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COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY “The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy toolkit has given me and my board tools to help us focus on the key questions that we really need to be asking: who we are, what we do, and how we can make sure we are meeting the changing needs of our community. I think it is the most important challenge for our field for the 21st century.”Paul Major
GET THE TOOLKIT
The “ What’s Next for Community Philanthropy ” toolkit aims to help community philanthropy organizations apply innovation and design methodologies to think creatively about their business models and the broader future of the field. To get a sense of what you’ll find in the toolkit, please read the Overview document below. Or if you prefer, flip through the “short story” visual WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana. In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. The one-day session provided nearly 40 midwestern consultants, regional FACILITATOR TRAINING WORKSHOPS Community foundations and other place-based funders operate in an environment that is dramatically different from the one in which many of their current practices and structures were developed. As a result, it will become increasingly important for community philanthropyleaders Continued
BRIGHT SPOTS: PROMISING APPROACHES IN COMMUNITY The bright spots in this document are organized across ten broad clusters of roles that community philanthropy organizations can play in their communities, detailed below. Bright spots can be copied directly, adapted for use in new places and circumstances, or serve to PRIORITIZING ROLES: CRAFTING YOUR STRATEGIC PORTFOLIO Prioritizing Roles: Crafting your strategic portfolio. Struggling to prioritize which roles your organization should focus on? This card game will help you think about the portfolio of roles you play in your community in the context of your organization’s mission, capabilities, and resources. Gain greater clarity about where to focusyour
LANDSCAPE MAPPING: UNDERSTANDING WHO’S DOING WHAT IN YOUR Landscape Mapping: Understanding who’s doing what in your community. Curious to see which roles other community philanthropy organizations are (or aren’t) playing in your community? This exercise provides a structured process for understanding the shifting landscape of community philanthropy in your area. Investigating the broader set of FLIPPING ORTHODOXIES: QUESTIONING INGRAINED ASSUMPTIONS IN Sometimes, the greatest opportunities are hiding in plain sight. This card game will help you identify and flip deeply held, unstated and unquestioned assumptions about “how things are done” that can become blind spots over time – what the innovation strategy firm Doblin calls “orthodoxies.”. The Flipping Orthodoxies exercisehelps
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY: Notes on the Canadian Landscape This document is intended as an addendum to the core toolkit of the What’s Next for Community Philanthropy initiative. ABOUT US | MONITOR INSTITUTE ABOUT MONITOR INSTITUTE. Monitor Institute is a social change consultancy that works with innovative leaders to surface and spread best practices in public problem solving and to pioneer next practices — breakthrough approaches for addressing social and environmental challenges. Monitor Institute marries a deep grounding in strategy,networks
COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY “The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy toolkit has given me and my board tools to help us focus on the key questions that we really need to be asking: who we are, what we do, and how we can make sure we are meeting the changing needs of our community. I think it is the most important challenge for our field for the 21st century.”Paul Major
GET THE TOOLKIT
The “ What’s Next for Community Philanthropy ” toolkit aims to help community philanthropy organizations apply innovation and design methodologies to think creatively about their business models and the broader future of the field. To get a sense of what you’ll find in the toolkit, please read the Overview document below. Or if you prefer, flip through the “short story” visual WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana. In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. The one-day session provided nearly 40 midwestern consultants, regional FACILITATOR TRAINING WORKSHOPS Community foundations and other place-based funders operate in an environment that is dramatically different from the one in which many of their current practices and structures were developed. As a result, it will become increasingly important for community philanthropyleaders Continued
BRIGHT SPOTS: PROMISING APPROACHES IN COMMUNITY The bright spots in this document are organized across ten broad clusters of roles that community philanthropy organizations can play in their communities, detailed below. Bright spots can be copied directly, adapted for use in new places and circumstances, or serve to PRIORITIZING ROLES: CRAFTING YOUR STRATEGIC PORTFOLIO Prioritizing Roles: Crafting your strategic portfolio. Struggling to prioritize which roles your organization should focus on? This card game will help you think about the portfolio of roles you play in your community in the context of your organization’s mission, capabilities, and resources. Gain greater clarity about where to focusyour
LANDSCAPE MAPPING: UNDERSTANDING WHO’S DOING WHAT IN YOUR Landscape Mapping: Understanding who’s doing what in your community. Curious to see which roles other community philanthropy organizations are (or aren’t) playing in your community? This exercise provides a structured process for understanding the shifting landscape of community philanthropy in your area. Investigating the broader set of FLIPPING ORTHODOXIES: QUESTIONING INGRAINED ASSUMPTIONS IN Sometimes, the greatest opportunities are hiding in plain sight. This card game will help you identify and flip deeply held, unstated and unquestioned assumptions about “how things are done” that can become blind spots over time – what the innovation strategy firm Doblin calls “orthodoxies.”. The Flipping Orthodoxies exercisehelps
