Tuesday, September 16, 2008

The Fastest Growing Crime in America Today!

Practically anyone who is born in this day and age will have a piece of information about him kept in a database somewhere. Your birthday, address, social security, tax identification, mortgage, school records, driving citations, credit application, loan application and even your prescription. There's always some form of data or information about us kept in some database somewhere. If those sets of information are assumed by someone else besides you then someone just practically stole your whole life and everything that goes with it--credit ratings included.

We take for granted a lot of information we give away in some forms, applications or even over the phone in a public booth. It never occurred to us that those pieces of information in the wrong hands can mean someone can assume our identity and do almost anything with it like apply for a loan, use our credit, subscribe for membership in clubs, or commit crime in our name.

Identity theft is defined by the ID Theft Act (18 U.S.C. § 1028(a)(7), 1029(e)) and by FTC Rule 16 C.F.R. § 603.2, and includes the misuse or attempted misuse of any identifying information – such as the SSN, biometric data, or an existing credit card account number - to commit fraud.

According to the Federal Trade Commission in its 2006 Identity Report "approximately 8.3 million U.S. adults discovered that they were victims of some form of ID theft in 2005."

In the United States alone it was estimated that 15 million people (or 1 in 20) have their identity compromised in 2006. The University of Texas - Arlington Alumni Association in 2006 believed that 100,000,000 people have been affected by losses of personal data in the last 20 months prior to November of that year. 5 million of these are from university losses so much so that Arlington Alumni Association enrolled their 130,000 alumni throughout the U.S. in an Identity Theft Protection service provided by LifeLock.

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LifeLock® helps consumers to render their personal information useless to thieves, backing up its service with a one million-dollar service guarantee. Famous for its CEO giving out his Social Security Number in advertising and national press, the company is experiencing astounding growth. Located in a secure facility in Tempe, Arizona, LifeLock is a private company backed by Goldman Sachs, Kleiner Perkins Caufield and Byers, as well as Bessemer Venture Partners.

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Here are some relevant information from the United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

How do thieves steal an identity?

According to a Federal Trade Commission advisory, identity theft starts with the misuse of your personally identifying information such as your name and Social Security number, credit card numbers, or other financial account information. For identity thieves, this information is as good as gold. Skilled identity thieves may use a variety of methods to get hold of your information, including:

  1. Dumpster Diving. They rummage through trash looking for bills or other paper with your personal information on it.
  2. Skimming. They steal credit/debit card numbers by using a special storage device when processing your card.
  3. Phishing. They pretend to be financial institutions or companies and send spam or pop-up messages to get you to reveal your personal information.
  4. Changing Your Address. They divert your billing statements to another location by completing a change of address form.
  5. Old-Fashioned Stealing. They steal wallets and purses; mail, including bank and credit card statements; pre-approved credit offers; and new checks or tax information. They steal personnel records, or bribe employees who have access.
  6. Pretexting. They use false pretenses to obtain your personal information from financial institutions, telephone companies, and other sources.

What do thieves do with a stolen identity?

Once they have your personal information, identity thieves use it in a variety of ways.

Credit card fraud:

  • They may open new credit card accounts in your name. When they use the cards and don't pay the bills, the delinquent accounts appear on your credit report.
  • They may open new credit card accounts in your name. When they use the cards and don't pay the bills, the delinquent accounts appear on your credit report.
  • They may change the billing address on your credit card so that you no longer receive bills, and then run up charges on your account. Because your bills are now sent to a different address, it may be some time before you realize there's a problem.

Phone or utilities fraud:

  • They may open a new phone or wireless account in your name, or run up charges on your existing account.
  • They may use your name to get utility services like electricity, heating, or cable TV.

Bank/finance fraud:

  • They may create counterfeit checks using your name or account number.
  • They may open a bank account in your name and write bad checks.
  • They may clone your ATM or debit card and make electronic withdrawals in your name, draining your accounts.
  • They may take out a loan in your name.

Government documents fraud:

  • They may get a driver's license or official ID card issued in your name but with their picture.
  • They may use your name and Social Security number to get government benefits.
  • They may file a fraudulent tax return using your information.

Other fraud:

  • They may get a job using your Social Security number.
  • They may rent a house or get medical services using your name.
  • They may give your personal information to police during an arrest. If they don't show up for their court date, a warrant for arrest is issued in your name.

How can you find out if your identity was stolen?

