Category: Nonprofit

  • Valley Medical Center Foundation

    Standards for Excellence Seal Holder, The Valley Medical Center Foundation, is working hard in the Silicon Valley to meet vital community health needs for the Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, O’Connor Hospital, and St. Louise Regional Hospital—check out their blog here. To our friends at the Valley Medical Center Foundation, we are proud of the amazing ways you are serving.

  • Data Security

    Data Security

    In the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic, nonprofits across the country are facing challenges that none of us have ever had to ponder, let alone tackle, before. Issues related to assisting those we serve, our staff, and volunteer teams are perhaps more pronounced than ever. Along with all of the new challenges and difficulties, there are a host of vital management and operations tasks that have always been on our plates—and continue to be on the proverbial “to do list.” Certainly, issues surrounding data risk management are among the most important.

    Scams and phishing schemes in the midst of these uncertain times are prevalent. I am disheartened and intensely annoyed by the frequent messages in my email box from fraudulent emailers masquerading as my supervisor. In fact, a few weeks into the pandemic, our organization was the subject of a phishing scheme that caused every member of our team to spend significant time adding additional layers of security to our emails to ensure that the scheme did not impact our data and our members’ data. For some, the “fix” had to be carried out two or three times, causing additional downtime and inefficiency. Additionally, our entire team moved to two factor password authentication protocol – which may be burdensome for our team, but worth it to avoid major losses. We were fortunate, though. It could have been MUCH worse.

    We offer some advice for how to manage risk through the Standards for Excellence: An Ethics and Accountability Code for the Nonprofit Sector. One of the Standards states “Organizations should make every effort to manage risk.” One aspect of risk management is the security of our data and systems. A recent study by McAfee (a leading cybersecurity company) indicated that “nearly 2/3 of people who use online services (more than two billion individuals) have had their personal data stolen or compromised.” Moreover, the report highlights the growth in cybercrime and the new technologies that cybercriminals are taking advantage of. Preparedness and vigilance are key for ensuring that, even if the worst should come to pass, your organization will be able overcome challenges in this area.

    Organizations should have adequate security in place that controls access to data. Generally, this involves controlling who has access to your system through robust login and user rights management. It also includes firewalls that secure internal systems against access from the external networks (this is the internet for most systems). Security also involves user education as unattended workstations, shared passwords, or lost laptops are the most common access points for security breaches. In instances where remote access to internal systems is allowed, special care must be taken to secure these access methods.

    These are just a few suggestions for mitigating data security lapses. Nonprofits should also consider cyber liability insurance for additional protection against online attacks. For the full series of tips and guidelines on data security, as well as other guidelines for nonprofits, check out the Standards for Excellence educational packet on Administrative Policies for more useful information. The educational packet includes helpful resources on data security, what steps to take to protect your data, what to be wary of in regard to external threats, and how to mitigate a data disasters.

    This educational resource packet and the full series of all packets – including sample policies, tools and model procedures to help nonprofits achieve best practices in their governance and management – can be accessed by contacting a licensed Standards for Excellence replication partner, one of the over 150 Standards for Excellence Licensed Consultants, or by becoming a member of the Standards for Excellence Institute.

    We share our sincere wishes for your continued good health and patience as we all navigate these challenging and uncertain times.

  • My Internship Experience

    My Internship Experience

    My name is Colin Fedor, and I am an English Major at Stevenson University and Volunteer Intern with the Maryland Nonprofit Standards for Excellence Institute in the Spring of 2020. My experience as an intern with the Maryland Nonprofit has been anything but normal, but it has provided me a greater amount experience than I could have hoped for. I started working with Maryland Nonprofit in mid-January of 2020 and I couldn’t have asked for a better start. To begin with, I was provided with projects and tasks that I have loved since my high school days- research and writing. I will admit, I was somewhat surprised by the independence I was offered in pursuit of these projects. From what I had heard from my fellows within my major, as well as the popular idea of an intern (as the coffee and paper gopher), I went into my internship with the idea that I would have a ton of oversight. With the support and guidance of my supervisor I was offered the freedom, and the responsibility, to pursue projects by my own means. Additionally, the experience I was able to have working in an office setting was extremely valuable to me as prior to this, I worked in retail and fast food. Working in the office was also highly beneficial as I was hyper focused on tasks and could compartmentalize my mind due to the setting. The office gave me the chance to a refine a mindset I had before into something that was able to turn around projects’ week after week.