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY: Notes on the Canadian Landscape This document is intended as an addendum to the core toolkit of the What’s Next for Community Philanthropy initiative. WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana. In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. The one-day session provided nearly 40 midwestern consultants, regional GAME | MONITOR INSTITUTE The Prioritizing Roles Interactive Game that follows is designed to help you think through the strategic roles that you should be playing in your community. It aims to help you make clear choices about what is core to your organization, what is not, and what experiments you should be exploring for the future, given your mission, capabilities GENERATING NEW IDEAS: A DESIGN WORKSHOP Generating New Ideas: A design workshop. Ready to brainstorm new ways to serve your community? This methodology and set of related exercises are tailored to spur creative new thinking about how your community philanthropy organization can do its work. It will equip you to run your own “idea generation” workshop with your staff, senior LANDSCAPE MAPPING: UNDERSTANDING WHO’S DOING WHAT IN YOUR Landscape Mapping: Understanding who’s doing what in your community. Curious to see which roles other community philanthropy organizations are (or aren’t) playing in your community? This exercise provides a structured process for understanding the shifting landscape of community philanthropy in your area. Investigating the broader set of WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 4 Instructions Small groups that are using the deck of orthodoxy cards (Appendix A): Take 15–20 minutes to complete steps 1–5 below. Small groups that are not using the deck of orthodoxy cards: Follow the same instructions as above, but for steps 1 and 2 below, substitute the orthodoxy cards with the orthodoxies worksheet(Appendix B).
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 Overview Generating new ideas and the fallacy of the “Eureka!” moment At the heart of the innovation process is the creation of new ideas. But people often romanticize the WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 20 2004 (Bush def. Kerry 50.7% to 48.3% popular vote) Source: Pew Research Center U.S. Presidential Elections by County11 Source: Bill Bishop, The Big Sort WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 Overview Community philanthropy organizations have adapted to changing times by taking on new roles in their communities. Community philanthropy organizations are driven by a deep commitment to serve donors, nonprofits, and — increasingly — residents WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 26 Change in Employment for a Sample of Large U.S.-based Multinational Companies7 (2009–2011; n=35) 113K 333K 0K 50K 100K 150K 200K 250K300K 350K
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you better understand your local community philanthropy landscape. This exercise provides a structured process for helping community philanthropy leaders better understand the local philanthropic context ABOUT US | MONITOR INSTITUTE ABOUT MONITOR INSTITUTE. Monitor Institute is a social change consultancy that works with innovative leaders to surface and spread best practices in public problem solving and to pioneer next practices — breakthrough approaches for addressing social and environmental challenges. Monitor Institute marries a deep grounding in strategy,networks
COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY “The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy toolkit has given me and my board tools to help us focus on the key questions that we really need to be asking: who we are, what we do, and how we can make sure we are meeting the changing needs of our community. I think it is the most important challenge for our field for the 21st century.”Paul Major
WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana. In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. The one-day session provided nearly 40 midwestern consultants, regionalGET THE TOOLKIT
The “ What’s Next for Community Philanthropy ” toolkit aims to help community philanthropy organizations apply innovation and design methodologies to think creatively about their business models and the broader future of the field. To get a sense of what you’ll find in the toolkit, please read the Overview document below. Or if you prefer, flip through the “short story” visual WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 How to use this document This primer is intended to help community philanthropy organizations understand how large-scale global forces are fundamentally alter their local WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 essays, tools, exercises, and provocations aimed at helping community foundations and other community philanthropy organizations begin to challenge old assumptions, understand the full menu of options that are available to them, and generate new thinking so thatthey can
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you identify and flip orthodoxies that may be obstacles to innovation in your organization. Orthodoxies are, by definition, rarely questioned or challenged, which can make them hard to surface and discuss head on. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 26 Change in Employment for a Sample of Large U.S.-based Multinational Companies7 (2009–2011; n=35) 113K 333K 0K 50K 100K 150K 200K 250K300K 350K
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY: Notes on the Canadian Landscape This document is intended as an addendum to the core toolkit of the What’s Next for Community Philanthropy initiative. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you better understand your local community philanthropy landscape. This exercise provides a structured process for helping community philanthropy leaders better understand the local philanthropic context ABOUT US | MONITOR INSTITUTE ABOUT MONITOR INSTITUTE. Monitor Institute is a social change consultancy that works with innovative leaders to surface and spread best practices in public problem solving and to pioneer next practices — breakthrough approaches for addressing social and environmental challenges. Monitor Institute marries a deep grounding in strategy,networks
COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY “The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy toolkit has given me and my board tools to help us focus on the key questions that we really need to be asking: who we are, what we do, and how we can make sure we are meeting the changing needs of our community. I think it is the most important challenge for our field for the 21st century.”Paul Major
WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana. In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. The one-day session provided nearly 40 midwestern consultants, regionalGET THE TOOLKIT
The “ What’s Next for Community Philanthropy ” toolkit aims to help community philanthropy organizations apply innovation and design methodologies to think creatively about their business models and the broader future of the field. To get a sense of what you’ll find in the toolkit, please read the Overview document below. Or if you prefer, flip through the “short story” visual WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 How to use this document This primer is intended to help community philanthropy organizations understand how large-scale global forces are fundamentally alter their local WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 essays, tools, exercises, and provocations aimed at helping community foundations and other community philanthropy organizations begin to challenge old assumptions, understand the full menu of options that are available to them, and generate new thinking so thatthey can
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you identify and flip orthodoxies that may be obstacles to innovation in your organization. Orthodoxies are, by definition, rarely questioned or challenged, which can make them hard to surface and discuss head on. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 26 Change in Employment for a Sample of Large U.S.-based Multinational Companies7 (2009–2011; n=35) 113K 333K 0K 50K 100K 150K 200K 250K300K 350K
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY: Notes on the Canadian Landscape This document is intended as an addendum to the core toolkit of the What’s Next for Community Philanthropy initiative. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you better understand your local community philanthropy landscape. This exercise provides a structured process for helping community philanthropy leaders better understand the local philanthropic context COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY “The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy toolkit has given me and my board tools to help us focus on the key questions that we really need to be asking: who we are, what we do, and how we can make sure we are meeting the changing needs of our community. I think it is the most important challenge for our field for the 21st century.”Paul Major
GET THE TOOLKIT
The “ What’s Next for Community Philanthropy ” toolkit aims to help community philanthropy organizations apply innovation and design methodologies to think creatively about their business models and the broader future of the field. To get a sense of what you’ll find in the toolkit, please read the Overview document below. Or if you prefer, flip through the “short story” visual WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana. In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. The one-day session provided nearly 40 midwestern consultants, regional WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 13 Global Data Generated Annually8 (Zettabytes — estimated) 0.8 1.9 7.9 35.0 0 10 20 30 40 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019 With the rapid growth of mobile devices and online access, the amount of WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 26 Change in Employment for a Sample of Large U.S.-based Multinational Companies7 (2009–2011; n=35) 113K 333K 0K 50K 100K 150K 200K 250K300K 350K
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 20 2004 (Bush def. Kerry 50.7% to 48.3% popular vote) Source: Pew Research Center U.S. Presidential Elections by County11 Source: Bill Bishop, The Big Sort WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 Overview Generating new ideas and the fallacy of the “Eureka!” moment At the heart of the innovation process is the creation of new ideas. But people often romanticize the WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 5 Asian American and Arab American Native American Latino African American 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 pre-1970 1970s 1980s1990s 2000s
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 PROTOTYPING SOLUTIONS: A collaborative exercise Overview Prototyping is a way of quickly sharing and testing new ideas. Even after you’ve surfaced interesting new ideas for serving your community, it can be difficult to figure out how to move forward. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you better understand your local community philanthropy landscape. This exercise provides a structured process for helping community philanthropy leaders better understand the local philanthropic context ABOUT US | MONITOR INSTITUTE ABOUT MONITOR INSTITUTE. Monitor Institute is a social change consultancy that works with innovative leaders to surface and spread best practices in public problem solving and to pioneer next practices — breakthrough approaches for addressing social and environmental challenges. Monitor Institute marries a deep grounding in strategy,networks
COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY “The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy toolkit has given me and my board tools to help us focus on the key questions that we really need to be asking: who we are, what we do, and how we can make sure we are meeting the changing needs of our community. I think it is the most important challenge for our field for the 21st century.”Paul Major
WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana. In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. The one-day session provided nearly 40 midwestern consultants, regionalGET THE TOOLKIT
The “ What’s Next for Community Philanthropy ” toolkit aims to help community philanthropy organizations apply innovation and design methodologies to think creatively about their business models and the broader future of the field. To get a sense of what you’ll find in the toolkit, please read the Overview document below. Or if you prefer, flip through the “short story” visual WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 How to use this document This primer is intended to help community philanthropy organizations understand how large-scale global forces are fundamentally alter their local WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 essays, tools, exercises, and provocations aimed at helping community foundations and other community philanthropy organizations begin to challenge old assumptions, understand the full menu of options that are available to them, and generate new thinking so thatthey can
