I was running a Club in Texas, when I was offered the
Executive Director position for the Boys & Girls Clubs in Akron Ohio. I knew the President of the Akron Community Foundation
and not another soul in town. Thankfully,
my Board had a plan.
One Board member, who isn’t the mayor of Akron but could
have been because he knows everyone, started setting up lunch meetings. We went to lunch with every community leader
in town. We told them of our struggles;
we told them about our kids and what they needed to be successful; we told them
our plan to ensure they were, indeed, successful – and that our Club was as
well. After 6 months, I, too, knew everyone in town.
What’s the lesson for your organization? There’s actually a
few:
1.
Who is on your Board and who do they know?
2.
Will they introduce you?
3.
Do you have a story?
4.
Can you tell it in a way that engages people?
5.
Who picks up the tab?
Now you might thing that it was silly of me to include the question
of who pays for lunch on my list of lessons, but I cannot tell you the number
of people who have asked. It matters. The question of what is a good use of agency resources
is a blog for another day, but for today, it’s worth having the discussion and
being clear about the answer before you ask Board members to set meetings.
Once you do, start having lunch, coffee and breakfast! Get
to know people in your community and let them get to know you. Program officers of foundations are incredibly
generous with their time and are interested in learning about your organization.
Community leaders, by definition, care
about the community. Go talk to them. You will be pleasantly surprised by the number
of people who say yes to your request for a meeting.
Profile building can and is partially done over lunch, but
it only starts at lunch. It doesn’t end there.
To build your profile, you also have to build your credibility and the credibility
of your program. Obviously, it won’t be enough to talk about your program if
your program isn’t providing excellent services. Impactful programming is critical. Benchmark similar organizations, find and
implement best practices and monitor and communicate your impact.
Speak in the community.
Most service groups have a speaker at every meeting. Recruit and train a Public Speaking Team to
present at service group meetings and in the community. It is a wonderful opportunity to get your
message out there. You can also blog
about the issues that impact your clients, write op-ed pieces and meet with local
politicians.
Is there a Leadership group in your city? Leadership Akron
was an incredible experience for me. It contributed to my professional development
and knowledge about the city in ways that I could not have replicated on my
own. It also provided incredible
resources for my organization. Now that I live in Columbus, I am a member of the
Leadership Columbus Alumni group. Consider
participating in your local group. Most leadership
programs offer scholarships for nonprofit senior leaders and it is an
incredible investment of your time and resources.
Figure out the “must attend” event in town, and attend. And when you do, walk around and greet everyone,
introduce yourself to people you haven’t been able to get in front of and ask
if you can call them for a meeting. Again,
you’ll be surprised at the number of people that say yes.
Finally, join groups that coalesce around the issues you
care about. Most communities have nonprofit
executive director groups, monthly or weekly educational forums, and leadership
organizations. Find one and get
involved. If there isn’t a group, start one. We invited all the leaders of agencies that
offered after school programming in Akron to a meeting. Akron had almost 2 dozen after school
programs, yet there was no on-going discussions about programming, best
practices or service gaps. The discussion
that started at that first meeting continued and our group later became the After
School Council of Greater Akron.
You can do it! Profile
raising, like everything else that is worth doing, takes time - lots of
time. Spending the time will pay off in spades,
for your organization, its mission and the community it serves!
Please let me know how it goes. As always, if you have other
ideas for profile building, or suggestions for blog topics, please share. A
rising tide raises all boats.
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