Creating High-Impact Nonprofits
 
In fewer than two decades, Teach for America has gone from a struggling start-up to a powerful force for education
 reform in the United States. Launched in 1989 by college
 senior Wendy Kopp on a shoestring budget in a borrowed office,
 the organization now attracts many of the country’s best and
 brightest college graduates, who spend two years teaching in
 America’s neediest public schools in exchange for a modest salary.
 In the last decade alone, Teach for America has more than quintupled
 in size, growing its budget from $10 million to $70 million
 and its number of teachers from 500 to 4,400. And it aims to double
 in size again in the next few years.1
But rapid growth is only part of New York-based Teach for
 America’s story. Although its success can be measured by such tangibles
 as the number of teachers it places or the amount of money
 it raises, perhaps the organization’s most significant accomplishment
 is the movement for education reform it has created. Although
 some education leaders are critical of the nonprofit’s teacher-training program, and how long these teachers stay in the classroom,
 using such measures misses the larger, intangible impact the
 organization has had. Teach for America has challenged how
 many Americans think about teacher credentialing, shaken up
 the education establishment, and, most important, created a
 committed vanguard of education reformers.
Teach for America has been so effective that it is now the
 recruiter of choice on many Ivy League campuses, often outcompeting
 elite firms like McKinsey & Company.2 Graduates
 who went through the program in the 1990s are now launching
 charter schools, running for political office, managing foundations,
 and working as school principals across the country. In
 these capacities, they can effect change at the systemic level –
 not just child by child or classroom by classroom, but at the
 school, district, and state levels.
How has Teach for America accomplished so much in such
 a relatively short period of time? And how have other similarly
 successful nonprofits had such significant social impact? Our
 answers to this second question are the subject of this article
 and the focus of our forthcoming book, Forces for Good: The Six Practices of High-Impact Nonprofits (Jossey-Bass, October 2007).
We grounded our findings in several years of research on
 12 of the most successful nonprofits in recent U.S. history,
 including the well-known (Habitat for Humanity), the less wellknown
 (Self-Help), and the surprising (the Exploratorium).
 One nonprofit, Environmental Defense, has helped reduce
 acid rain in the northeastern United States and created new solutions
 to global warming. Another, City Year, has
 helped thousands of young people serve their country
 and changed how we think about volunteerism.
 Collectively, these high-impact nonprofits have
 pressed corporations to adopt sustainable business
 practices and mobilized citizens to act on such issues
 as hunger, education reform, and the environment.
What we discovered after closely examining
 these 12 high-impact nonprofits came as a bit of a
 surprise. We had assumed that there was something
 inherent in these organizations that helped
 them have great impact – and that their success was directly tied
 to their growth or management approach. Instead, we learned
 that becoming a high-impact nonprofit is not just about building
 a great organization and then expanding it to reach more
 people. Rather, high-impact nonprofits work with and through
 organizations and individuals outside themselves to create more
 impact than they ever could have achieved alone. They build
 social movements and fields; they transform business, government,
 other nonprofits, and individuals; and they change
 the world around them.
Myths of Nonprofit Management
We first examined the 12 organizations through the lens of traditional
 nonprofit management, studying their leadership, governance,
 strategies, programs, fundraising, and marketing. (See
 p. 40 for details on how we selected and studied these nonprofits.)
 We thought we would find that their success was due to timetested
 management habits like brilliant marketing, well-tuned
 operations, or rigorously developed strategic plans.
But instead what we found flew in the face of conventional
 wisdom. Achieving high impact is not just about building a great
 organization and then scaling it up site by site, or dollar by dollar.
 As we got further into our research, we saw that many commonly
 held beliefs about what makes nonprofits successful
 were falling by the wayside. In fact, the vast majority of nonprofit
 literature focuses on issues that, although important,
 don’t determine whether an organization has impact, such as:
Myth #1: Perfect Management. Some of the organizations
 we studied are not exemplary models of generally accepted
 management principles. Although adequate management is
 necessary, it is not sufficient for creating significant social impact.
