nonprofits Archives - JIG Technologies https://jigtechnologies.com/category/nonprofits/ Better. Happier. Peace of mind. Tue, 09 Aug 2022 14:39:57 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://jigtechnologies.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/JIG-Emblem32x32.png nonprofits Archives - JIG Technologies https://jigtechnologies.com/category/nonprofits/ 32 32 How to Use IT Strategy to Drive Your Nonprofit Mission https://jigtechnologies.com/it-strategy-for-your-nonprofit/ Tue, 07 Jun 2022 18:55:20 +0000 https://jigtechnologies.com/?p=3904 If the typical executive director was asked, “do you need an IT Strategy?” you would be hard pressed to find anyone answering no. So, why is it then that so many nonprofits fail to create an IT Strategy to follow?

The post How to Use IT Strategy to Drive Your Nonprofit Mission appeared first on JIG Technologies.

]]>

How to use IT Strategically to Drive Your Nonprofit Mission

Why is an IT Strategy Needed?

If the typical executive director was asked, “do you need an IT Strategy?” you would be hard pressed to find anyone answering no.  So, why is it then that so many nonprofits fail to create an IT Strategy to follow?

One of the reasons IT Strategy is often ignored is because there is not a clear understanding of why it is important.  Many don’t realize that IT Strategy helps create value in the organization.  In other words, it helps maximize the return on IT investments. By ensuring that IT is aligned with the business vision, and across all departments throughout the organization, a better return will be provided.

What Could Go Wrong Without a Strategy?

Most organizations will not develop a clear IT Strategy and seem to get along just fine for a period of time without one.

Often a nonprofit or charity will start out with a mission to bring good into the world and IT is the last thing on their mind.

As the organization is formed, the financial person will choose the accounting system that best meets their needs.

The head of fundraising needs to track donors and sets up a donor management system for tracking donations.  This works well for some time, but the organization needs to get the word out about their cause and hires a marketing person.

This marketing person sets up a website and CRM to track new potential leads.  With all the success the funding team can no longer mange which group gets funding on spreadsheets, so a grant management system is created.

All noble efforts, and each group has the system they need, but this is where the challenges start.

While the donor management system tracks donations, the information about the bank account activity needs to be copied over to the accounting system for reconciliation.   Often this is done through some sort of export and import, but details are lost and reconciliation every month becomes very time consuming.

The marketing group has a list of potential donors, but when they donate, there is no match between the person on the donor system and the one on the marketing system. Lots of additional work goes into figuring out which campaigns ended up leading into donations.

Without an overall IT Strategy the organization has many systems not talking to each other.

Another problem that often occurs is the misalignment of the technology with the mission of the organization. 

An example might be an organization that’s mission is to help cure a particular disease that create a great donor database to raise funds but provides no system to award funding and track the effectiveness of the research.

In this way funds are received, but potentially ineffective and wasted. If IT is not aligned with the mission, then low return will be made on the investment.

Mobile
Mobile

How Does an IT Strategy Get Implemented?

Now that we see all the issues that can arise without a clear IT Strategy, how does one go about creating it?   

First and foremost, there must be a clear business strategy and vision to follow.  Business should lead technology, not the other way around.

With the business vision created, an IT vision can be developed, and the following 5 steps can be used to create the IT strategy:

Step 1: Development IT Vision: Answer the questions like where are you headed?  What does the end state look like?

Step 2: Identify the current IT capabilities: What people, processes, technology are currently in place?  How do these operate together?

Step 3: Document the future IT capabilities: What people, processes, technology are needed to accomplish the vision in step 1?  How do these operate together?

Step 4: Determine the IT capability gaps: What people, processes, and technology do not exist in the organization that are needed to reach the future state described in step 3?

Step 5: Create a migration plan: What are the steps needed to fill these gaps identified? Who is responsible for each? What are the deliverables and timelines?

With the plan in place, work can start to implement the IT Strategy in the organization. 

However, this is not a set it and forget it activity.   Every 1 to 3 years the IT Strategy should be reviewed and revised.  Additionally, quarterly check-ins are needed to ensure implementation is going as per the initial plan.

How Big is an IT Strategy Effort?

While many envision an IT Strategy that involves a digital transformation of the entire organization, it doesn’t not have to be that exhaustive. 

An initial IT Strategy could be as simple as just getting systems to a modern baseline level. This is often done through a technology success review (IT Audit) performed by a managed service provider and would take 3-4 weeks. This nice part about this is that it’s standardized and there is a lot to gain just by using the experience of the MSP to just get up to best practices.  It is also true that a more comprehensive and ambitious transformation to reinvent the organization can be taken on.  These efforts tend to be larger with a 6-12 month range for the timeline.

