Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Overview of the New Nonprofit Planning Model

My last post described how I came to the realization that our collaboration tool KnowtShare is a better tool for capturing content for the Grant Proposal Generator than Microsoft Excel. It's better because the required content is NOT a simple list of questions and answers, but a business plan - a plan specifically designed to meet the needs of nonprofits.

I knew it would be mechanically easy to build a hierarchical plan using KnowtShare, but I needed to decide the best approach for thinking through the model I wanted to capture.

I decided to use the bottom-up, intuitive approach to building a tree. I had the leaves of the tree -- they were the individual questions/information items gleaned from the series of foundation grant applications we had analyzed. Using the bottom-up approach, I began grouping these into small groups and creating headers for the groups. Sometimes these headers were new items; sometimes I used an existing note as the header. For example, I decided to use the Executive Director's Name as the header for the Executive Director's contact information.

Then I grouped my first level groups into higher level groups, and wrote headers for those new groups. I continued in this fashion until I reached one, comprehensive group, which was the overall plan. This basic process is called creating an Affinity Diagram, and I describe it in more detail in my book The Shape of Knowledge. Often this method is used to help a group of people develop a shared model, but I find it is a good approach for individuals as well!

The top level of the tree became my page headers: Strategic Plan, Financials and Program Plans. One of the challenges I faced while designing this nonprofit business plan was how to handle the program-specific content for multiple programs. I decided to make each Program Plan a separate page or branch of the tree, and that each should contain an identical template of questions.

I also decided to automatically generate a program page called "General Operating Support" for every plan (because every charity writes grant proposals for operating support) and then let the charity generate additional pages, one for each of their major programs. In this way, the plan is customized to match a charity's particular offerings. When it is time to generate a grant proposal, the charity will need to select one of these programs as the basis for their funding request.

In the next post we'll take a closer look at the composition of each of the major planning sections.


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