Today, I revisit some larger questions about nonprofit organizations inspired by reading Gary Vaynerchuk’s latest book The Thank You Economy.
I first became aware of Gary a few years ago when I read Crush It, his first book and NY Times Best Seller, that explored how he built his own personal brand and local businesses using social media. The Thank You Economy serves somewhat as a sequel and formalizes what he and many other successful companies have been doing since 2004.
In the preface, Gary explains that Social Media has become the great equalizer – it’s given the power back to main street – and the companies who care the most about their customers are the ones who will win now and in the future. I want to emphasize that last sentence again: companies who care the most will win now and the future.
Sounds nice, right?
He points out that its not all that different from how business worked during the 1920-30s when my grandparents were growing up. When all there was local business. Everyone knew each other and the success of your businesses rested in the strength of your relationships. Word of mouth was king. Taking the long-term view and creating a legacy was core to the game.
Times changed after WWII, the long-term view was replaced by the pressures of short-term gains, quarterly profits…
You know the story. You’ve lived the story.
So what does this mean for nonprofits?
I think part of the problem for nonprofits is that social media has become the shiny object, a distraction. And a distraction where people and organizations get stuck in the how (short-term tactics) instead of the why (long-term strategies). Again, clarity of purpose is key to any tactic, no matter how shiny!
So let’s remove the distraction – social media – from the rest of this conversation and focus on the larger point Gary introduces in his book.
What does it mean for you or your nonprofit if caring is the name of the game for success moving forward?
For me, this all starts with your organization’s core values. For example, in The Canoe Group our core values define how we go about our work, the practices we use, even the customers we seek.
Does your organization have formally expressed core values? If so, do you know them? How are your actions in your work informed by your organization’s core values?
Is this the first time someone has asked this question? My experience tells me that most people would reluctantly answer yes to this question.
You must strike a balance between what you do (head) and how you go about it (heart). And striking a balance for many nonprofits means dedicating time to renewing (or simply placing greater emphasis on) their core values.
Let me know what you think.
Where do you fall in this whole conversation? What questions do you have? Concerns? Experiences you’d like to share? Drop a comment below and I’ll be happy to extend the conversation.
Next up, I’ll be writing about passion and its connection in the whole conversation. Hint: I don’t think we’re making enough of the collective passion that exists within each nonprofit. And I may even relate it to some Social Media tactics…



RSS
LinkedIn
Email