    However, come late February and going into early March, we start getting news about the spread of COVID-19 abroad and some of my projects begin to change. Where before I was focused on projects centered on the Standards for Excellence’s accreditation process, I was now focused on updating and researching some of our material on health emergencies. Again, it was interesting experience, to see how quickly we as an organization could add a new focus while maintaining our previous projects, but it was definitely concerning. I won’t lie, I was worried that I was going to be furloughed or laid off as result of COVID-19, although those fears were unfounded. Come mid/late-March and I’m now working at home, and having to adapt to not having an office. Suddenly (not to suddenly, I was well informed about the shift but it still felt sudden), I was provided with arguably the best experience I could hope for from an internship. I never expected to have to work remotely, so having to adapt and work from home due to the quarantine/shelter-in-place order was surprising..I had to reframe my mentality around working time for my internship and for my coursework, and that took a great deal of time. But, as I have adapted and gotten into a groove, I find remote work has its own qualities that I enjoy. For example, I find it easier to work on my personal computer than the computer I used at the office for my internship – I am able to work more efficiently with technology that is more familiar to me, and this makes it easier to learn new things. All in all, this has been a marvelous experience. I have had benefit of working from an office, and getting to know office culture, while also getting to experience a fully remote work environment. While I wish that less dire circumstance had brought about this opportunity, I am still immensely grateful for this opportunity and I have enjoyed every moment of my time with the Maryland Nonprofits.

  • Nonprofits and Political Advocacy

    Nonprofits and Political Advocacy

     

    This is part of a special series, brought to you by the Standards for Excellence Institute, to provide nonprofit leaders with a brief nonprofit governance and management tip weekly over the course of 2020. We hope these short tips will be helpful to you and the nonprofits you serve. If you have suggestions for future topics, please forward these to acmadsen@standardsforexcellence.org.


    It’s an election year and it’s important for nonprofits to understand what they can and can’t do when it comes to political advocacy. There is a common misconception that nonprofit organizations are legally prohibited from engaging in advocacy or lobbying activities. This is entirely untrue. Nonprofits can advocate and lobby so long as they abide by federal and state regulations. In fact, nonprofits should engage in advocacy in or to represent the interests of the people they serve and “influence public policies that affect the organization’s ability to achieve its mission.” When nonprofits do engage in lobbying and advocacy, expenditures must be disclosed, paid lobbyists or staff that engage in lobbying must be properly registered with the state and Congress if necessary, and most importantly all lobbying and advocacy activities must be nonpartisan. This means that nonprofits may not endorse or imply support for or opposition to a particular candidate or contribute in any way to a political campaign. However, there are numerous ways in which nonprofits can be active during election season, from the provision of nonpartisan study, analysis, or research to the hosting of candidate forums. It is therefore crucial that nonprofits “have a written, board-approved policy on advocacy defining the process by which the organization determines positions on specific issues.”  (Standards for Excellence: An Ethics and Accountability Code for the Nonprofit Sector)


     

    More information is available and helpful models and sample are available in the Standards for Excellence educational resource packet, Advancing the Mission through Public Policy which outlines the benefits of advocacy and the limits on and legal requirements for nonprofit lobbying. This educational resource packet and the full series of all packets  – including sample policies, tools and model procedures to help nonprofits achieve best practices in their governance and management – can be accessed by contacting a licensed Standards for Excellence replication partner, one of the over 150 Standards for Excellence Licensed Consultants, or by becoming a member of the Standards for Excellence Institute.

     

  • Choose Your Own Adventure: 5 Steps to a Sustainable Strategic Plan

    Choose Your Own Adventure: 5 Steps to a Sustainable Strategic Plan

    Life is like a “choose your own adventure” book.

    With each choice we make, our adventure changes. With one big difference. In a “choose your own adventure” book, we don’t know where the decisions will lead us (unless we look at the end). But in real life, we’re pretty good at anticipating consequences – if we think of it. It’s one of the things that makes us human.
    Consider – if you look backward, you can probably describe the path that led you to live where you live, work where you work, love whom you love. Hindsight makes the path easy to see. Moment after moment you made choices – consciously or unconsciously – and each choice created the possibility of making the next choice.
    Each moment is the result of all the moments that came before. As Hildy Gottlieb wrote in The Pollyanna Principles: Each and every one of us is creating the future, every day, whether we do so consciously or not.

    We can choose our own adventure when we plan for the future.

    Not only can we anticipate the consequences of a particular choice, we can reverse engineer the future we want, imagine the steps that led us there, and consciously use those steps to build a path to that desired future. We can imagine we are standing in that future, and use imaginary hindsight to recount how it happened.