The best way to find out is to monitor your accounts and bank statements each month, and check your credit report on a regular basis. If you check your credit report regularly, you may be able to limit the damage caused by identity theft.

Unfortunately, many consumers learn that their identity has been stolen after some damage has been done.

Monday, January 21, 2008

IEC: Information, Education and Communication

Not-for-Profit organizations or NFPs are oftentimes to engross with the day-to-day advocacy and challenges of implementing projects that they don't stop to communicate their intent, their activities, the impact they would like to create, and the stakeholders they need to support them. Information Education and Communication or IEC clearly show three (3) distinct components: information, education and communication.

Many times we are confronted with issues and concerns that only if we communicated earlier or more clearly would have prevented ruffled feelings, lack of coordination or even animosity among stakeholders. The problems of communication are not unique to small organizations. Communication is a very basic component of any organization. No organization or even communities can survive let alone stay together if no framework of communication exist.

Communication in an organization refers to the structures, processes, media, or channels that get a message across from the sender to the intended recipient. Of course both sender and recipient are part of the whole communication environment.

Information is the relevant content that can be use for decision-making. You have to ask yourself if what you are communicating is relevant and can the recipient use it to make tactical or strategic decision: to act or not to act.

Education comes when our communication and information is sent or delivered with the aim of changing a mindset, a behavior, or move an audience to a certain course of action.

Around the late 1980s, most international aid agencies like the WorldBank and the Asian Development Bank required programme implementers to make an IEC plan an integral component of any development plan or programme. Stakeholders are to become an important component of the IEC loop.

Our Stakeholders: Who Are We Communicating To and What Desirable Outcome Do We Want?
Our IEC program is the vehicle in which we design our message, the quality of its content and our delivery systems. For the IEC program and its projects to be effective, we must understand to whom we are delivering the message and what desired effect are we trying to achieve?
Every material, text, delivery method or media must put our audience first. We must understand "where our audience" is coming from and design our IEC projects with that in mind.

Content: What Are Our IEC Deliverables? The content of our IEC program is dependent on who is using or seeking out information about us and our activities. It is logical therefore that each corporate public or audience of the IEC campaign will have different needs in terms of content.

Channels: How Do We Deliver Our Message? The delivery system is as important as the message. It is important therefore to consider the most cost-effective delivery system for the message and the audience. Existing services and technology are already adequate for the kind of IEC campaign envisioned but it is the creative application and combination that will determine the quality and extent of the impact. The most effective approach is to apply a multi-channel delivery system which is complementary and provides synergy.

The succeeding posts will touch on the many dimensions of the IEC of a NFP. Keep posted.

Saturday, June 03, 2006

Not-For-Profit: Getting Ready for Free Money

You say you need money to start doing your projects. Do you have a project plan or a business Plan? For more than 10 years now I have volunteered my time helping NFP organizations get their project moving and I still hear the same thing over and over again: "We can't start the project without funds!"

Of course I always ask the same question to that question: "Are you ready for this free money that will come along?"

Guess what? I haven't encountered an organization yet who categorically answered yes to this question. Absolutely none! At least not the ones I am helping (It's probably the reason I'm helping them). Every one of them wants the money but none is actually prepared to receive it if it drops on their lap on the same instant.

The question now is: "How do you prepare for or get ready for funding?"

Here are some aspects or areas of your organization you should look at.

Beneficiaries
NFP organizations must be able to recognize who benefits from what they do. It can be bit strange to some NFPs but some of the most professionally managed NFP organizations actually refer to their beneficiaries as "Clients". You may be in an organization wherein there are no direct beneficiaries. Ecological and environmental oriented NFPs for example have programs with goals not immediately discernible and with impacts going beyond the immediate generation.

Do you have a clear profile and criteria of who is and who will be your beneficiary? If someone walks up to you and ask for assistance, will you be able to say to this person if you can or cannot help him? Will you be able to explain to him why you are or are not helping him? How are you going to do that?

Will the public know who you are by the kind of beneficiaries you have? Does the public even understand what is a beneficiary in as far as your programs or projects are concerned?

Define your beneficiary according to their psychosocial profiles, socio-economic clusters, demographics, geography, age group, sex, civil status, education, profession, occupation, physical attributes (or absence of certain characteristics), religion, culture, medical condition, political subdivision, degree of certain conditions, and other combination of characteristics or attributes.

There will be a great temptation to help everyone and admittedly to the frustration of most volunteers, you can only do so much. Defining your beneficiary or client keeps time, resources, projects, programs and volunteers focus.

