Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Shift Your Sector with a Connector

I reconnected with a long-lost acquaintance yesterday.  I worked with Jim Caccamo a wee bit ago on some metro-wide collaborations when he led Kansas City's Partnership for Children and hold a pretty deep resevoir of goodwill toward him.  We caught up and talked about my new focus of search in nonprofit, law and banking.  Jim's eyes lit up.  "I've been helping people out with their job searches for years," he said.  "A lot of them lawyers who want to go into nonprofit."

BINGO!  That had been my experience, too. We wondered all the reasons why and just what is that correlation between those who choose the practice of law and those who advocate for nonprofit missions?  Over the years I also had mentored lawyers seeking to move from the practice into nonprofit work.  I can quickly tick off the names of at least a dozen colleagues who did just that -- and pretty effectively, I might add.

I'm not suprised that folks sought out my colleague, Jim.  He's a CONNECTOR. 

Recently, Kansas City Star careers columnist and business, economics and workplace writer Diane Stafford offered advice to individuals seeking to shift to the nonprofit sector.  In it, she offers two critical pieces of advice:  (1) Get with a Connector (someone who can connect you in the nonprofit community); and (2)  Connect your skills and passion by seeking positions that relate to transferable skills and volunteer work. 

Here's Diane's article from The Kansas City Star, March 25, 2012.  You can find it online to share with friends at http://www.kansascity.com/2012/03/27/3516302/diane-stafford-shift-your-sector.html .

Diane Stafford: Shift your sector with a connector
By DIANE STAFFORD

This is for would-be sector-shifters - you who have spent your work lives in the business world and now want to do "meaningful" work.

The good news: You probably have skills and experience that are transferable from for-profit to nonprofit jobs.

The bad news: You have stiff competition from people who have spent their work lives furthering the mission you want to pursue, and nonprofit "lifers" may be skeptical of your switch.

The reality: You should show passion for your target nonprofit's mission.

"In a tighter job market, there's a flood of people coming in to apply when nonprofits post openings, so it's best to get with someone who is a 'connector' in the nonprofit community," counsels Jennifer Furla, a nonprofit recruiter with HCap Search.

"And if you're making the leap, you need to be sure you have the right fit for the organization, because you'll have to advocate for yourself."

Katey Tryon, who does nonprofit executive search at Tryon & Heideman, emphasizes that "connector" role.
"If you're coming from the business world, it helps to have an existing connection - an individual or volunteer work - in the nonprofit," Tryon advises. "If you don't have those, you should get them."

How? Do some boots-on-the-ground volunteering. Develop contacts in your target field. Make sure you care about the mission. Then be ready to show that you've not just volunteered on your own but have a track record leading volunteers or committees.

Both recruiters recommend starting a sector shift with research and informational interviews to learn more about your target industry, association, philanthropy or social service.

Don't waste your time pitching a talent that's not needed.

Furla also urges sector-shifters to look beyond the big agencies for smaller organizations that may need your financial or marketing expertise.

And Tryon suggests using the American Society of Association Executives as a resource to find nonprofit organizations and recruiters.


For other articles on jobs and employment featuring HCap Search and Christopher and Long partners, click on: 

http://www.tampabay.com/news/business/workinglife/article1054518.ece , "If You're Looking for Work,  Tell Everyone"

http://www.fresnobee.com/2011/12/13/2647902/to-job-hunters-keep-chins-up-during.html, "To Job Hunters, Keep Your Chins Up During December Dog Days"


Friday, March 23, 2012

So, You Want to Be a Career Fundraiser?

Know This: It's About M & Ms

I admit it.  M&Ms are one of my secret guilty pleasures.  The iconic little candy-coated delights with the melt-in-your-mouth-not-in-your-hands technology that was developed in our hometown of Kansas City (more on that later) are the subject of some interesting traditions and lore.  Never until the other morning, though, did M&Ms make it into my fundraising lexicon. 

At an AFP Issues & Answers, I listened while three respected fundraisers talked about the lifecycle of a fundraising career.  One followed an upward progression, raising more for larger organizations, taking on more responsibility, and earning more with each job change. Another had a lifelong connection with the organization he heads.  While he’s a  CEO and not a development director, his words clearly signaled to me that he was a Fundraiser through and through.  The third, a recovered lawyer like me, admitted that she “fell into” the fundraising profession -- and initially had been a bit embarrassed by the thought that she would be “begging” for donations.

That was, until she heard a wise volunteer give an inspirational talk at an AFP National Philanthropy Day luncheon some years ago.  The speaker was a prominent civic leader who was not bashful in delivering her message.  She had placed a small bag of M&Ms at every seat and used them to explain that fundraising was not about sales; it was about Matchmaking and Marketing. 

When I transitioned from the for-profit world to follow my desire for a nonprofit career, I explained to interviewers who asked about my fundraising experience that it was “all volunteer” until that time but that I had a substantial amount of experience in SALES.  Thankfully, this resonated with one group of volunteers – leading to a 20-plus-year love affair with work in the nonprofit sector.

And there are similarities between sales and fundraising:  The research you do with your prospects (see, New$ You Can U$e, http://www.jeffreybyrneandassociates.com/planning3.htm about using the classic sales tool, the Mackay 66, to truly uncover important information about your donors);   how you “drip” on your prospects to bring them closer to your organization; some techniques for pre-qualifying; getting the appointment; and, in some respects, how you go about making the “ask.” 

