Grantee Highlight - Capacity Building: Executive Recruitment Search

Capacity Building Update: Understanding and Learning Impact

Grantee Highlight - Capacity Building: Online Employee Portal

Capacity Building Update: Visualize your Organization's Impact and Sustainability

The matrix map is a tool created by Jeanne Bell, Jan Masaoka, and Steve Zimmerman, detailed in the book Nonprofit Sustainability: Making Strategic Decisions for Financial Viability.

A matrix map plots all of your organization’s activities – not just it’s client-facing programs – into a single image. It’s a great tool that you can use with your leadership and board of directors to begin the strategic conversations of which programs and activities to keep, to grow, and to close or give away.

Capacity Building: The Board's Role During Crisis

Capacity Building: Community Health Planning Grant


THINKING ABOUT HIRING A CONSULTANT FOR EVALUATING ONE OF YOUR ORGANIZATION'S PROGRAMS?

Capacity Building: What is Capacity Building?

As part of our 2019-2023 strategic plan, we have codified Capacity Building as one of our four focus areas over the next five years.  As Program Officer of the Foundation’s Community Responsive Grants, I’m also tasked with overseeing our Capacity Building Investments – and I’m often asked, “what does capacity building mean?”

If you Googled “what is nonprofit capacity building” you’d find a number of different answers – “an investment in the effectiveness and future sustainability of a nonprofit” (National Council of Nonprofits); “the process of developing an organization's strength and sustainability” (MissionBox); “improving effectiveness, often at the organizational level” (GrantCraft); “building the competency, the capability, the bandwidth of organizations and their staffs” (The Nonprofit Center at LaSalle University).  Even though these answers are all different, they highlight some of the same aspects – effectiveness and sustainability.

Capacity building grants usually cover one-time expenses aimed at strengthening an organization’s operations, management, or governance to further enhance its effectiveness or sustainability.

Capacity building grants don’t have to be large dollar amounts.  We’ve supported opportunities for strategic planning, program evaluation, and board development, each with a grant for under $10,000.

At the Foundation we recognize that our work relies on partnerships with strong local organizations.  We believe investing in an organization to improve its internal operations is two-fold: it enhances that organization’s ability to offer high-quality programs and services to the people we all care about, and it helps the Foundation to advance our mission of the improving health of people in Northeastern Pennsylvania.

If you’d like to talk about any capacity building needs your organization may have, please don’t be afraid to reach out to me.

Jeff Smith
Program Officer
jsmith@mosestaylorfoundation.org


Examples of capacity building grants include:

  • evaluation of program effectiveness
  • board or staff development
  • succession or strategic planning
  • fundraising, communications, and technology
  • executive transitions
  • other well-defined projects that invest in an organization’s ability to effectively and sustainably fulfill its mission

Capacity building “is not just about the capacity of a nonprofit today — it’s about the nonprofit’s ability to deliver its mission effectively now and in the future. Capacity building is an investment in the effectiveness and future sustainability of a nonprofit.”

The National Council of Nonprofits

Capacity Building: Evaluating and Enhancing Program Effectiveness

In its 28 years as a non-profit organization operating in Northeastern Pennsylvania, the Northeast Regional Cancer Institute (NRCI) has spearheaded a number of initiatives that have helped ease the burden of cancer in the region. The Community Based Cancer Screening Navigation Program, initiated in 2012, is an evidence-based screening initiative that has been utilized by individuals from Lackawanna to Luzerne to Wayne Counties—and beyond. Recently, the NRCI applied for a grant from Moses Taylor Foundation to bring in an outside consultant who will assess the existing process and system for reaching patients, discuss possible enhancements, and make recommendations for strengthening patient engagement. The idea to bring in an outside evaluator first began when Laura Toole, LCSW, Executive Vice President of NRCI, had a conversation with Moses Taylor Foundation, which led to the suggestion.

“The Foundation will often ask about the kind of support we need,” Toole said, as she explained how the evaluation process got off the ground. “Not only did they help cover the costs for the consultant, but they helped us find a qualified person who would work well with us.”

As Toole explained, although her organization does continuous internal evaluations, the time seemed right to bring in an outside evaluator to look at its Community Based Cancer Screening Navigation Program. This, she said, will improve their process and services.

Although the consultant’s work is not yet complete, Toole said that the process had been going wonderfully—even though there may have been some reservations, at least in the beginning.

“To invite an open evaluation can sometimes make people feel a little vulnerable professionally,” Toole explained. “We are going to get good feedback to tweak our program and make it stronger,” she said, adding: “So far, we have gotten good suggestions about what we are doing well and can build on.”

Specifically, some of the areas the consultant is evaluating include:

  • Assessing the existing process and systems for reaching patients and discussing possible enhancements
  • Developing an understanding of the navigator role and making recommendations based on current evidence based approaches for enhancing patient engagement
  • Call and outcome measuring to determine effectiveness and efficacy
  • Analyzing program promotion, marketing, and community outreach

“Going through a process like this, your organization needs to trust the outcome of the evaluation and the information that it includes,” she said.