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Finding the right employee in any business,
either for profit or nonprofit, is a challenge. In the nonprofit arena the daily
pressures of fundraising continue to raise the bar when boards are seeking to
hire the executive director or development director for their organization.
Finding the right individual means matching the
organizational needs of finding someone who can both manage the structure of the
organization while at the same time motivating the board to keep the
organizational momentum moving in the right direction.
Stated another way, everyone is looking for an
individual that has boundless energy with the ability to transfer their
excitability. People seek an individual that works smart and can think
critically solving problems as they occur while still having the personal skills
to make you feel important and comfortable working with them, not for them. This
individual is expected to balance the reality of having to be an obedient
follower for the board while maintaining the ability of being its visionary
leader.
As job markets continue to tighten, all good
executive leadership in the nonprofit arena will continue to be a prized
commodity. That said, looking for potential candidates outside the traditional
arena, while looking for specific talents, should be considered. While some may
disagree, nonprofits are a business and should be run like a business! Having a
person in charge of your organization that has no "business sense" will spell
disaster.
Finding this prized employee is difficult at
best and impossible unless you have
other organizational tools in place. One such tool is having a clear job
description! Regardless of what you might have in place today start, this
approach with a blank sheet of paper and really ask yourself the question, "What
job do we need done?" "What did the previous executive director or director of
development do right?" "What do we want changed?" While hard to swallow on the
back of this same sheet note any board dysfunctions that keep someone from being
successful in meeting this description. Getting the right person requires board
members to be open and honest.
A list of resources to help you hire the best employees can can
be found by
clicking here!
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