Trade secrets for nonprofit managers /
McLaughlin, Thomas A.
Trade secrets for nonprofit managers / Nonprofit managers Thomas A. McLaughlin. - New York : Wiley, 2001. - xi, 224 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. - Wiley nonprofit law, finance, and management series .
Includes index.
Acknowledgments. Introduction. VISION. Dreams and Actions. MISSION. The Art of the Mission Statement, or Why the Writing Should Be on the Wall. The Life Cycles of Nonprofit Organizations. The Death (and Rebirth) of Advocacy. The End of a Mission. STRATEGY. The Art of Strategic Positioning. Don't Just Manage, Lead. The Strategic Agenda. How Everyone Can Be a Strategist. Making Management Your Business. The Iron Triangle. How to Improve Quality Ten Different Ways. What Your Funding Sources Want from Managed Care. The Core Competence of the Nonprofit Corporation. A Different Kind of Growth. Collaborating to Compete. The Power of Social Enterprise. Needed: Clearly Marked Exits. ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE. The New Organizational Chart. The Permanent Labor Shortage. It's 2010: Do You Know Who Your Executive Director Is? Why Mergers Fail, and What To Do About It. Boys and Girls. Managing Different Kinds of Diversity. Why Board Members Wake Up at 3:00 a.m. Why "Corporate" Board Members May Fail. The Structure of National Boards of Directors. The Natural Laws of Task Forces, Committees, and Boards of Directors. In Praise of Hidden Government Subsidies. The Rise of the ASO. Proactive Management through Benchmarking. Giving Diligence Its Due. Related Parties. Down With Geography, or Why You Have Service Gaps. Rethinking the United Way Gilt by Association: Why Associations Must Reshape Themselves. The Business of Trade Shows. RESOURCES. Profit: Why, and How Much. Why Capitalization Is Not a Four-Letter Word. In Cash There Is Opportunity. Indirect Secrets, or Why Nonprofits Will Never Have $80 Screwdrivers. Critical Juncture Financing. Where to Find Cost Savings. Recovering from a Case of Parentheses. Soliciting Mistrust. How to Transfer a Few Trillion Dollars. Donor Advised Funds: New Kids Change the Block. Index.
Nonprofit managers often focus on mastering the core competencies of their jobs--fund raising, financial management, board development, and leadership--rather than on becoming wide-ranging executives like their for-profit counterparts.
0471389528
00043380
Nonprofit organizations--Management.
HD62.6 / .M395 2001
658.048 / MCT 2001
Trade secrets for nonprofit managers / Nonprofit managers Thomas A. McLaughlin. - New York : Wiley, 2001. - xi, 224 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. - Wiley nonprofit law, finance, and management series .
Includes index.
Acknowledgments. Introduction. VISION. Dreams and Actions. MISSION. The Art of the Mission Statement, or Why the Writing Should Be on the Wall. The Life Cycles of Nonprofit Organizations. The Death (and Rebirth) of Advocacy. The End of a Mission. STRATEGY. The Art of Strategic Positioning. Don't Just Manage, Lead. The Strategic Agenda. How Everyone Can Be a Strategist. Making Management Your Business. The Iron Triangle. How to Improve Quality Ten Different Ways. What Your Funding Sources Want from Managed Care. The Core Competence of the Nonprofit Corporation. A Different Kind of Growth. Collaborating to Compete. The Power of Social Enterprise. Needed: Clearly Marked Exits. ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE. The New Organizational Chart. The Permanent Labor Shortage. It's 2010: Do You Know Who Your Executive Director Is? Why Mergers Fail, and What To Do About It. Boys and Girls. Managing Different Kinds of Diversity. Why Board Members Wake Up at 3:00 a.m. Why "Corporate" Board Members May Fail. The Structure of National Boards of Directors. The Natural Laws of Task Forces, Committees, and Boards of Directors. In Praise of Hidden Government Subsidies. The Rise of the ASO. Proactive Management through Benchmarking. Giving Diligence Its Due. Related Parties. Down With Geography, or Why You Have Service Gaps. Rethinking the United Way Gilt by Association: Why Associations Must Reshape Themselves. The Business of Trade Shows. RESOURCES. Profit: Why, and How Much. Why Capitalization Is Not a Four-Letter Word. In Cash There Is Opportunity. Indirect Secrets, or Why Nonprofits Will Never Have $80 Screwdrivers. Critical Juncture Financing. Where to Find Cost Savings. Recovering from a Case of Parentheses. Soliciting Mistrust. How to Transfer a Few Trillion Dollars. Donor Advised Funds: New Kids Change the Block. Index.
Nonprofit managers often focus on mastering the core competencies of their jobs--fund raising, financial management, board development, and leadership--rather than on becoming wide-ranging executives like their for-profit counterparts.
0471389528
00043380
Nonprofit organizations--Management.
HD62.6 / .M395 2001
658.048 / MCT 2001