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Multiple Income Streams: The Key to Sustainability for Nonprofits

When the so-called Great Recession hit the nation over a decade ago, many nonprofits found themselves struggling to stay afloat financially. Not all of them survived.

Organizations with only one or two revenue streams were particularly vulnerable, yet, more than a decade later, some nonprofits continue to struggle. It’s only a matter of time until the country enters another recessionary period, so now’s the time to ensure your revenue streams are sufficiently diverse.

Varied revenue sources

As some organizations learned the hard way during the last recession, relying on a single source of revenue can leave you with empty coffers if that source dries up. For example, nonprofits that were dependent back then on state funding for their budgets had to scramble as states across the nation began reducing, suspending and even eliminating grants.

Of course, governmental funding isn’t the only source that could unexpectedly disappear. Tough economic times can hurt major gifts, corporate giving, ticket sales for fundraising events, individual donations and foundation grants. If you sell goods or services, you might see sales dry up as people are forced to cut back on personal spending.

Road map to diversification

Financially stable nonprofits have a good mix of revenue sources, with no one source accounting for more than 25% or 30% of the budget. The following steps can help you get there.

Perform and present your initial evaluation. Nonprofit boards of directors sometimes are reluctant to add revenue streams, but a visual aid can help them understand the need. It’s easy to generate a pie chart in Excel that will show each source as a percentage of the total revenue. You also might want to include benchmarking data that shows how your revenue mix compares to those of peer organizations.

The initial evaluation should include a review of future plans and anticipated expenses, too. Present the board with multiple scenarios where those costs are compared to revenues with and without the current revenue sources. Seeing how eliminating a revenue stream could jeopardize the mission may be the nudge reluctant directors need to embrace diversification.

Determine appropriate additional revenue sources. Keep everything on the table as you begin this part of the process. Consider a wide range of potential sources, weighing the pros and cons of each, including implications for staffing and other resources, accounting processes, unrelated business income taxes and your organization’s exempt status.

In addition, assess how well aligned potential sources are with your mission. For example, has that foundation grant you’re thinking about pursuing ever been awarded to another nonprofit serving your population? Does the company that has pro-posed a joint venture engage in practices counter to your values?

Develop strategies for each new source. You don’t want to put all your eggs in one basket, but you also don’t want to depend on too many “baskets,” because each new revenue stream will require its own strategy. Executing too many implementation plans can strain resources.

Each plan should include initial and ongoing budgets, as well as any new systems, procedures and marketing campaigns that will be needed. It also should have a timeline with milestones to facilitate monitoring. 

Review and adjust as necessary. Take the time at the end of every month — don’t wait until year end — to closely review each revenue source. Is it living up to expectations? Is it costing more than expected or falling short of revenue projections?

If a source fails to deliver over time, don’t feel tied to it. Your financial advisor can help you figure out whether it’s best to let it go and try another route.

READ MORE: The Wayfair Ruling: What this Sales Tax Case Means for Nonprofits

Patience is crucial

You can’t add significant revenue streams overnight — it takes time, especially if you’ve relied on one type of revenue for a long time. But that’s more reason why organizations with only one or two revenue sources should start diversification plans now. If you have questions about how to diversify your revenue streams, contact us.