With a clear definition of you serve, you deliver your services to those you can help the most. Your organization will be providing nothing fancy but also nothing less than the best you can offer.

Goals and Programs
Define your goals clearly and create the most appropriate program to accomplish one or two of those goals. Design as many programs as the goals you have set out to accomplish.

The ideal ratio is to have one program for each goal. Typically however most organizations will have two or as many as three organizational goals per program. This is the reason why goals must be defined clearly. The more refined the definition of the goals the more focus the programs will be.

The unexpected benefits of good programs are better selection of what projects to undertake.

Strategy and Structure
In my organizational development and business planning workshops, I have always emphasized the essence of formulating strategy before structure. I still have to witness an organization doing this right the first time.

Try to imagine this: You are a new leader talking for the first time to your people in front of the Red Sea about a great journey. You describe your vision of a land rich with grapes and honey. The picture of wonders has amazed your people and they are all gearing up to pack and follow you anyway, anywhere.

After your inspirational speech everybody seem to be busy forming committees of every conceivable size and purpose. Suddenly, you get people weaving cloth for sails, some cutting trees for timber to build a boat, others are stocking water in large jars, and other carving oars.

As their leader, you now stop to ask: Why in the name of the Great God of my ancestors are they building a boat?

As a concerned leader, you step down from your esteemed throne to your people and ask: “Why are we building a boat?”

Your loyal follower answers:
"Your Greatness, you have talked about a land rich with grapes and honey in front of the Red Sea. We all thought that we are going to cross the sea to that land of wonders."

You answer your loyal follower:
"No idiot! We're going to Egypt in a caravan! The only reason we have the Red Sea is because we're in Sudan and there's no other sea around!"

As a leader you made three monumental mistakes. First, you created a vision without crystallizing it into a well-defined goal: Migrating to Egypt. Second, you forgot to outline your strategy. The general idea how to get there: Traveling by land in a caravan. Third, you did not define your structure well. You allowed your people to make assumptions as to how they will organize the trip to the land of wonders. They did what they thought was obvious enough for them--Organized committees to build a boat.

When I step in to help NFP organizations what I find is a structure made of committees: Ways and Means, Membership, Public Relations, etc. These kinds of structure do not tell you what the organization actually does. Most of the time members of these committees do not know what they are going to do and what the committee is for. You have to define your strategy and design your structure based on how you will comply with your defined strategy.

Internal Processes
Your internal processes are sets of activities or tasks that you do regularly and predictably to get jobs done. Most of the time because it is happening consistently and by the same people, we never come to think that if we lose people the organization have to start all over again to do even the most simple tasks.

NFP organizations must study their processes if it is logical and actually useful. You must document your internal processes and know why they exist. You document your internal processes through charts, procedures, and forms. Funding organizations will include your systems and processes in evaluating organization because it is a good indicator of capability to manage projects. An organization who is very experienced in managing projects tends to have very sound and transparent systems and procedures in place to manage and to protect resources. Typically, these organizations adapt best practices in finance and logistics and have very good audit procedures.

Organizational Resources
It is a given already that most NFP should have assets in tangible form like supplies, tools, equipment, and other assets to get their project s and programs done. Two resources today are always taken for granted in NFP: knowledge and alliances (partnership). More and more funding sources are learning the critical role of knowledge resource and partnerships in managing programs and successful completion of projects.

Knowledge resources in technology, communication, public relations, investment and fund management, project management, and Internet marketing are now being sought out in NFP organizations in almost the same quality and quantity as business enterprises. In a way, this poses a greater challenge for leaders in NFP organizations. Now they have to be more creative in recruiting and retaining workers and volunteers alike.

Partnerships or alliances are critical because it brings the capabilities of NFP organizations beyond existing resources. It provides enhanced image and prestige not to mention the network of knowledge resources that it immediately brings into the NFP organization. Funding organization also find NFP organizations with so many alliances more reliable and seemingly trustworthy. If you trust IBM, Asian Development Bank and the UNICEF, you certainly will trust the organization carrying the logos of these institutions on their letterheads.

Operational Plan
People or organization engaging and spending time on planning must be very serious in what they are doing. At least most funding organizations will see this to be so. Institutions that have evolved to be strong in their chosen fields know that planning will involved keeping stock of what you have, it means having internal processes that keep track of progress, it translates into knowing strengths and weaknesses, and eventually doing an assessment of what can be done in the context of existing realities.