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you identify and flip orthodoxies that may be obstacles to innovation in your organization. Orthodoxies are, by definition, rarely questioned or challenged, which can make them hard to surface and discuss head on. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 26 Change in Employment for a Sample of Large U.S.-based Multinational Companies7 (2009–2011; n=35) 113K 333K 0K 50K 100K 150K 200K 250K300K 350K
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY: Notes on the Canadian Landscape This document is intended as an addendum to the core toolkit of the What’s Next for Community Philanthropy initiative. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you better understand your local community philanthropy landscape. This exercise provides a structured process for helping community philanthropy leaders better understand the local philanthropic context ABOUT US | MONITOR INSTITUTE ABOUT MONITOR INSTITUTE. Monitor Institute is a social change consultancy that works with innovative leaders to surface and spread best practices in public problem solving and to pioneer next practices — breakthrough approaches for addressing social and environmental challenges. Monitor Institute marries a deep grounding in strategy,networks
COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY “The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy toolkit has given me and my board tools to help us focus on the key questions that we really need to be asking: who we are, what we do, and how we can make sure we are meeting the changing needs of our community. I think it is the most important challenge for our field for the 21st century.”Paul Major
WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana. In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. The one-day session provided nearly 40 midwestern consultants, regionalGET THE TOOLKIT
The “ What’s Next for Community Philanthropy ” toolkit aims to help community philanthropy organizations apply innovation and design methodologies to think creatively about their business models and the broader future of the field. To get a sense of what you’ll find in the toolkit, please read the Overview document below. Or if you prefer, flip through the “short story” visual WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 How to use this document This primer is intended to help community philanthropy organizations understand how large-scale global forces are fundamentally alter their local WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 essays, tools, exercises, and provocations aimed at helping community foundations and other community philanthropy organizations begin to challenge old assumptions, understand the full menu of options that are available to them, and generate new thinking so thatthey can
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you identify and flip orthodoxies that may be obstacles to innovation in your organization. Orthodoxies are, by definition, rarely questioned or challenged, which can make them hard to surface and discuss head on. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 26 Change in Employment for a Sample of Large U.S.-based Multinational Companies7 (2009–2011; n=35) 113K 333K 0K 50K 100K 150K 200K 250K300K 350K
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY: Notes on the Canadian Landscape This document is intended as an addendum to the core toolkit of the What’s Next for Community Philanthropy initiative. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you better understand your local community philanthropy landscape. This exercise provides a structured process for helping community philanthropy leaders better understand the local philanthropic context COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY “The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy toolkit has given me and my board tools to help us focus on the key questions that we really need to be asking: who we are, what we do, and how we can make sure we are meeting the changing needs of our community. I think it is the most important challenge for our field for the 21st century.”Paul Major
GET THE TOOLKIT
The “ What’s Next for Community Philanthropy ” toolkit aims to help community philanthropy organizations apply innovation and design methodologies to think creatively about their business models and the broader future of the field. To get a sense of what you’ll find in the toolkit, please read the Overview document below. Or if you prefer, flip through the “short story” visual WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana. In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. The one-day session provided nearly 40 midwestern consultants, regional WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 13 Global Data Generated Annually8 (Zettabytes — estimated) 0.8 1.9 7.9 35.0 0 10 20 30 40 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019 With the rapid growth of mobile devices and online access, the amount of WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 26 Change in Employment for a Sample of Large U.S.-based Multinational Companies7 (2009–2011; n=35) 113K 333K 0K 50K 100K 150K 200K 250K300K 350K
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 20 2004 (Bush def. Kerry 50.7% to 48.3% popular vote) Source: Pew Research Center U.S. Presidential Elections by County11 Source: Bill Bishop, The Big Sort WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 Overview Generating new ideas and the fallacy of the “Eureka!” moment At the heart of the innovation process is the creation of new ideas. But people often romanticize the WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 5 Asian American and Arab American Native American Latino African American 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 pre-1970 1970s 1980s1990s 2000s
