The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - (Page 6) TIME TO LET GO Continued from page 1 the area. “She started with nothing with this museum and made it happen,”he said. The sitting president serves on the museum’s board, which is made up of about two dozen members serving three-year terms.The museum has an annual budget of more than $6 million with 40 full-time employees and about 40 part-time employees. Abram led the organization through a $6-million acquisition of a new building on Orchard Street and the development of a five-year strategic plan. Campanella said the board was looking for someone to “take it to its next level.” The board and search committee also were sensitive to selecting a future presi- tions, said William Foster, a partner in the Boston office of The Bridgespan Group, a nonprofit that helps nonprofits with management strategies. Committed, passionate and heavily involved founders and executive directors are part of the nonprofit world, and even necessary for nonprofits simply to be founded. Many nonprofits are founded and grow along with the career of one person, Foster said, so they reach this point and it’s the first time they’ve ever faced it. Where the challenge arises is when nonprofits try to make the transition from being a personal endeavor to an institutional endeavor. GOING THROUGH THE STAGES Crompton said it’s critical to understand the problem: “The difficulty that we’re referring to in founder’s syndrome is the realization that the organization is going through stages,” she said, just as a product has a life cycle, it’s the individual who’s aging. All organizations go through stages and often what an organization needs in the first stage of life is different from other stages. “Founders bring a tremendous amount of passion, and that’s needed.You need those ideas and passion to get the organization off the ground,” Crompton said. “The same qualities that can lead to trouble in later stages are necessary to get things started,” Foster said.Where the challenge arises is when nonprofits try to make the transition “from being a personal endeavor to an institutional endeavor.” After a nonprofit evolves out of its the initial start-up phase it tends to need different skills, having grown or evolved so much that a founder’s skills are no longer the right ones for the future leadership. “Often the founder is not the one with those skill sets,” Crompton said. “It might need to grow and many founders are averse to growth at all costs.” Boards associated with the founder in the early stages tend be weaker boards, which Crompton said is not a bad thing because the founder has clear ideas for what they want to do.“Often the board is happy to help, but they’re not called upon to make the same kinds of oversight and strategy decisions they’ll be called upon later as the organization moves into another life cycle.” The power between the founder and the board needs to be rebalanced when the organization is moving on. Crompton suggested that a founder step aside for a period of time so their successor has a chance to make a mark on the organization. Crompton’s prescription to avoid Founder’s Syndrome is to have the founder step back for a year and not serve on the organization’s board. “There’s no uncertainty around what’s good practice; it’s not a good practice for the founder to remain on the board,” said Crompton.“The reason it’s a bad idea is because what you’re looking for when you transition to a new leader is a clean break,” she said. “You need someone who feels free to bring their own new ideas, their own view of the organization to the board.That’s difficult to do in the lingering presence of a founder; it weakens the board. Board members will have a natural predisposition to defer to the founder, who are often strong individuals,” said Crompton. Any successor needs a year of total freedom to look at what the organization needs and move into the future. “It depends on the circumstances, but a year is a reasonable amount of time to get a successor up and running, devise new strategy, whatever decisions need to be made,” Crompton said. Randy Jordan was chief operating officer for five years at Wayne, Pa.-based Hope Worldwide and previously was its general counsel. He succeeded the founders, Bob and Pat Gimpel, as president and chief executive officer this past May. working relationship that had evolved over the past 17 years, between their 17 years and my 12, and provided a basis of continuity that was preferred, rather than sever the future from the past,” he said.“At the same time, it was made clear by all parties, this would be a transition of leadership. The executive leadership would be changing.” Hope Worldwide has an annual budget of about $50 million, with 1,500 employees and programs in roughly 60 countries. “The length of time that the board has decided upon in this transition has helped us overcome some of the predispositions on founder’s syndrome,” Jordan said. He likened it to a relay race in which one runner has a baton in hand that needs to be Ruth J. Abram The power between the founder and the board needs to be rebalanced when the organization is moving on. dent who they believe has “the credibility and style to be able to follow in her footsteps and keep the organization and the museum together and moving forward,” Campanella said.