Funding organizations will expect you to know what you are doing and where you are going. Your strategic, business or operational plan will at least give them a documented view of your direction and how you intend to get there. Take planning seriously and if you are not at it yet better start now.

Well-defined Projects
When you define your project, your most common basis will be your goal. Some may argue that it is the mission or the primary purpose of the organization. If you were in the United States, Canada or somewhere in the U.K., that will be most logical.

In the United States there's probably less than 1,000 foundations that have formed the landscape of altruistic, civic or social development work.

Define your project based on your clearly defined goal. When many competing projects fit or serve your goal, eliminate and choose by looking back at your vision or mission (if you have one). If you think your project is not consistent with your goal or mission, you can bet your funding organization will realize or see that too.

Don't ever underestimate the ability of funding organization to discern the intent or the doability of your project as you propose it. You can spend time doing proposals for many project but these guys do the one thing they do best which is separate the best proposal from an utterly bad one (or stupid ones). Funding organizations don't feel obligated to justify or take initiative to explain their action on your proposal.

The Project Teams
You don't expect funding organizations to believe in your business plan if you don't have a team who will manage your projects and deliver results. The best way to make an impression about your project team is to have a brief profile of each team member. A comprehensive resume from each of them should take care of this. The team is really as good as its individual team members and the team leader who keeps and manages them.

Individual team members coming from the general membership or corps of volunteers that have successfully done projects together are more impressive than teams put together from subcontractors.

Information Education and Communication
Organizations use to call this public relations or corporate communications but it does not define very well other things that NFPs do. Information, Education and Communication are really 3 distinct activities that NFPs do to get their message across to their stakeholders.

Information is the content or the message in your campaign or your project. This should include editorial style, images, forms, fonts, layout, etc.

Communication is the technology, media, channel or sets of activities that delivers the message.

Education is the strategies, projects, tasks or activities that creatively and effectively use information and communication for a desired outcome. The outcome can be a certain course of action, acquisition of knowledge or skill, change of attitude and perspective or a decision in favor or against a certain issue.

A Well-written Proposal For Funding
There are five (5) very important sets of paper you will need to know or get familiar with in preparing proposals for grants: inquiry letter, cover letter, table of contents, executive summary and project summary.

Inquiry letter is really a portion of your research or due diligence. In the point of view of the funding organization, it is a chance to screen out proposals that are unlikely from the more likely to be approved. Inquiry letters are good for testing project ideas.

Cover letter refers to the letter that accompanies the proposal. Some funding organizations do not require it but those who do have a very specific use of the cover letter especially a well-written one. The cover letter is your introduction to the funding organization.

The table of contents or sometimes referred to as ToC is a glimpse of the highlights of the proposal. Anything not found in the ToC is considered most likely insignificant to the proposal. The ToC is the road map of your proposal. It is important that you include in the ToC specific components in the proposal that the funding organizations have specified in their guideline. You must reflect in the ToC topics that funding organizations want to find.

Your executive summary must provide a very brief description of the project and the desired outcome. It must provide the funding organization pertinent contact information and must declare what you expect of the funding organization. Also indicate what you or others in your organization have already invested to support the project you are proposing.

The project summary is called or referred to by many names: project overview, project synopsis, or The Abstract. Funding organizations usually use the project summary for publicity opportunities. It is the tool that funding organizations use to find out at a glance if your project meet the minimum criteria of their funding program.

There are really many facets of your organization you should look at. The few aspects of the organization above are merely the most common that funding organizations or even prospective partners of your organization will look at to gauge the integrity, reliability and capability of your organization.

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

Not-For-Profit: Are You Ready for Free Money?

In spite of the many experiences and case studies of organizational development among NFP organization, many still believe that lack of funding is the main hindrance to successful program management and completion of projects.

Project managers and consultants however don't count lack of funding as a primary cause of project failures or program development. Their logic is really simple. A good planning session would have already cancelled out programs or projects that are clearly not viable. They never get off the ground in the conceptualization face in the first place.

Project managers or program implementers believe that you simply don't ask funds for projects that don't even pass the conceptualization phase. You'll be surprise by the kind of project proposals NFPs sometimes prepare for funding.

You encounter proposals asking for multimillion funding for projects that clearly cannot be delivered base on what you know about the proponent. If these proposals were coming from entrepreneurs you would think that these projects are really a good excuse for a rip off.

With NFPs you cannot think this way.