    What about Strategic Planning?

    In an organization, reverse engineering is tailor made for strategic planning. Here are the five steps:
    1. Gather all the people who have a stake in your future – board, staff, volunteers, clients, supporters, funders, government – and envision the future.

    • If we are 100% successful in whatever it is we decide to do, what will be different?
    • For whom? What does that future look like? Who will be affected?

    THIS is the inspiration. By envisioning the future, you inspire each member of the board, staff and community to make it a reality. What will be different because YOU exist?

    Asking many people who will be affected reminds us that whatever we do is being done by – and affecting – people: clients, frontline staff, administration, community, donors, board, neighbors. This is key to the success of the plan. Think about how difficult change is for some people. It’s often because the people who were planning didn’t include and get buy-in from the different people who would be affected.
    2. Consider what needs to be in place for that future to be a reality.

    • What do each of these ‘whoms’ need to know, believe, have, for you to achieve this success?
    • What needs to be in place for this plan to be successful?

    Some of these are beliefs, e.g., staff and board need to believe this vision is possible. It might be knowledge, for example, staff need to know how to do the job – which itself leads to realizing that the staff will need training. It might be feelings, for example, the board needs to feel engaged in the process and willing to step out of their comfort zone — which leads to a need for board guidance. It may be legislation, like appropriate laws or appropriations, which may mean the board needs to advocate. It may be tangible things, like a building in which to work, or updated technology.
    3. Assess the resources you already have access to, and identify the resources that you don’t yet have.
    Unlike traditional strategic planning, where you start by considering whether what you have are strengths or weaknesses, when you start with a vision of the future, you have something to measure your resources against. You can evaluate whether your assets are really strengths. Just because you have a great music department, if you’re trying to become a STEM resource center, it’s not necessarily an asset. Framing the question about needed resources this way, you can think of missing resources as just one more step to take on the way to the end result.
    Based on our previous examples, needed resources might be time, people, faciliaties. Time for staff to be trained; time and locations for staff meetings; activists or lobbyists to advocate the legislature; a building, funds for a building, or relationships with commercial property owners.
    4. What actions do we need to take to make sure the resources are available; to ensure the things we need are in place?
    Now that we know what we need, and what we have, we can figure out what we need to do. When we start with the vision, identify what needs to be in place, and assess what we already have, then it becomes obvious what actions you need to take.
    For example, if legislation needs to change, then we know we need to research our legislators’ positions so we can effectively speak with them; we need to train our board members to be advocates; our staff needs to create materials to support our advocates’ work and a calendar that correlates with the legislative calendar.
    Finally:
    5. Individuals accept responsibility for making sure each item gets done.
    Plans without accountability – knowing who is doing what, by when – are the kinds of plans that get put on a shelf. Nice ideas, elaborate wish lists, but not truly actionable. As Tom Peters is reported to have said, What gets measured gets managed.

    Complexity and Success

    These five simple steps become more complex – and far more successful – as we identify more affected stakeholders. Including all the people who will be affected makes it far more likely that the needs of each will be taken into account, and no steps will be missed. You’ve looked at both external and internal conditions for success, with an emphasis on the people, rather than the things.

    Congratulations! You can choose your own adventure!

    What will YOUR future be?

    For more tips and thoughts on nonprofit board governance, planning and facilitation, sign up at The Detwiler Group, or email Susan Detwiler directly.
    Blog post originally posted on detwiler.com.

    Photo Credit: Credit to Sharon Fullerton Photography.

  • Managing Difficult Board Members

    Managing Difficult Board Members

    You know who they are.

    They engage in sidebar conversations with other board members or even the members about what they think is wrong with the board or the executive director or the organization in general. They joined the board simply to promote themselves or their business and then come up with schemes to get the organization to buy their services or products. They ask for special favors such as upgraded airfare or free tickets to a fundraising event or free products from vendors. They commandeer meetings and interrupt other board members or talk incessantly. They don’t show up for meetings. They don’t have their assigned tasks ready when asked or drop the ball altogether. They never raise a single dime. They insist money be spent on projects that are not in keeping with the mission or they come up with grandiose projects for which they will bear no responsibility. The over-scrutinize everything the CEO does and never find anything worth praising. They have unreal expectations of the CEO, often calling at home or while he/she is on vacation. They are rude to volunteers or members. They have no comprehension of nonprofit governance and often make suggestions that are contrary to maintaining nonprofit status. They are willing to break the law, falsify tax documents or behave unethically. They date or have a romantic relationship with a staff member. They donate a large amount of money so they can blackmail the other board members or CEO or staff with their generosity. They go behind the CEO’s back and direct staff to perform certain tasks. They get their friends hired to the nonprofit. I could go on. These are just a few of the things I (or my colleagues) have personally experienced. The point of this article is what is a CEO or board member to do with board members who misbehave? Years ago I was speaking to a peer explaining a particular problem I was having with a board member. He gave me a piece of advice that was golden. “Put a board member between you and the problem.” In other words, it is the responsibility of the board to manage its membership and even the most talented CEO must turn to the board for assistance in dealing with bad board members. This isn’t always easy because frequently board members don’t want to be confrontational or they hope that a problem will eventually work itself out. Most often though, problems do not go away on their own and ignoring them can cause them to grow. Problems are best avoided through written policies, governance structure, and organizational culture.