“It is a little different replacing a founder versus someone who’s been there a couple years.” Although finding a successor was ultimately the board’s responsibility, Abram was an ex-officio of the search committee’s meetings but didn’t have a vote. Abram was a strong influence, Campanella said, after all, “who else knows the museum best?” BoardSource’s Crompton said it’s not a bad thing to have some founders involved in selecting their successor, and practically, it’s difficult to not have them involved. “It’s best if the founder has one voice and the board takes a stronger role in selecting a successor. While it’s not unreasonable that the founder have a voice in the selection process, it should not be the only voice,” she said. Having a founder leave completely can minimize tensions but organizations potentially lose the institutional heritage and strengths that a founder can sometimes bring, such as inspiring passion among stakeholders, fundraising or external rela- Photo Courtesy LESTM The Lower East Side Tenement Museum marked its 20th anniversary this year, and with it, welcomed its new, and only second, president, Morris J. Vogel (top photo). Randy Jordan (center photo), also replaced founders at Hope Worldwide as its new president and CEO. William Foster (bottom photo) said nonprofits face unique circumstances as organizations often grow along with the career of a founder. The process began in February 2007 and the board approved Jordan as the new CEO in July 2007, with the understanding that he would take over in May, to allow for a proper transition. The organization’s 13-member board includes the CEO. After 17 years of service, the Gimpels no longer will be on the payroll but will remain active volunteers, helping out development activities, Jordan said. Part of what helped the transition be as successful as it was, he said, has been Frank Kim, board chair, who was very active in shepherding the process. Jordan said the topic of founder’s syndrome was a matter of open discussion among the board. “Our board in its view, agreed with the particular nature of the carefully passed, and with proper timing, to the next runner. Jordan said the board realized that the nontraditional succession merited extra time to ensure it happened well. Given that nonprofits are lean at the management level, Foster said the odds of finding an internal candidate are less than in the for-profit world. When it comes to external searches and third parties, the same trimness of management dollars makes nonprofits less able to invest in the search and transition process, he said. “The sector’s focus on keeping administration costs lean makes these transition points more challenging then they might otherwise be, even though the nature of the challenge is the same as a for-profit,” Foster said. NPT JULY 1, 2008 THE NONPROFIT TIMES www.nptimes.com Photo Courtesy LESTM http://www.nptimes.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 Time to Let GO Sparks Flying From Blackbaud's Bid For Kintera Holiday Jeer Contents Who...When...Where...How...What? The Wrong Arguments Calendar Measure the Unmeasureable Getting Good Advice We Barely Got to Know You Special Report: Giving USA Shows Bequests, Foundations Boosted Otherwise Flat Giving to 306 Billion Dollars National Benchmarking Nothing Is Forever Diversified Planet Business Briefs NPT Jobs Resource Directory Bridge Map Insert The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Holiday Jeer (Page 1) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Holiday Jeer (Page 2) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Contents (Page 3) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Who...When...Where...How...What? (Page 4) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Who...When...Where...How...What? (Page 5) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Who...When...Where...How...What? (Page 6) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Who...When...Where...How...What? (Page 7) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Who...When...Where...How...What? (Page 8) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Who...When...Where...How...What? (Page 9) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Who...When...Where...How...What? (Page 10) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Who...When...Where...How...What? (Page 11) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Calendar (Page 12) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Measure the Unmeasureable (Page 13) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Measure the Unmeasureable (Page 14) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Getting Good Advice (Page 15) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - We Barely Got to Know You (Page 16) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Special Report: Giving USA Shows Bequests, Foundations Boosted Otherwise Flat Giving to 306 Billion Dollars (Page 17) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Special Report: Giving USA Shows Bequests, Foundations Boosted Otherwise Flat Giving to 306 Billion Dollars (Page 18) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - National Benchmarking (Page 19) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - National Benchmarking (Page 20) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - National Benchmarking (Page 21) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Nothing Is Forever (Page 22) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Diversified Planet (Page 23) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Diversified Planet (Page 24) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Diversified Planet (Page 25) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Business Briefs (Page 26) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - NPT Jobs (Page 27) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Resource Directory (Page 28) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Resource Directory (Page 29) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Resource Directory (Page 30) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Resource Directory (Page 31) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Resource Directory (Page 32) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Bridge Map Insert (Page I-1) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Bridge Map Insert (Page I-2) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Bridge Map Insert (Page I-3) The NonProfit Times - July 1, 2008 - Bridge Map Insert (Page I-4)
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