Title: Community Leadership Webinar
1- Community Leadership Webinar 1
- Values, Culture and Will
- March 13, 2009
2Welcome
- First Community Leadership Webinar
- Hosted by CFLeads the Council on Foundations
- More than 90 participants
3Agenda
- Welcome Winsome Hawkins
- The Making of the Community Leadership Framework
Mike Howe - Aligning for Community Impact Steve Joul
- Becoming A Catalyst for Community Change
Jennifer Leonard - Q A
4Presenters
- Mike Howe Chair, National Task Force on
Community Leadership -
- Steve JoulPresident, Central Minnesota Community
Foundation -
- Jennifer Leonard President Executive Director,
Rochester Area Community Foundation
5THE MAKING OF THE COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP FRAMEWORK
- Mike Howe
- Chair
- National Task Force on Community Leadership
6National Task Force on Community Leadership
- 30 philanthropic leaders
- 12 months
- 2 frameworks individual community foundation
and field-level
7CL Framework Value
- Many pathways to community leadership not
prescriptive - A way to unpack complex concepts and processes
- A tool for planning that starts from analysis
rather than intuition - A tool for taking stock and evaluating progress
- A means to target the right actions to achieve
desired results - Finallya definition of community leadership
8Community Leadership Definition
- The community foundation is a catalyzing force
that creates a better future for all by
addressing the communitys most critical or
persistent challenges, inclusively uniting
people, institutions and resources, and producing
significant, widely shared and lasting results.
9Unpacking the definition
The community foundation
is a catalyzing force that creates a better
future for all by addressing the communitys
most critical or persistent challenges
inclusively uniting people, institutions, and
resources and producing significant, widely
shared and lasting results.
10Framework for Community Leadership, First Level
Building Blocks
D. Understanding and skills
A. Values, culture and will
C. Resources
B. Relationships
11Building blocks are inter-related
- Not mutually exclusive
- Strengthening one building block strengthens
others - Best strategies address multiple building blocks
12First-Level Building Blocks
A. Values, Culture Will
- Common good
- Diverse inclusive
- Results-driven learning organization
- Respectful transparent
13First-Level Building Blocks
B. Relationships
- Grassroots grasstops
- Encourage engage new leaders
14First-Level Building Blocks
C. Resources
- Internal systems
- Human resources
- Donors and investors
- Business model
15First-Level Building Blocks
D. Understanding Skills
- Possess and gather information
- Community change processes
- Facilitation communication
- Knowing when on what to act
- Public policy
- Outcomes metrics
16Values, Culture and WillFirst-Level Building
Block
- The community foundation manifests the values,
culture will to exercise community leadership.
17Building Block A Second-Level Building Blocks
- A.1 The community foundation is committed to the
common good. - A.2 The community foundation is fundamentally
committed and organized to increase opportunity,
diverse participation and fairness. - A.3 The community foundation is a results-driven
learning organization. - A.4 The community foundation is humble,
respectful and transparent.
18ALIGNING FOR COMMUNITY IMPACT
- Steve Joul
- President
- Central Minnesota Community Foundation
19History of Central Minnesota Community Foundation
- Created in 1985
- Primarily focused on Donor Services
- Limited unrestricted grant dollars
- Focused grant dollars in key areas
- Strengthening youth and families
- Supporting infrastructure of non profits
- Recognizing and appreciating diversity
20What Was Missing?
- Community/leadership initiatives had no basis
- No metrics to measure impact in the community
- Not leveraging impact of other funds held at the
Foundation
21Donor Service vs. Community Service
Donor Services Organization
Discretionary Grantmaker
Source Development Deliberations by Stuart
Applebaum
22The X/Y Factor
23Measuring Community Service Social Capital
- Robert Putnams work at Harvard Bowling Alone
- Connections are important
- Greater connections mean
- Better schools
- Safer streets
- Greater economic growth
- More effective government
- Healthier lives
- Social Capital increases the productive
potential of a community - Social Capital defines Community
- Benchmark Survey
- Quantifiable
- Comparable
- Repeatable
Without adequate supplies of social capital
that is, without civic engagement, healthy
community institutions, norms of mutual
reciprocity, and trust social institutions
falter and lose efficacy. Robert Putnam
24Goals of the Social Capital Survey
- Establish a Benchmark Metric for the Region
- Create Community Discussion
- Create a Measure of Health of Our Community
25The Social Capital Survey
- Social Capital is a method of measuring the
value of connections that individuals have to
other individuals and to their communities. - This survey looks at a variety of indicators
found, in national research, to be good measures
of social capital.
See also www.communityview.org
26A strategy map illustrates CMCFs ultimate goal
of building a prosperous community.
Prosperous Community
Financial Capital
Connected Resources
Example metrics dollars staying local Total
endowment
High Financial Capital Growth, High Social
Capital Growth
- The strategic plan supports growth in both
social and financialcapital. The Vision is - Engaging People,
- Connecting Resources,
- Building Community.