    A clear set of guidelines such as a “Conflict of Interest” statement that each board member must agree to and sign, can help organizations fend off attempts at hijacking the organization for personal gain. Conflict of Interest statements can also define what board members are free to discuss with non-board members or the public at large. The Standards for Excellence Institute’s Board Excellence Handbook includes a sample Conflict of Interest statement that can be tailored to fit your organization.

    Board members who don’t attend meetings can be dealt with by establishing a policy for meeting attendance. I’ve always favored the policy that requires a board member who misses two meetings in a row be automatically removed and must affirmatively be voted back on the board. This saves the board from having to vote members off the board, which so often boards are reluctant to do. Establishing clear guidelines for fundraising expectations can also save the board headaches. After talking with CEO’s for several years, I would hazard a guess that well over eighty percent of board members do not raise money for the organization they serve. This is contrary to one of the essential responsibilities of being a board member, fundraising. How a board handles an obnoxious person is a reflection of organizational culture. Ideally the president or chair of the board should manage meetings in such a way that no one person can dominate the agenda or bully the other members. However, if board behavior is out of hand, it might be time to call in a consultant to conduct board training.

    And speaking of board training, does your organization have a board handbook and are new members provided with training? This is an area that is often overlooked or dismissed. And while organizational expectations might seem obvious, it should be remembered that people are born “board members” and many people who find their way onto board service are well-meaning volunteers, not governance experts.

    The functionality and health of the board of directors is a direct reflection of the health of the nonprofit. If a board is dysfunctional, the organization will be dysfunctional. If a board is focused, healthy and mission driven, the organization will be the same. If you are dealing with problematic board members, it’s time to take action; delaying will only cause the problems to grow. 

    Bunnie Riedel is a Standards for Excellence Licensed Consultant. Her areas of expertise are board development, strategic planning, communications and media relations and public policy advocacy. riedelcommunications.com

  • Understanding Nonprofit Obstacles: What Headwinds Do Your Clients Face?

    Understanding Nonprofit Obstacles: What Headwinds Do Your Clients Face?

    When you travel from New York to London, the shortest flight is about 6 hours and 45 minutes. When you return, the shortest flight is an hour longer. Flying east, we have tailwinds helping us along. Flying west, we’re pushing against headwinds.
    Every time we make a plan, we’re also making assumptions. Some assumptions are simple and pretty universal – we all experience headwinds and tailwinds in flight.
    But other times we are making assumptions based on our own experiences, sometimes unaware of the headwinds and tailwinds that are helping and hindering us.
    For example, if you ask me how far the nearest Target store is, I’ll answer that it’s about 10 minutes from my home. Unconsciously, I’m assuming you have a car. If my neighbor doesn’t have a car, it will typically take over an hour – walk to the bus stop, take a bus several miles in the opposite direction from Target, so he can change to the bus that will take him there.
    My tailwind is that I have a car and enough money to pay the insurance and fill the tank. His headwind is that he doesn’t have a car. Worse, he also has the headwind that he’s working two jobs, so the time it takes to get to Target is an even greater chunk out of his free time than it would be from mine. He’s flying west, while I’m flying east.

    Estimating based on our own personal experience is natural.

    It takes conscious effort to parse out the advantages and obstacles – tailwinds and headwinds – that make up our personal experience, so we can more clearly see the advantages and obstacles of others.
    When we makes plans, our first inclination is to think about what works for us. What do we like, what resources do we have – time, cash, knowledge – that we can employ. Planning based on our own experience may work if everyone is just like us – same background, same experiences, same resources.

    But our clients, patrons, staff members and visitors are not all the same.

