide is in the form of grants to nonprofits, and the other half in investments—early stage, venture capital—to newly formed for-profits,” says Omidyar Network VP, Amy Klement.

Like a venture capital investor, Omidyar Network personnel take a seat on the boards of the groups they support, whether nonprofit or for-profit, to provide additional human capital assistance. For Korngold, “Participation on boards where ON invests was music to my ears.”  She describes the practice as “simply smart investing and an excellent value-add [sic] for the recipient.”

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This author remembers, however, a conference session in Seattle where investors affiliated with Social Venture Partners commented that they faced two problems with their engaged philanthropy along these lines. First, joining the board and offering assistance is not a one-time thing. It requires showing up, and showing up again, and showing up again. Maybe for the Omidyar Network people who work only for ON it’s possible, but for SVP investors who had their own jobs, it’s hard to live up to Woody Allen’s admonition that 80 percent of success is showing up.

Second, SVP investors frequently learned that the knowledge that they gained in business, in the world of high tech, often didn’t provide them with much to offer nonprofits that were dealing with intractable social problems. Frequently, the donors’ high engagement allowed the nonprofits to teach the donors more than the donors taught the nonprofit grant recipients.

But the Omidyar Network invests with some high profile groups, not the local groups that typical SVP’s do, so maybe the skill transfer needs are different. How do NPQ readers feel about funders placing themselves on your nonprofits’ boards as part of their grant quid-pro-quo?—Rick Cohen

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About the author
Rick Cohen

Rick joined NPQ in 2006, after almost eight years as the executive director of the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy (NCRP). Before that he played various roles as a community worker and advisor to others doing community work. He also worked in government. Cohen pursued investigative and analytical articles, advocated for increased philanthropic giving and access for disenfranchised constituencies, and promoted increased philanthropic and nonprofit accountability.

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