But the Matchmaking and Marketing analogy resonated with me because it addresses a key principal to success in soliciting charitable gifts:  Before you ask, get to know the donor.  Before you ask, allow them to get to know you.  My colleague, the recovered lawyer, explained to the AFP group that fundraising was much more about helping donors get to know your organization and then matching donors’ passions to your mission and programs, than “selling” them on your need for money.  In that, she is absolutely correct.

I wonder: How many would-be professional fundraisers and board members stumble over the concept that they cannot ask their friends and colleagues to support a cause they care deeply about because they feel they are preying on them just to ask for money; just to “sell” them on the need for charitable gifts? 

When you focus on helping donors get to know your organization (Marketing) and then matching the donors’ interests to your mission and programs (Matchmaking), it becomes a matter of visiting with and building a rapport with your donor.  The Fear of Fundraising fades and it is then that you begin to see real results.

For my lawyer friend and me, this recognition led to many years of fruitful fundraising. So, when you’re considering a shift to a career in nonprofit fundraising, remember: It’s not as much about sales, as M&Ms.

Now, for the post-script:  As a huge hometown booster and someone who’s intellectually curious about the world around me, early in my fundraising career I stumbled on a fact little-known outside of Kansas City about M&Ms and one of our local institutions.  Midwest Research Institute, now MRIGlobal, is a $436 million independent nonprofit contract research organization headquartered in Kansas City.  Founded in 1944 during World War II with an initial mission to find a way to convert the ammonium nitrate military ordnance plants in Kansas and Arkansas to peaceful uses of creating fertilizer, MRI is credited with developing the coating process for M&M Candies permissing the coating of 3,300 pounds of chocolate centers every hour.  To learn more about MRI, visit http://www.mriglobal.org/.

To learn more about bridging into a fundraising career, contact me at jfurla@hcapsearch.com.

 




Sunday, March 4, 2012

I've Been Preparing for This ...

This week, as we announced my new partnership at HCap Search, I joked how this career shift just adds to my Tri-Fecta of "most hateds":  I'm an attorney. I've worked as a journalist, a fundraiser, and now ... a HEADHUNTER.   

In truth, though, this is an easy and logical transition. 

You see, I started preparing for this job at 25. 

Fresh out of law school, with some experience in a mid-sized boutique domestic relations firm and an appellate clerkship under my belt, I was hired to start and run a statewide legal newspaper for a growing publishing firm out of Boston.  It was August. Their charge:  Incorporate us in Missouri, find an office, hire a printer, hire your staff … and, we want to have a product on the streets in October.  While it was a start-up, I had to hire a full complement of advertising staff, a legal editor, a news editor, a CFO and administrative support staff.  I ended up recruiting locally and from several states away a staff that ranged from fresh out of a prestigious mid-tier University to seasoned veterans from law and journalism.  I was lucky to have a mentor in the process, the brother of the company’s owner who was retired  Fortune 500 Exec.  But, make no mistake:  The success or failure of the fledgling start-up concern was 100% dependent on the talent I hired and how I brought those individuals together as a team.

After 5 years of producing essentially a “daily” newspaper week-in and week-out without interruption, 52 weeks a year, it was time to think about returning to one “coast” or another – St. Louis or Kansas City – to be close to support systems as my husband and I thought about starting a family. A call from a headhunter started my search process and I kept at it through the most part of a year, until a career in nonprofit management called us to Kansas City.  There, as CEO of a 100-year-old social service agency dedicated to empowering women and eliminating racism, I completely realigned the organization according to Mission-based service lines rather than geographic service areas and charted a bold new vision that resulted in a $11-million capital campaign and a spot on a national Task Force for Excellence within the organization’s worldwide movement.  All the while, overseeing operations and management of a staff of more than 300, ranging from very-part time program and facilities staff to top-level division managers.

At Commerce Bank, my job was to network with and cultivate colleagues to generate leads for new trust business.  I worked out of Kansas City and was responsible for the Mid-Missouri market, seeking out pipeline referrals from all areas of  the bank – from commercial to retail to brokerage to institutional trust to community board members of all stripes. 

For the last 11 years, I have been integrally involved in all aspects of growing my former firm to a nationally recognized fundraising consultancy.  Consulting in personal services, I knew that the firm’s success – and my personal success – would be built on Human Capital.  Forming strategies, identifying and recruiting talent to enter new markets and providing ground-up training and performance coaching, I helped grow the firm from a two-person shop to a roster of 14 consultants and more than $2 million in revenues.  As a consultant, I’ve recommended new staff acquisition and led searches for dozens of clients, ranging from needs to drive growth, to crisis intervention, to strategic human resource reallocation. 

My story is one of entrepreneurship, building new networks, and -- most importantly -- reinvention and transition.  Reshaping and transitioning my own skill sets as I  forged a career path that brings me to where I am today.  While I’ve conducted – literally -- hundreds of searches for my employers, business ventures and clients over the years, I’ve also found myself a frequent resource for advice and networking for job seekers and hiring managers, alike.  From wanting to know how to move from corporate or law into the nonprofit world, to general intelligence on the business and nonprofit community, I’ve been fortunate to be considered a go-to person for friends and colleagues.

So, in a very real sense, I’ve been building for this job all my career.  I know that human capital is THE KEY to success or failure in business – for profit or nonprofit – and that’s why I’m passionate about the work we do at HCap.