Example metrics Social capital survey Number of
CVIEW users
Engaged People
Poor Community
Social Capital
27The redesign work was to align the work of the
Foundation to the two-pronged strategy
- Strong donor services
- Relatively small, scattered grant making
- A desire to be more strategic and understand
impact
- Criteria with common philosophy
- Benchmark of social capital metric
- Clearly defined role for CMCF (as catalyst,
observer, or participant) - Start, Stop, Continue
- Venture Philanthropy
28Community Programs Committee Original Purpose
- to study and propose the role the Central
Minnesota Community Foundation should play in
bringing individuals and community resources to
bear on significant community issues that lead to
building a better community.
- Provides the vehicle by which the Foundation
exercises leadership on the key important issues
facing the community. - Assess and monitor community needs and assets as
well maintain inventory of who is doing what in
the community. - Recommend community foundation involvement on key
community issues and determine approach of being
observer, participant or catalyst. - Recommend priority focus areas for the
unrestricted grants of the Foundation - Recommend grants from the Community Foundation
29Community Programs Committee -- Resources and
Tools
- Influential and engaged volunteers
- Unrestricted grants (100,000 per year)
- Neutrality of the Foundation
- Access to Donor Advisors with Funds at CMCF
- CommunityVIEW Interactive web-based tool to
connect people and issues in the community
30In determining CMCF involvement, we will use the
following criteria
Address Community Needs 6. How does it address
community needs? 7. How does it build the
capacity of the community to be responsive?
Impact, Results Sustainability 8. To what
extent is the plan clear, sound, measurable, and
well developed? 9. To what extent is the
impact on the community broad-based and long
term? 10. To what extent are the results
measurable? 11. What is the potential for
sustainability? Resources Philanthropy 12.
How does it stimulate philanthropy? 13. How
does it engage other resources?
- CMCFs Role
- 1. How does CMCFs participation add value?
- To what extent does CMCF have the resources to
support the level of involvement chosen? - Build Community
- 3. Does it build Social Capital?
- 4. How does it create opportunities for
individuals and families to successfully engage
with the St. Cloud area economic, political,
and social life? - 5. How does it expand knowledge and
understanding in the community?
31Restructure of Unrestricted Grant Making Process
- Committee used criteria to evaluate our
leadership initiatives in community - Solicited grant applications that created
Bridging Social Capital - Committee used Building a Healthy Community
criteria to rank grant applications using on-line
tool, CommunityVIEW - Committee especially looked at how funded
applicants measured the building of Social
Capital - Committee now looking at moving to a more focused
and intentional approach to grant making by
exploring the Venture Philanthropy model.
32Timeline
Criteria used for in-depth evaluation of CMCF
initiatives, grant rounds on hold, process is
redesigned. CPC grapples with what to invest in,
what to let go of
2005-06
CMCF holds training for non-profits on what
Social Capital is and the new grantmaking process.
Dec 2006
CPC utilizes CommunityVIEW for letters of intent
(gt60) and final selection of proposals.
2006-07
Continuation of Social Capital as the metric and
monitoring of Initiatives. Two grant rounds held,
with new criteria, larger amounts, investment and
venture philanthropy focus.
2006-07
A resurveying planned with the Social Capital
survey.
2009
33What Difference Has it Made?
- Some initiatives discontinued
- Agro forestry Fund
- Applied Technology Initiative
- Other initiatives enhanced
- Womens Fund
- Create CommUNITY
- Future decision making made easier
- Community Cultural Arts Plan
34Tough Love Advice and Thinking
- Should have done it sooner
- Question of additional metrics in Community
Service Challenging discussion - Crucial 2nd Level A Building Blocks
- A.1 Committed to effecting change that advances
the common good - A.3 The CF is a results driven learning
organization
35Tough Love Advice and Thinking Continued
- 2 Building Blocks we wished had been stronger
- C. 2. The CF has human resources to exercise
community leadership. - C.4. The CFs business model provides flexible
financial resources to support community
leadership efforts. - What would we do differently?
- Move process along quicker
- Provide more education to volunteers
36Conclusion
The Mission of the CMCF is to Engage People,
Connect Resources and Build Community This is
done by building both Financial Capital and
Social Capital.
37BECOMING A CATALYST FOR COMMUNITY CHANGE
- Jennifer Leonard
- President and Executive Director
- Rochester Area Community Foundation
38Becoming a Catalyst
- The Importance of Values, Culture and Will
- Internal Preparation Is Key
- Evolutionary, Not Revolutionary
- Critical Role of Strategic Planning
- Changing the Customer
- Changing the Conversation
- The Virtuous Cycle
39Hedgehog
Our People are Passionate
We Can Be Best in the World
?