Myth #2: Brand-Name Awareness. A handful of groups
 we studied are household names, but a few hardly focus on marketing
 at all. For some, traditional mass marketing is a critical
 part of their impact strategy; for others, it’s unimportant.
Myth #3: A Breakthrough New Idea. Although some
 groups come up with radical innovations, others take old ideas
 and tweak them until they achieve success.
Myth #4: Textbook Mission Statements. All of these
 nonprofits look to compelling missions, visions, and shared
 values. But only a few of these groups spend time fine-tuning
 their mission statement on paper; most of them are too busy
 living it.
Myth #5: High Ratings on Conventional Metrics.When
 we looked at traditional measures of nonprofit efficiency, many
 of these groups didn’t score well, because they don’t adhere to
 misleading metrics such as overhead ratios.
Myth #6: Large Budgets.We discovered that size doesn’t
 correlate with impact. Some of these nonprofits have made
 a big impact with large budgets; others have achieved similar
 impact with much smaller budgets.
 As we dismissed the conventional wisdom about what
 makes high-impact nonprofits successful, we realized we had
 discovered a new way of understanding this sector – and what
 enables the best nonprofits to create lasting social change.3
Six Practices of High-Impact Nonprofits
The secret to their success lies in how high-impact nonprofits
 mobilize every sector of society – government, business, nonprofits,
 and the public – to be a force for good. In other words,
 greatness has more to do with how nonprofits work outside the
 boundaries of their organizations than with how they manage
 their own internal operations. The high-impact nonprofits we
 studied are satisfied with building a “good enough” organization
 and then focusing their energy externally to catalyze largescale
 change.
To paraphrase Archimedes, “Give me a lever long enough
 and I alone can move the world.” These groups use the power
 of leverage to create change. In physics, leverage is defined as
 the mechanical advantage gained from using a lever. In business,
 it means using a proportionately small initial investment to
 gain a high return. The concept of leverage captures exactly what
 high-impact nonprofits do. Like a man lifting a boulder three
 times his weight with a lever and fulcrum, these nonprofits are
 able to achieve greater social change than their mere size or structure
 would suggest.
After a long process of studying these 12 nonprofits, we
 began to see patterns in the ways they work. In the end, six patterns
 crystallized into the form presented here – the six practices
 that high-impact nonprofits use to achieve extraordinary impact:
1. Serve and Advocate: High-impact organizations may
 start out providing great programs, but they eventually realize
 that they cannot achieve large-scale social change through service
 delivery alone. So they add policy advocacy to acquire
 government resources and to change legislation. Other nonprofits
 start out by doing advocacy and later add grassroots programs
 to supercharge their strategy.
Ultimately, all high-impact organizations bridge the divide
 between service and advocacy. They become good at both.
 And the more they serve and advocate, the more they achieve
 impact. A nonprofit’s grassroots work helps inform its policy
 advocacy, making legislation more relevant. And advocacy at the
 national level can help a nonprofit replicate its model, gain
 credibility, and acquire funding for expansion.4
The nonprofit Self-Help, based in Durham, N.C., presents
 an excellent example of how combining advocacy with service
 can result in greater impact. Self-Help began by giving home
 loans to clients – often poor, minority single mothers – who
 did not qualify for traditional mortgages. Although its services
 helped thousands of low-income families purchase a house,
 Self-Help’s work was soon undermined by predatory lenders,
 which took advantage of vulnerable borrowers by adding
 excessive fees or charging exorbitant mortgage rates, virtually
 ensuring that the borrower would default.
Eventually, Self-Help organized a statewide coalition in
 North Carolina and lobbied to pass the first anti-predatory lending
 law in the country. Later, the organization established the
 subsidiary Center for Responsible Lending to help local nonprofits pass
 similar legislation in 22 additional states. Through its direct services,
 Self-Help has given more than $4.5 billion in home
 loans to low-income families in the United States. But through
 its advocacy efforts, it has created far more value for the country’s
 most vulnerable populations by protecting them from
 predatory lenders.
