-
New: Get
info about practitioner guide and textbook
Financial
Management for Nonprofit Organizations. Published by John Wiley, co-authored with Jo
Ann Hankin and Alan Seidner, 2007, and now available. The
previous edition of this
guidebook received the Terry McAdam award in 1999
by the Alliance for Nonprofit Management for the book contributing most to the practice of nonprofit management.
This book is updated and significantly revised,
including a new chapter on nonprofit accounting and a
new chapter on liquidity management. The two main
emphases which distinguish this book from others in the
field are the twin focuses on policies and practices.
* Go to =>
TEXTBOOK SUPPORT SITE
Please
contact me for
end-of-chapter questions and problems.
- Co-authored
book
Cash & Investment Management for Nonprofit
Organizations (John Wiley, April 2007).
-
Nonprofit Training - College Partnerships
* Emory
and the Georgia Center for Nonprofits
*
Case Western Reserve University
-
Accelerating Cash Inflows:
How
Can I Bring Cash In More Quickly? (article in
NonProfit Times, 9/1/2005)
- Article:
The Nonprofit CFO as Turnaround Specialist
- Article:
Differences Between Nonprofit Financial Mgmt and
Business Financial Mgmt
-
Career Opportunities in Nonprofit Management (with job
search sites, pg. 3) (from
Seton Hall University)
-
Nonprofit Finance Jobs - Foundation Center (under
"Job Functions," choose "Finance"; then click "Go")
-
Glossary of Nonprofit Financial Terms
- Enroll in my web-based nonprofit financial management course
taught each summer for
Indiana University-Indianapolis.
Get information on the
School of Public & Environmental Affairs degree programs. Read the
course description.
For information on Summer, 2008
enrollment, see this
description. This course covers
the needs of three different audiences. Click here
for this and other Community Learning Network
course offerings coming up via the web. Or,
might you be interested in the
Nonprofit Certificate online? Graduate
students click here for info on the
MPA
in Nonprofit Management.
- In a
business profession, but
thinking about going to a nonprofit organization?
*
Related:
Great advice and stories from
the Bridgestar Group.
- You may also be interested in knowing that
an
MBA is attractive to a nonprofit organization,
in getting
more information on and MBA and the need for management
skills in nonprofits, or that there is an
online profile of
nonprofit graduate programs. Listen
to a podcast on getting a nonprofit specialization
in your MBA. Also, if you will soon graduate with
your MBA from a large program,
you can work abroad in a nonprofit consulting role.
Here is a
story from the front lines of such an engagement.
Also, if you are in the business sector,
see this article on switching to the nonprofit sector.
- Nonprofit
job-seeking tips from Idealist
- Nonprofit
Accounting & Finance Jobs
(Chronicle of
Philanthropy)
- Learn
about
social
entrepreneurship,
Dennis Young NC State Univ. keynote address on social
enterprise,
faith-based
community economic development, the
HIV/AIDS faith and community-based initiatives (and
USAID), Robert Wuthnow's book on
congregation-based social service effectiveness, 45-page
HUD
study of faith-based community economic development, the
White House Office of Faith-Based Community Initiatives,
how to
identify faith-based organizations in NCCS databases, and the
National
Congress for Community Economic Development.
- Would you
like to take an
small
business entrepreneur course in Chattanooga? Find out
about opportunities at
The Bethlehem Center,
run by the United Methodist Church, in
Chattanooga, TN.
- Check out Harvard's
Initiative
on Social Enterprise newsletter.
- How
Furniture Row (& Denver Mattress Factory)
use
charitable giving to battle homelessness in the U.S.
- Motivating
quote from Peter Drucker, Barron's, 12/18/2000,
online edition:
Peter Drucker, the nonagenarian
management guru, [stated] in a 1999 interview with
Philanthropy magazine. "Far too many nonprofits believe
that good intentions are sufficient," he said. "They
lack the discipline -- the imposed discipline of the
bottom line." Drucker... further observed, "Nonprofits
today are probably pretty much where American business
was in the late 1940s, with a few outstandingly
effective, well-managed companies, and the great bulk of
them at a very low level. In the business world, the
average has risen dramatically. Yet today, the vast
majority of nonprofits are not so much badly managed as
not managed at all."
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