    To successfully serve the community, we have to consciously find ways to understand our clients’, patrons’, staff members’ and visitors’ experiences. Not just what the headwinds (and tailwinds) are, but also their ramifications. I may have known that my neighbor didn’t have a car; that doesn’t mean I understood what the implications were when it came to shopping and the decisions they force you to make. If you have to go through that much trouble to shop at Target, then it may make sense to pay the higher prices at the local bodega. The ramifications of one situation affect the next, which affect the next.
    Before digging into the myriad of experiences of clients, patrons, staff and visitors, take time to consider the headwinds you’ve encountered growing up and getting to where you are in life. Then stop and consider all the tailwinds that have helped you on your way – the mentors, the education, sustenance, the visits to cultural institutions.
    Which of these are universal? Which are uniquely yours? Which make you wonder about the tailwinds and headwinds of others?
    To schedule a time to explore your board and staff headwinds and tailwinds, reach Susan Detwiler at sdetwiler@detwiler.com or www.detwiler.com.

  • How Excellent Is Your Program Evaluation?

    How Excellent Is Your Program Evaluation?

    Nonprofit program evaluation refers to the process of gathering data about a service or program an organization offers to determine its effectiveness. Nonprofits that thoroughly and strategically evaluate their programs show a commitment to the communities they serve by identifying their successes and challenges. More and more charitable donors now expect to see an evaluation plan in the programs they fund. 

    The Standards for Excellence: An Ethics and Accountability Code for the Nonprofit Sector identifies key areas of effective nonprofit management, and offers guidance on developing and implementing a successful nonprofit program evaluation plan. 

    Consider the Cost 

    A good rule of thumb is to outline your program evaluation plan as you are creating the program itself, at the very beginning of the planning stage. This allows you to include the costs of implementing your evaluation in your program’s budget, and many funders consider underwriting the evaluation costs as evidence of a commitment to delivering the highest-quality program. If your nonprofit has already engaged in delivering your program without an evaluation plan in place, don’t worry! It’s never too late to research cost-effective strategies and include them in your budget and planning session for the coming year. 

    Define Your Program 

    Nonprofits typically form to alleviate specific problems or address certain issues in society, and define mission statements that include a purpose and broad methods for achieving their goals. When drafting your program evaluation plan, be sure to begin with a comprehensive definition of your program at the beginning to establish the plan’s objectives. Move beyond the mission statement to identify the vital components of your program to help you determine an appropriate evaluation method for each one. 

    Monitoring vs. Evaluation 

    Nonprofits should be prepared to include both monitoring and evaluation procedures in their evaluation plans to ensure they are consistently and thoroughly analyzing their effectiveness. Monitoring refers to the essential, ongoing process of collecting information related to your program delivery and operations. Outlining monitoring systems early on ensure you won’t lose or miss valuable information that could be gathered during your activity and later assessed, such as how many people participated, how much time did we dedicate, how much money was spent or generated, or anything else that is important to count.
    Evaluation goes beyond monitoring. It weighs the information gathered by your monitoring systems and assesses the impact you can claim as resulting from your program. Whatever evaluation methods you use, be sure to look at how your program has changed the conditions for your targeted population or problem.

     Effectiveness vs. Efficiency 

    The key to determining program effectiveness is the identification of standards, benchmarks, or criteria against which progress or performance can be assessed. Perhaps you are evaluating the year-over-year results of an annual fundraiser, or the outcome of a program against national statistics. Be sure to include criteria in your evaluation plan that you can compare against your data to help identify specific results and areas of improvement. 

    Efficiency is determined by the ratio of outputs to inputs. Efficient programs offer satisfactory results that are achieved with an appropriate amount of dedicated resources. Paying attention to the efficiency of your program minimizes waste, expenses, and unnecessary effort. 

    Ready to learn more about creating an excellent nonprofit program evaluation plan? Members of the Standards for Excellence Institute and its Replication Partners have access to an extensive library of educational resources to help nonprofit organizations implement each area of the Standards for Excellence code. Our educational resource packet on program evaluation includes tip, tools and best practices to support your program evaluation development. Become a member and download your resources today!

  • APPLICATIONS OPEN: Become a Standards for Excellence Licensed Nonprofit Consultant

    APPLICATIONS OPEN: Become a Standards for Excellence Licensed Nonprofit Consultant

    nonprofit_consultant

    Applications are now open for the tenth Standards for Excellence Licensed Nonprofit Consultant Training program.