In nearly every case we studied, the nonprofit combined
 direct service programs and advocacy to enhance its impact
 over time. Some groups, like America’s Second Harvest and
 Habitat for Humanity, began by providing services, such as
 feeding the hungry or housing the poor, and added advocacy
 only after a decade or more. Other groups, like the Center on
 Budget and Policy Priorities, the Heritage Foundation, and
 Environmental Defense, began with advocacy and later added
 grassroots programs or services to expand their impact to
 the local and state level. Some groups, like City Year and the
 National Council of La Raza, did both from the outset, despite
 pressure to specialize, and recognized early that advocacy and
 service reinforce each other.
2. Make Markets Work: High-impact nonprofits have
 learned that tapping into the power of self-interest and the laws
 of economics is far more effective than appealing to pure altruism.
 No longer content to rely on traditional notions of charity,
 or to see business as an enemy,
 these nonprofits find ways to
 work with markets and help
 companies “do good while doing
 well.” They influence business
 practices, build corporate partnerships,
 and develop earnedincome
 ventures to achieve social
 change on a grander scale.5
Environmental Defense was
 one of the first nonprofits to
 realize the power of harnessing
 market forces for social change.
 The New York-based organization
 was founded in the late
 1960s by a group of scientists
 who lobbied to ban the use of
 DDT, and its informal motto for
 years was “sue the bastards.”
 Over time, however, the nonprofit
 became known for a different
 – and initially more radical
 – approach: working with corporations to change their
 business processes and become more sustainable.
For example, even though other green groups criticized
 Environmental Defense for “selling out” at the time, the nonprofit
 worked with McDonald’s in the 1980s to make the fastfood
 giant’s packaging more environmentally sound. Since
 then, Environmental Defense has worked with hundreds of
 companies – from FedEx to Wal-Mart Stores – often scaling
 its innovations to change practices in an entire industry.
 Although these partnerships are becoming more common
 among environmental groups, Environmental Defense was an
 early pioneer in this area.
But Environmental Defense didn’t just set out to change businesses’
 behavior. It went a step further, harnessing market
 forces to help solve larger environmental problems. Environmental
 Defense has been a strong proponent of market-based
 systems to control pollution, such as “cap and trade,” which
 establishes overall emission limits (on carbon, for example),
 and then creates economic incentives for companies to comply
 and reduce their emissions. Cap and trade systems helped
 reduce acid rain in the northeast United States and have become
 an important tool in the effort to fight global warming. In fact,
 this approach led to the passage of California’s Global Warming
 Solutions Act of 2006, the first statewide legislation of its
 kind and a model for more stringent federal emissions controls.
We found three primary ways in which high-impact nonprofits
 use markets. They help change business behavior on a
 large scale, as did Environmental Defense. Self-Help also followed
 this path, creating a secondary loan market and expanding its
 innovative lending models
 through mainstream financial
 players such as Wachovia and
 Fannie Mae, thereby changing
 the industry’s practices and helping
 large companies reach historically
 underserved markets.
Nonprofits also leverage
 markets by partnering with corporations
 to garner additional
 resources for their cause, as have
 America’s Second Harvest, City
 Year, and Habitat for Humanity.
 All three have established large
 corporate partnerships through
 which they obtain funding,
 media relations, marketing support,
 and in-kind donations.
Some nonprofits run their
 own small businesses, generating
 income that helps fund their
 programs. Share Our Strength,
 for instance, runs a nonprofit consulting business called Community
 Wealth Ventures, whose revenue it redeploys toward
 its social mission.
3. Inspire Evangelists: High-impact nonprofits build
 strong communities of supporters who help them achieve their
 larger goals. They value volunteers, donors, and advisers not only
 for their time, money, and guidance, but also for their evangelism.
