The Philantrepreneur Journal Vol2 Spring2016 | Page 11

Erin McClarty An attorney in the Houston Texas area, she is also an avid blogger and speaker advocating for the nonprofit sector. Erin focuses on startup and emerging organizations that have a social or charitable purpose and want help with topics ranging from formation, exemption and policy development to training, audits and business issues. www.Emcclartypllc.com www.Notationsonnonprofits.com Building Capacity: I How to Start the Journey f you do everything right, money will come in and you’ll hit all the major benchmarks. Still somehow neither will feel like enough. The surface is being scratched. But there are so many opportunities and needs outstanding. At the same time, you might hesitate to explore these. Do you have the resources, bandwidth, or large enough coffee supply to do more? Disoriented and dejected, you circle until the organization starts to stagnate; or worse, regress. I want to give you a North Star. A low-pressure place to start and build momentum. That place is the here and now. Because the first step to building capacity is to get a grip around where things currently stand. And the best way to do this is through an assessment and audit. But Why? Wipe the brow sweat and roll your eyes back into their forward facing position. Hear me out. To build capacity you have to understand where capacity is full. And understand how it got to that point. Then start the vision setting and strategic planning to move forward. I find a 5-pronged checkup is helpful here. I won’t spend time on specific audit points, there’s plenty of resources on that. I'll talk about what to look at and what to think about. With each prong, dig around and take note of where things are. Do this BEFORE you whip out checklists and best practice worksheets. It keeps your findings honest and allows you to compare to your own benchmarks first. Another tip, don’t focus only on the gaps. Think about obstacles, setbacks or anything else that could hinder a forward path. I list all five prongs below, along with To build capacity you have to understand where capacity is full. And understand how it got to that point. Then start the vision setting and strategic planning to move forward. The Philantrepreneur Journal 11