Mobile
Mobile
Mobile

The post How to Use IT Strategy to Drive Your Nonprofit Mission appeared first on JIG Technologies.

]]>
IT Planning and Assessments for Your Nonprofit https://jigtechnologies.com/it-planning-assessment-nonprofit/ Mon, 14 Feb 2022 18:31:16 +0000 https://jigtechnologies.com/?p=3494 How IT Planning and Assessments can help your organization meet its mission goals and bring you peace of mind

The post IT Planning and Assessments for Your Nonprofit appeared first on JIG Technologies.

]]>

IT Planning and Assessment For Your Nonprofit

How IT Planning and Assessments can help your organization meet its mission goals and bring you peace of mind

Nonprofits build strong communities. They are core to our economic stability and facilitate healthy forward momentum for those who use their services.

Technology is a nonprofit’s greatest ally. The tools provided by healthy and secure technology environment are essential in achieving important mission goals. Not only does technology ensure fast, secure and transparent operations in your organization, but it also helps to reach wider audiences of donors, volunteers and constituents.

Having an IT Plan and Assessment is important for several reasons:

  • It allows you to approach IT in a strategic and proactive way
  • It allows you to become a smart and savvy IT decision maker
  • Give you the understanding to save cases and invest in beneficial IT
  • Ensure your organization is using its existing technology in smarter ways
  • Implements a roadmap for building on your technology foundation in a direction that benefits your organization in the most cost-effective way
  • Provides security in case of emergencies or unexpected failures

These are a lot of things to consider for the person who gets assigned the task of managing IT in your organization.

A typical business might have roles such as Chief Information Officers, Chief Technical Officers and so on. There might be rolls for people who specifically deal with data governance and data security.

Most nonprofits do not have budgets to include this fantastic array of specialists to manage all the things.

A typical nonprofit might have people assigned to certain rolls, “IT Manager” or “System Administrator” but may not have the adequate skills or support to perform these roles simply due to time and resources.

Without the necessary support, technology can be accumulated with extra cost and little benefit. Quick fixes sometimes come in the way of 3rd party services and technology, cloud applications and subscriptions-based apps which may solve the problem temporarily but are rarely kept track of and can lead to needless spending. Further to that, with only one or two people at the helm of this great big technology machine, it is very difficult to ensure policies, procedures and maintain communication that is integral for security.

JIG's IT Planning and Assessment Strategy

1

Getting to Know You

We learn everything there is to know about how your organization works. We want to know how you work, when you work and who you work for.

image_1

2

Getting to Know Your Community

The more we know about who you are working for, who you are helping and what their needs are, the more we can start to envision and structure solutions and plans for you.

image_2

3

What are Your Constraints?

A successful plan hinges on realistic and consistent estimates for allowable resources.

image_3

4

What Do You Already Have?

A thorough audit of your software, hardware, servers, and the state of the devices that are attached to your network or system will ensure you get the most bang for your buck. It establishes how information (sensitive and otherwise) is being shared and protected. Security in nonprofit industries is an area of major concern.

image_4

5

What Are Your Options?

Researching affordable technology that has the greatest reach within your organization. Finding the tools and equipment that are scalable and secure. Whether that’s CRMs, donation portals or data storage, there is something out there that fits everyone.

image_5

6

Who Will Use This Technology?

Training is important and removes technology barriers that would otherwise create inequality in your organization. Whether it’s volunteers, staff, stakeholders, constituents, everyone requires accessible interaction with your services and technology.

image_6

7

How Will This All Fall Into Place?

Depending on your unique needs and the urgency required, a timeline and schedule will be developed to implement all these phases in comfortable roll-out that makes sure nobody is left behind. The lifecycle is designed to move your organization in an upward direction at your own pace and within budget.

image_7

8

Are We Ready?

Things are finalized, prepared. Policy and procedure documents have the i’s dotted and the t’s crossed.

image_8

9

Off We Go!

We put the plan into action.

image_9

A firm IT plan will remove the confusion and uncertainty about the technology goals of your organization. It will reduce stress, uncontrolled costs, provide transparency and most importantly in many cases, security.

Technology is your greatest ally in this mission to build a better world and we want to make sure we can help provide you with that peace of mind.

The post IT Planning and Assessments for Your Nonprofit appeared first on JIG Technologies.

]]>