 To inspire supporters’ commitment, these nonprofits create
 emotional experiences that help connect supporters to the
 group’s mission and core values. These experiences convert outsiders
 to evangelists, who in turn recruit others in viral marketing
 at its finest. High-impact nonprofits then nurture and sustain
 these communities of supporters over time, recognizing that
 they are not just means, but ends in themselves.6
Habitat for Humanity, located in Americus, Ga., exemplifies
 this ability to create a larger community and inspire
 evangelists for its cause. As founder Millard Fuller has said,
 he didn’t set out to create an organization so much as a social
 movement. From the outset, the nonprofit spread its model
 through local church congregations and word of mouth,
 building its brand from the grassroots up. That model includes
 enlisting supporters in the very core of its work: building
 homes for the poor. Participants work alongside the future
 residents of the home, and in the process live out their values
 while becoming advocates for the housing cause. These
 evangelists, in turn, recruit their friends and colleagues,
 expanding the circle of supporters outward.
In addition, Habitat for Humanity attracts what we call “super-evangelists” like former President Jimmy Carter – people
 who by virtue of their personal accomplishments, famous
 names, and vast social networks can help take a nonprofit to the
 next level. By serving on the board and as a spokesperson for
 the organization, Carter helped propel it from a grassroots
 nonprofit to a global force for change.
Not all of the high-impact nonprofits we studied had an organizational
 model that makes involving supporters easy. Yet
 almost all of them found creative ways to convert core supporters
 to evangelists and to mobilize super-evangelists.
4. Nurture Nonprofit Networks: Although most nonprofits
 pay lip service to collaboration, many of them really see
 other groups as competition for scarce resources. But highimpact
 organizations help their peers succeed, building networks
 of nonprofit allies and devoting remarkable time and energy to
 advancing their fields. They freely share wealth, expertise, talent,
 and power with other nonprofits not because they are
 saints, but because it’s in their self-interest to do so.7
The Heritage Foundation exemplifies this network mind-set.
 From its founding, this Washington, D.C.-based organization
 defied the traditional notion of a think tank. The foundation
 sought not only to cultivate a broad membership base, but
 also to infuse conservativism into mainstream thought. To
 achieve its goals, Heritage realized that it needed to build a movement,
 not just an organization. And so the foundation helped
 to seed and galvanize a vast network of conservative organizations
 at the local, state, and national levels.
Today, Heritage’s Resource Bank – a network of state and
 local nonprofits – includes more than 2,000 member organizations.
 The Heritage Foundation helps leaders of these state
 and local nonprofits raise money and freely shares its donor list
 with like-minded groups. It also offers extensive programs to
 train non-Heritage policy analysts on everything from conservative
 strategies to public speaking skills. And Heritage cultivates
 talent – not only for its own organization, but also for other leading
 conservative groups – by offering a prestigious internship
 program and job-placement service for its young acolytes. The
 nonprofit also frequently works in coalitions to promote conservative
 policy and to pass legislation. Rather than seeing
 other conservative organizations as competitors, Heritage has
 helped build a much larger conservative movement over the last
 two decades, serving as a critical connector in this growing
 network of like-minded peers.
Other high-impact nonprofits harness the power of networks.
 In some cases, they formalize their networks through
 an affiliation structure, such as YouthBuild USA or America’s
 Second Harvest. In other cases, they keep their networks less
 formal and operate without official brand or funding ties,
 such as the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities or the
 Exploratorium.
Regardless of whether they have formal or informal affiliates,
 all of these nonprofits help build their respective fields through
 collaboration rather than competition. They share financial
 resources and help other nonprofits succeed at fundraising.
 They give away their model and proprietary information in an
 open-source approach. They cultivate leadership and talent for
 their larger network, rather than hoarding the best people. And
 they work in coalitions to influence legislation or conduct grassroots
 advocacy campaigns, without worrying too much about
 which organization gets the credit. These nonprofits recognize
 that they are more powerful together than alone, and that largescale
 social change often requires collaborative, collective action.
5. Master the Art of Adaptation: High-impact nonprofits
 are exceptionally adaptive, modifying their tactics as
 needed to increase their success. They have responded to changing
 circumstances with one innovation after another. Along the
 way, they’ve made mistakes and have even produced some flops.
 But unlike many nonprofits, they have also mastered the ability
 to listen, learn, and modify their approach on the basis of external
 cues. Adaptability has allowed them to sustain their impact.8
Too many nonprofits are highly innovative but can’t execute
 new ideas. Other nonprofits are so mired in bureaucracy that
 they lack creativity. But high-impact nonprofits combine creativity
 with disciplined systems for evaluating, executing, and
 adapting ideas over time.