    The Standards for Excellence Institute® continues to build a national network of qualified nonprofit consultants licensed to provide training, consulting, and support on the Standards for Excellence: An Ethics and Accountability Code for the Nonprofit Sector. The Licensed Consultant Training is an exclusive, professional development initiative that gives independent nonprofit consultants the knowledge, skills, and tools necessary to work with organizations across the country interested in learning about, conducting self assessments, implementing change, and becoming accredited in the Standards for Excellence Program.*
    The seminar will take place in Baltimore, Maryland October 24, 25, and 26 at the Hyatt Place in the heart of Baltimore’s beautiful Inner Harbor East. Meals and refreshments will be provided during the seminar, and a reception marking 10 years of the Licensed Consultant program will take place the evening of the 25th (see program description for more details). 

    Nonprofit_consultant 
    Apply today to become a Standards for Excellence Licensed Consultant

    Program Benefits
    Applicants that are accepted to the program will participate in a three-day license certification seminar. The seminar includes:

    • Facilitation and training development to incorporate the Standards for Excellence in your nonprofit consulting practice

    • Background on the importance of self-regulation for the nonprofit sector

    • Overview of the Standards for Excellence program and the specific content contained within the 67 guidelines

    • Take-home tools to help assess organizations in alignment with the Standards for Excellence code

    • Educational tools for all Standards for Excellence signature training programs including PowerPoint slides, curricula notes, and resource handouts

    • Educational Resource Packets and Bulletins (3 full sets of each of the educational resource packets and bulletins (currently, there are 27 educational resource packets) included free – additional copies available to purchase at a reduced rate)

    • 20 copies of the Standards for Excellence Codebook (updated version released in 2014) (additional copies available to purchase at a reduced rate)

    Participants in the program will receive a two-year license to provide Standards for Excellence consultation, including the ability to mentor organizations through the process of incorporating the Standards for Excellence to improve internal management and/or applying for accreditation to be awarded the Seal of Excellence.
    All Standards for Excellence Licensed Nonprofit Consultants are listed in our searchable online directory and featured with an individual profile page on the Standards for Excellence Institute’s website, promoting your status as a National Licensed Consultant in all facets of Standards for Excellence code. Licensed Consultants also have the opportunity to serve as an additional professional resource for the Standards for Excellence Institute on a contractual basis.

    Download the full program description for more details about the Licensed Consultant Training program.

    nonprofit_consultant
    Standards for Excellence Licensed Consultants work directly with
    nonprofit organizations)

    Eligibility and Requirements 

    Individuals must complete an application and become accepted to participate in the Licensed Nonprofit Consultant Training program. Applicants should be serving in a capacity that supports educating and working with nonprofits to implement and demonstrate organizational improvement and self-regulation. All Standards for Excellence Licensed Nonprofit Consultants must commit to program reporting and evaluation requirements, submit periodic reports on Standards for Excellence related training and consulting engagements they conduct, including client contact information for consulting engagements, and abide by all copyright, intellectual property, and derivative work restrictions of the Standards for Excellence Institute. See the program description for full details about Licensed Consultant eligibility and requirements. 

    To Apply 

    All applications for the 2016 Licensed Consultant Training must be submitted by July 1, 2016.  A screening process, including review of professional experience and references will be conducted by Standards for Excellence Institute staff. Accepted applicants must participate in all facets of the three-day training seminar, and enter into a written agreement with the Standards for Excellence Institute setting forth obligations and commitments as mentioned in the program description. Applicants will be notified of acceptance decisions by August 5, 2016.

    Apply now to become a Standards for Excellence Licensed Nonprofit Consultant 

    Program Tuition 

    The tuition for the 2016 Licensed Consultant Training is $1575 (does not include travel and lodging). A $150 discount is provided to individuals who are currently members of Maryland Nonprofits or the Standards for Excellence Institute. Payment is due in full upon acceptance into the program and subject to the program cancellation policy. Upon request, participants will have the ability to pay tuition in installments and must sign a payment plan agreement. See program description for more details. 

    * Geographical limitations apply with regard to where Licensed Consultants can provide service. In areas represented by a Standards for Excellence Partner, Licensed Consultants will require written permission from the Partner to conduct Standards for Excellence related activities.  Partners may contract with Licensed Consultants to provide services within their regions. Prospective Licensed Consultants will require a letter of endorsement from replication partners operating within geographic areas where they reside and/or work. A current list of licensed replication partners and their regions can be found here. If you conduct your primary business within the geographic limits of a Standards for Excellence Institute Partner, please contact us to discuss arrangements.