You meet really honest people with big dreams of helping the less fortunate, of saving the environment, of protecting children or helping farmers. What I see are people who simply don't know the implication or the enormity of the responsibility that comes along with serious or large funding.

NFP organizations must realize that the real issue is not where to get funding. The issue is not even how much. The real worry for organizations is their readiness to receive funding if it is made available to them.

I suggest that you or the officers or leaders of NFP ask yourselves candidly serious questions about your readiness to receive financial assistance. You need to see, to realize if you or the organization you manage and represent, are prepared for serious funding now.

Before I go out helping NFP organizations, I ask the most influential or most active leaders and members simple questions.

You can start asking yourself these same questions now.

Who do you serve?

What bigger picture will this fund play in your plans?

Where are you going to use it?

How are you going to use it?

What exactly will you spend it on?

Do you know how long it will last?

Do you have a way to keep track of the funds?

Do you know who will be responsible for using and supervising the use of the funds?

Do you have somebody responsible for monitoring and reporting the actual use of the funds?

Do you have an organized paperwork for all of the above?

The answers to these questions will not be solving the most common problems of NFPs but it will be quite an eye-opener for starters. If the answers are honest enough, it will lead most concerned leaders and members to take the necessary action to bring about changes.

Making changes can be daunting but seeing the need is even more difficult to do. It will require a certain amount of knowledge and degree of maturity to do so. Most of the time this will require professionals from many fields of knowledge and expertise.

It will not be easy but if they're lucky enough they can get really good consultants and other experts to volunteer.

I for one will volunteer if the cause is legitimate and the leaders and members are dedicated enough. In so many instances I have stuck out my own neck aside from my knowledge to support causes I truly believe are worth fighting for literally.

The questions above are like mirrors on the wall. You get to see things the way they are if you look hard enough.

Not-For-Profit: An Organizational Dilemma

NFP organizations all over the world have played critical and far-reaching roles in their respective societies. Every country has each evolve organizations that made meaningful and lasting impact on people's lives.

You will see NFP organizations in far-flung and depressed areas of countries. You will meet volunteers of these organizations during calamities, in the heat of war, and even in the dark secret prisons of totalitarian states.

These dramatic experiences are not really the typical variety even in these organizations. The more common experiences are really those that concern routine tasks of getting services to beneficiaries or meet project schedules.

The Challenges of Contemporary NFP Organizations
The challenge of not-for-profit organizations today is that it must accomplish A goal or a mission, it demands leadership, it has to manage people to accomplish this, it has to provide its people with tools and resources, it needs to develop competence, it needs to coordinate projects, and it has to acquire money just like any business. What it cannot do very well is acquire profit.

This is not only a challenge but also an irony.

Admittedly, not-for-profit or NFP organizations by their operation or activities are for all intents and purposes run just like any enterprise. It requires the same amount and quality of talent, knowledge, skills, and labor costs but it is deployed not to gain profit but to accomplish an altruistic or supposedly noble goal.

I have volunteered my own personal time to help not-for-profit or non-government organizations (NGOs). Most of the time, I don't help organizations raise funds. I help them prepare to receive and use them.

The difference may not be apparent but raising funds compared to being prepared to receive them are to me two distinct actions. The reason why I took the liberty of creating a distinction is for my own reference of accepting a consulting project pro bono or not.

Raising funds can be very controversial especially if you have very prominent community personalities running the fund-raising initiative.

Raising funds is getting money from someone and putting it in your hands or technically into the organization's bank account if it has any. Helping organizations prepare to receive funds is about creating the process, systems and mechanisms to effectively use funds and monitor its flow from its infusion to its final payout to projects.

NFP or NGOs have almost the same likelihood of being recipients of funds. I mean funds of any kind and amount. What they don't have in equal footing is the ability to use them.

The one thing a consultant will gain when volunteering time to help NFP organizations is the intimate knowledge of processes and structures. Even a consultant with expertise and experience in process development and improvement will find the realities of NFP organizations a challenge.

This is the single most strategic reason I help out NFP organizations. The learning experience for me as a consultant is invaluable.

Some of the approaches I have developed in communications, organizational development, leadership, competence development, and team building are direct result of my involvement with NFP organizations.

Let me list down the difficulties or "challenges" that a typical NFP organization faces on a fairly regular rate. These are just mere examples of the most common. If you are a member of one, go email me some I have not mentioned here.