Share Our Strength has been exceptionally adaptive. Bill
 Shore started the Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit by mailing
 letters to food industry celebrities to raise money for
 hunger relief. Although he received a few checks, he found that
 professional chefs were much more enthusiastic about donating
 their time and talent to a local tasting event. After the success
 of a single event in Denver, Share Our Strength abandoned
 its direct mail campaign and launched the Taste of the Nation
 series – now a national success in more than 70 cities. It has
 raised millions of dollars for hunger relief, and many other nonprofits
 have copied it.
Over time, Share Our Strength has experimented with a
 number of different innovations, from participatory events to
 cause-marketing campaigns. Not all of these events have been
 successful. One failed experiment was its attempt to extend the
 Taste concept into the sports arena, through a program called
 “Taste of the Game.” Share Our Strength solicited celebrity athletes
 to coach young people in a sport and asked parents to buy
 tickets to demonstration games – with all proceeds going to
 hunger relief. But the passion for antihunger issues wasn’t as
 strong among athletes and coaches as it was among the restaurant
 community. After several less successful initiatives cost
 the nonprofit time and money, Share Our Strength developed
 a more rigorous approach to managing innovation. Today, the
 nonprofit’s staff develops business plans and conducts more
 research before diving into new programs.
All of the nonprofits in our sample have mastered what we
 call the cycle of adaptation, which involves four critical steps. First,
 they listen to feedback from their external environments and
 seek opportunities for improvement or change. Next, they
 innovate and experiment, developing new ideas or improving
 upon older programs. Then they evaluate and learn what works
 with the innovation, sharing information and best practices
 across their networks. They modify their plans and programs
 in a process of ongoing learning. It’s a never-ending cycle that
 helps these nonprofits increase and sustain their impact.
6. Share Leadership: The leaders of these 12 organizations
 all exhibit charisma, but they don’t have oversized egos. They
 know that they must share power in order to be stronger forces
 for good. They distribute leadership within their organizations
 and throughout their external nonprofit networks, empowering
 others to lead. Leaders of high-impact nonprofits cultivate
 a strong second-in-command, build enduring executive teams
 with long tenure, and develop large and powerful boards.9
The National Council of La Raza (NCLR) is a great example
 of collective leadership in action. The Washington, D.C.-
 based nonprofit was founded in 1968 by a group of Hispanic
 leaders, and within its first decade it appointed Raul Yzaguirre
 as CEO. Yzaguirre led the nonprofit for more than 30 years of
 extraordinary growth. He quickly developed a cadre of strong
 and empowered senior executives, many of whom have been
 with the organization for decades and who have played critical
 leadership roles. Yzaguirre always had a second-in-command,
 or COO, who helped him with internal management while he
 focused on external leadership. And the NCLR board has
 learned to share power with the executive director. Even when
 Yzaguirre retired and was replaced by Janet Murguía, the organization
 maintained its leadership practices.
Habitat for Humanity is one organization that went
 through a difficult leadership transition when Fuller left and
 started a competing housing organization. But almost all of
 the nonprofits we studied, like NCLR, exemplify a shared
 leadership model. They have strong leadership at the top, led
 by either a founder or a growth leader who has learned to share
 power. They all have long-tenured executive teams with significant
 responsibilities. And their boards are larger than average
 – with sizes ranging from 20 to more than 40 members –
 and share power with the executives.
Sustaining Impact Through Organization
The 12 high-impact nonprofits that we studied use a majority
 of these six practices. But they didn’t always, and they don’t all
 employ them in the same ways. Some initially incorporated only
 a few practices and added others gradually. Others focus more
 on pulling certain levers and apply them to different degrees.
 Yet they all converge on using more of these practices, not
 fewer. Rather than doing what they’ve always done, high-impact
 nonprofits continuously move in new directions. And by working
 with and through others, they find levers long enough to
 increase their impact.