Economically Sustainable
40Hedgehog
Our People are Passionate
We Can Be Best in the World
Community Change Agent
Economically Sustainable
41Revised Mission
- RACF builds a better community for everyone
through philanthropy - By stimulating growth and providing careful
stewardship of the communitys endowment - By engaging donors, recipients, and other
partners - By building upon and mobilizing community assets
and resources
- We engage passionate philanthropists in improving
our community.
42Revised Vision
- We engage passionate philanthropists in improving
our community.
- To be greater Rochesters catalyst for community
change.
43Our Values (Revised)
- World Class Stewardship
- Inclusiveness
- Opportunity for All
- Foster Personal Responsibility
- Personalized Donor Support
- Creative Problem Solving
- Collaboration/Partnership
- Impact/Making a Difference
- Independent
- Principled Leadership
- Permanent Stewardship
- Personalized Philanthropy
- Collaboration and Partnership
- Systemic Change
- Broadly Inclusive
- Independent and Nonpartisan
44Key Customers (Revised)
- Greater Rochester Community
- Philanthropists Committed to Greater Rochester
Community - Key Partners
- Community Leaders
- Nonprofits and Community Initiatives
- Legal and Financial Advisors
- Government and Private Funders
- Board, Staff and Volunteers
45Key Result Areas (Revised)
- Learning to Make Change
- Focusing for Impact and Engagement
- Telling Our Story
- Broadening Our Circle
- Did we prepare to be community change agents?
- Did we engage philanthropists and community
partners? - Does the community perceive us as facilitators
of change? - Have we reached and engaged more diverse
populations?
46Learning to Make Change
- Outcomes
- Frequent, effective community leadership in
multiple areas - Demonstrable community improvements
- Public policy improvements
- Process measures
- Board and staff ready for roles as change agents
- Foundation operation is more sustainable
- Policies and procedures support core mission
- Community partnerships developed
47Focusing for Impact Engagement
- Outcomes
- Measurable impact in interest areas
- Our expertise recognized and solicited
- More philanthropists more actively engaged
- Increased resources in interest areas
- Process measures
- Strategies for impact and change identified
- Recruitment and deployment of staff
- Knowledge and accountability systems in place
- New ways to engage philanthropists in place
48Telling Our Story
- Outcomes
- Increased public awareness of Foundation
- Foundation seen as change agent, expert and
leader - Attraction of philanthropists who want what we do
- Process measures
- Foundation branded as community change agent
- Increased investment in marketing
- Culture of storytelling about impact
- Internal and external messages clear on mission
- Systematized reporting of results to all partners
49Broadening Our Circle
- Outcomes
- Increased variety of philanthropists
- Retention of diverse staff, board,
philanthropists - Foundation as place for community philanthropy
- Foundation broadly representative of community
- Process measures
- New ways to engage philanthropists
- Sustainable products allow everyone to be a
philanthropist (without encouraging small funds) - Outreach to specific target markets (geography,
ethnicity, lifestyle, etc.) - Foundations inclusive practices enhanced
50Timeline (as of 2006)
- Refine interest areas
- Re-price products
- Debate leadership role(s), oversight
- Choose new priority area
- Hire program, communications officers
- Restructure Program Dept
- Plan marketing campaign
- Investigate next gen philanthropist engagement
- Investigate technology (accountability and
customer relationship management) tools - Professional development
- Finish repositioning marketing messages,
materials - Launch marketing campaign
- Implement at least one giving circle
- Invest in technology tools
- Upgrade website to strengthen community issues,
philanthropist interface - 35th anniversary rollout, including Evening Out
- Consider different event for 2008
51Timeline (contd)
- Hire development officer
- Major community leadership initiative
- Add one more giving circle
- Focus on grant accountability
- Continue telling the story
52Changing the Conversation
- A vehicle for change
- Not a vehicle for donors
- Support our community
- Not support anything you want
- Make a difference
- Not make a grant
- Join our family of philanthropists
- Not get our services for a low fee
53Changing the Conversation
- Larger funds get more services
- Not all funds get everything
- The work we do
- Not the business were in
- Community philanthropist
- Not fundholder
- Community Philanthropy Awards
- Not Philanthropy Awards
54Always Ask
Is This the Best Thing We Can Do to Strengthen
Greater Rochester?
55Three Years Later
- Board Development and Makeup
- Board Comfort with Sharing Credit
- Board-initiated Community Indicators Project
(Joint with UW) - Board Focus on Economic Downturn
- We Are At the Table Making Change
- Example Preventing After-School Cuts
56Q A
- Press 1 to enter the question queue
- To remove yourself from queue, press 2
- Please state your name community foundation
before asking your question - Direct your question to one of the presenters
57Thanks!
- For more info about the Community Leadership
Framework, visit www.cfleads.org - Archived Webinar available at www.cfleads.org
- Watch for Webinar announcements
58Community Leadership Webinar Series