5 key characteristics for crisis success

This page will walk you through 5 areas that can help you navigate and protect your organization against crises. It also includes tips & focus points to help you build your crisis response plan in addition to insights about scaling this data down to the right size for your situation.

Research varies on what exactly makes a nonprofit successful and on what makes some nonprofits fail to thrive. At this point, scholars generally agree that

successful nonprofits have:

  1. Quality leadership on both their staff & and board

  2. A clear mission that is focused, relevant, and consistently evaluated

  3. Access to external resources and a strong sense of legitimacy

  4. Reliable funding that is diverse and includes some form of earned income

  5. An offensive (not defensive) business model that is proactive and allows for leaders to pivot quickly

But, these things can be hard to maintain at small organizations because:

  1. Staff turnover (especially in leadership) is higher because of low pay supports and high job demands

  2. Funding is much less reliable and success often rides on one key program or income stream because of staff capacity

  3. Structures and business models regularly change out of necessity (often because of staff turnover and unreliable funding).

  4. Staff are already spread thin and have little time to play offense or proactively build plans

Don’t give up hope! These characteristics can still provide a great framework for moving through crisis!

let’s dive into these 5 areas:

1. Quality Leadership

We’ve already discussed the literature on leadership theory here where we learned that quality in leadership is key. We also know that there is no one-size-fits-all method for leadership and that leaders need to understand their specific organization and circumstances to be successful.

But what are ‘quality leaders’ and how do I know if my organization has them?

Scholars define effective nonprofit leaders as team players that are strategic, transparent, quick to respond, prepared, and self-composed.

We also know that, in nonprofits, leadership often consists of a collaborative team and is often based in or defined by community perception/need. Because of this, leadership builds within various levels of the organization—not just at the top. Key leaders might be volunteers, staff members that deal most often with the public, or community partners that interact often with the organization.

Nonprofits that successfully weather crisis tend to have the following:

2. Mission Clarity

We discussed mission and how it relates to measuring organizational success here. We learned that nonprofits are unique because their structure and success are tied to mission rather than profit. This is because nonprofits must provide socially valuable goods (i.e., things that government/for-profit entities weren’t able to fit into their business models).

So, if nonprofits exist to fill a need another industy couldn’t, why are we still using their evaluation methods to track nonprofit progress?

According to some scholars, they shouldn’t be. Instead, nonprofits can use their mission as a roadmap for measuring organizational outcomes, tracking progress in terms of impact, capacity, and activity. A clear and focused mission allows nonprofits to effectively plan, use resources, and track progress when for-profit metrics of success fall short. Moreover, scholars have noted that organizations who already have a solid grasp of their mission spend less time re-inventing the wheel when a crisis occurs and therefore are better equipped to tackle that crisis.

In other words, your mission is your roadmap to success.

Nonprofits that are well-primed to tackle crisis tend to have missions that include:

3. External Resources

We learned how scholars have discussed and posited that organizational resiliency is key to weathering crisis here. Our key takeaways were that no organization can exist on an island and that the three best predictors of crisis survival are how deep its community connections are, organizational age, and budget size.

In other words, nonprofits (especially small-midsized ones) must rely on support from a broad network of community members, peer organizations, and government agencies in order to funnel their already limited resources towards mission.

Building a strong & supportive network means establishing:

4. Reliable Funding

We learned that financial stability is the biggest indicator of organizational closure here because financial stability allows staff to focus efforts & resources on mission-related activities instead of income. Moreover, we know that financial crisis is more common in small and mid-sized nonprofits because they tend to have fewer resources to begin with.

These resource constraints often force small & mid-sized organizations to depend on insecure income sources such as a singular major income stream (like a key program), an unstable stream of government & donor supports, or a staff that has little time or resources to develop new income opportunities.

Scholars have come up with various methods of resiliency to combat this, many pointing to revenue diversification as a key method to do so. All in all, there are various ways to build reliable income but there’s no one-size-fits-all method (although I’d like to highlight community-centric funding models as the most successful method for small, community-based organizations; I’ve compiled a primer on this topic here).

Leaders should focus their efforts on thoughtfully developing a reliable and realistic funding model that incorporates the following:

5. Offensive (vs Defensive) Business Modeling

We learned how every nonprofit needs a strong and flexible business model here. Our main takeaway was that nonprofits might have different needs and goals, but they still exist and operate in a for-profit market. Therefore to stay active in those markets, they need to strategize, evaluate, and build an competitive edge.

Building a business model can seem incredibly overwhelming. And for small nonprofits, there’s not a lot of research on what you need to include in your model. Many organizations fall into the ‘scaling down’ trap that many scholars have presented. While logically it might make sense to scale down a model that works for a bigger organization, this ultimately will leave you stuck because small nonprofits don’t operate like mini versions of larger organizations. They have different priorities, different threats, access to very different resources, and therefore have to operate and adapt in very different ways.

So, what do you do if you want to build a business model, but have nothing to model yours after?

Don’t panic; here are some quick & easy things to consider:

Okay, so now we understand what makes an organization more likely to weather crisis and how to build those strategies into your nonprofit. You’re probably thinking

But what do I do with my current problem? I need a plan!

It’s time to build your very own Crisis Response Plan.