Here's a few samples:

  • Raising funds using a team without a single salesman led by a retired person with no business sense.
  • Managing a project without a plan nor funds to start with.
  • Working with a project team led by a retired desk clerk.
  • Organizing 300-strong small-scale miners against the abuses of fifteen families who are backed up by a military contingent, a police station, a mayor and a governor.
  • Improving an organization's image after a project team ruffles the sensitivity of beneficiaries and insults local legislators because of bad behavior and questionable conduct.
  • Coming up with a relocation plan for urban poor dwellers while their association officers are fighting each other during confederation meetings.
  • Convincing local government leaders to help in relocating urban poor dwellers knowing full well that this will mean lesser voters in their locality in the next election year.
  • Requesting endorsement for the organization's programs to community leaders after they have formally requested their local government to terminate one of the projects under these programs.

Common Problems of NFP Organizations
When you facilitate brainstorming, planning and project management meetings, you get to know all stakeholders up close. You get their opinions and contributions first hand, you hear their biases, you get acquainted with their most excellent and their worse moments, and you experiment with th most creative to the most absurd ideas to solve society's perennial problems.

The problems that commonly plague NFP organizations:

  • Poorly defined goal or purpose.
  • Lack of leadership.
  • Absence of a competent project team.
  • Badly conceived strategy.
  • Organizational structure does not support strategy.
  • Programs are not effectively driving strategy.
  • Absence of a viable project plan.
  • Lack of expertise or knowledge resource.
  • Lack of or poorly created alliances.
  • Lack of dedicated volunteers.
  • Absence of appropriate hard assets.
  • Absence of sound policies and process.
  • Lack of funds.

There can be a lot more problems you can put on paper but the above are the most common that not only cause projects to fail but can lead organizations to eventually shutdown.

You can check the list above and compare it with the most common reasons why most industry cooperatives become inactive or go bankrupt and you will find that they are almost identical.

If you haven't notice, lack of funds is in tail end of the list. When you have a clear goal and you are passionate about it, are led by the most charismatic and creative leader, and you have the most dedicated team of volunteers behind you, lack of funds is the least of your worry.

I have seen more programs and projects fail simply because of the absence of a strong and inspirational leadership than by lack of funds.

Endeavors great and small throughout ancient and contemporary civilizations have demonstrated man's capacity to move mountains, change beliefs, forget the unforgivable, and build from the ashes of devastation.

Not-For-Profits: A Value Proposition in Fundraising

The blogs in this session was lifted from my e-book: "Are You Ready For Free Money? A Guide To Getting Grants". The e-book was written to provide a free resource for non-government organizations (NGO) or what is commonly referred to in other countries as "Not-for-Profits" or NFP. In its original context it included cooperatives, people's organizations, trade associations and other organizations with social goals. This edition includes educational institutions or support organizations whether private or government.

Although, the title refers to grants-in-aid this blog goes beyond conventional sources of grants. Funding sources today comes from many sources and do not necessarily come from foundations or governments. You will get a glimpse of some of these other sources of funds here.

Many fund seekers may feel like they are begging for alms and they have good reasons to feel so. In many interaction with community leaders, environmental activists, advocacy volunteers, and community development workers, I have seen how the process of raising funds have turned into a humiliating experience for some and a totally messy legal battle for others. In many countries, fund-raising has become such a professional cluster of activities that certain businesses have thrived to provide support services for NGOs or NFPs to raise funds. A lot of consulting businesses in this field in fact, do not come cheap.

From here on you will never use the word "solicitation" ever again. What you will learn in this blog is the word "Value Proposition". You will no longer write and mail "solicitation letters" but business or marketing proposals. You will not be lining up into some politician or businessman's office and beg (or God help you "plead") for donations, you will now call for an appoint, set up your presentation and make a close.

Monday, January 16, 2006

Developing and Managing Not-for-Profit Corporations

Not-for-Profit or Non-government Organizations as they are known in some parts of the world play important roles in different societies today. They work hard to fight hunger, injustice, illiteracy, abuse against women and children, ravages of war, poor shelter and sanitation, just about every conceivable human problem on this earth.

Like business enterprises, NFP or NGOs also need to be managed well. They seek out talent and skills just like any enterprise. They have strategic and tactical goals just like any business corporation and they need to be viable financially.

This blogsite shall provide NFPs and NGOs the tools, knowledge, reference and tips on how to grow their organization, re-tool them for the changing global challenges that confront them.

This is my contribution to better the human condition because just like you, I am a citizen of this planet.