In addition to employing these six practices, these 12 highimpact
 nonprofits have also mastered several basic management
 principles that are necessary to sustain their impact. They have
 all developed enduring, somewhat diversified sources of financial
 support, including large individual donor bases, government
 contracts, corporate donations, and foundation grants. Typically,
 they have aligned their fundraising strategy with their
 impact strategy. Those that are the savviest about inspiring evangelists
 are also able to build a broad individual donor base.
These nonprofits have also learned that they need to invest
 in their human resources, and so the majority of them compensate
 their executives very well compared to organizations
 of similar size. And these nonprofits have all figured out how
 to build reliable internal infrastructure, including sophisticated
 information technology systems. They aren’t afraid to invest in
 their own capacity – despite the countervailing public pressure
 to keep administrative ratios low.10 Although none of these
 basic management practices alone leads to breakthrough impact,
 a solid organizational foundation is essential to sustaining
 impact over time.
When a nonprofit applies all these forces simultaneously –
 the six high-impact practices coupled with basic management
 skills – it creates momentum that fuels further success. “It’s like
 pushing a snowball down a hill,” says one Habitat for Humanity
 volunteer. “At first you have to work at it and it takes a lot
 of energy. But once it gets going, momentum builds and it starts
 rolling on its own.”
Using Leverage to Advance Social Change
Why do these nonprofits harness multiple external forces,
 when it would be easier to focus only on growing their own
 organizations? It’s because of their unwavering commitment
 to creating real impact. These organizations and the people who
 lead them want to solve many of the biggest problems plaguing
 our world: hunger, poverty, failing education, climate
 change. They aspire to change the world. They don’t want to
 apply social Band-Aids. They seek to attack and eliminate the
 root causes of social ills.
It’s not enough for Teach for America to raise the test
 scores of students in its classrooms; the organization also
 wants to transform the entire educational system in America.
 It’s not enough for Habitat for Humanity to build houses; the
 organization also aspires to eliminate poverty housing and
 homelessness from the face of the earth. It’s not enough for
 City Year to build a few successful
 youth corps; the organization
 also wants all young
 people to spend a year serving
 their community.
But for each of these 12
 organizations, audacious idealism
 is grounded in real pragmatism.
 These nonprofits are
 not so much ideological as
 they are focused on achieving
 greater impact. As Self-Help
 founder Martin Eakes says, “I
 need to have impact more
 than I need to be right.” If that
 means checking their egos at
 the door, or even putting their
 individual or organizational
 needs second at times, these social entrepreneurs will do whatever
 it takes – within reason.
“We are extremely pragmatic,” says Gwen Ruta, program
 director of alliances at Environmental Defense. “We’re all about
 results. It doesn’t matter who we work with if we can get credible
 results. And we’ll use whatever tool it takes to make
 progress: We will sue people, we will partner with business, we
 will lobby on the Hill or educate the public. Every one of these
 tools is in our tool kit, and we deploy the one most likely to get
 us to our goal.”
Even if nonprofits master and use all six practices, they still
 won’t be able to solve the world’s largest problems. Other sectors
 must also follow suit. For real change to occur, government
 and for-profit business leaders must learn from high-impact nonprofits
 and the six practices that they follow. Government leaders
 can begin to see nonprofits not just as a convenient place to
 outsource social services, but also as a valuable source of social
 innovation and policy ideas. Business leaders can partner with
 leading nonprofits to devise innovative systems that harness market
 forces for the greater good. And individual donors and volunteers
 can increase the social return on their investments by
 supporting those nonprofits that have the most impact, rather
 than those that adhere to conventional, and misguided, ideas
 of efficiency.
We believe that without more nonprofits, businesses, and
 government agencies following these six practices to achieve
 maximum impact, we are doomed to plod along with slow, incremental
 change. We’ll barely make a dent in global warming.
 We’ll meagerly fund programs that only perpetuate the cycle
 of poverty. We’ll continue to allow millions of children to grow
 up without healthcare. And we’ll continue to make one of the
 biggest mistakes of all: focusing too much on process rather than
 on impact.
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Read more stories by Heather McLeod Grant & Leslie R. Crutchfield.
 