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 PROTOTYPING SOLUTIONS: A collaborative exercise Overview Prototyping is a way of quickly sharing and testing new ideas. Even after you’ve surfaced interesting new ideas for serving your community, it can be difficult to figure out how to move forward. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you better understand your local community philanthropy landscape. This exercise provides a structured process for helping community philanthropy leaders better understand the local philanthropic context ABOUT US | MONITOR INSTITUTE THE WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY INITIATIVE. The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy initiative was launched by the Monitor Institute in January 2013 to engage community foundations and other community philanthropy organizations in a large-scale innovation and design process to help them open up to new models and new possibilities that will help them better serve COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY “The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy toolkit has given me and my board tools to help us focus on the key questions that we really need to be asking: who we are, what we do, and how we can make sure we are meeting the changing needs of our community. I think it is the most important challenge for our field for the 21st century.”Paul Major
GET THE TOOLKIT
The “ What’s Next for Community Philanthropy ” toolkit aims to help community philanthropy organizations apply innovation and design methodologies to think creatively about their business models and the broader future of the field. To get a sense of what you’ll find in the toolkit, please read the Overview document below. Or if you prefer, flip through the “short story” visual WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 essays, tools, exercises, and provocations aimed at helping community foundations and other community philanthropy organizations begin to challenge old assumptions, understand the full menu of options that are available to them, and generate new thinking so thatthey can
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 4 Instructions Small groups that are using the deck of orthodoxy cards (Appendix A): Take 15–20 minutes to complete steps 1–5 below. Small groups that are not using the deck of orthodoxy cards: Follow the same instructions as above, but for steps 1 and 2 below, substitute the orthodoxy cards with the orthodoxies worksheet(Appendix B).
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 How to use this document This primer is intended to help community philanthropy organizations understand how large-scale global forces are fundamentally alter their local WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 13 Global Data Generated Annually8 (Zettabytes — estimated) 0.8 1.9 7.9 35.0 0 10 20 30 40 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019 With the rapid growth of mobile devices and online access, the amount of WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 18 Source: Pew Charitable Trusts Adult Income Distribution of U.S. Children Born into the 2 Lowest-Earning Quintile3 43% =70% 27% 17% 9% 4% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you better understand your local community philanthropy landscape. This exercise provides a structured process for helping community philanthropy leaders better understand the local philanthropic context ABOUT US | MONITOR INSTITUTE THE WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY INITIATIVE. The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy initiative was launched by the Monitor Institute in January 2013 to engage community foundations and other community philanthropy organizations in a large-scale innovation and design process to help them open up to new models and new possibilities that will help them better serve COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY “The What’s Next for Community Philanthropy toolkit has given me and my board tools to help us focus on the key questions that we really need to be asking: who we are, what we do, and how we can make sure we are meeting the changing needs of our community. I think it is the most important challenge for our field for the 21st century.”Paul Major
GET THE TOOLKIT
The “ What’s Next for Community Philanthropy ” toolkit aims to help community philanthropy organizations apply innovation and design methodologies to think creatively about their business models and the broader future of the field. To get a sense of what you’ll find in the toolkit, please read the Overview document below. Or if you prefer, flip through the “short story” visual WHAT'S NEW | MONITOR INSTITUTE What’s Next for Community Philanthropy pilots new train-the-trainer sessions in Indiana In late June, the Monitor Institute piloted the first What’s Next for Community Philanthropy facilitator training at the Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne in Indiana. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 essays, tools, exercises, and provocations aimed at helping community foundations and other community philanthropy organizations begin to challenge old assumptions, understand the full menu of options that are available to them, and generate new thinking so thatthey can
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 4 Instructions Small groups that are using the deck of orthodoxy cards (Appendix A): Take 15–20 minutes to complete steps 1–5 below. Small groups that are not using the deck of orthodoxy cards: Follow the same instructions as above, but for steps 1 and 2 below, substitute the orthodoxy cards with the orthodoxies worksheet(Appendix B).
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 How to use this document This primer is intended to help community philanthropy organizations understand how large-scale global forces are fundamentally alter their local WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 13 Global Data Generated Annually8 (Zettabytes — estimated) 0.8 1.9 7.9 35.0 0 10 20 30 40 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019 With the rapid growth of mobile devices and online access, the amount of WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 18 Source: Pew Charitable Trusts Adult Income Distribution of U.S. Children Born into the 2 Lowest-Earning Quintile3 43% =70% 27% 17% 9% 4% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you better understand your local community philanthropy landscape. This exercise provides a structured process for helping community philanthropy leaders better understand the local philanthropic context GAME | MONITOR INSTITUTE The Prioritizing Roles Game. Given limited human and financial resources, community philanthropy leaders need to be deliberate about which roles they play in their communities, which roles they want to play more of in the future, and which roles they should not beplaying.
GENERATING NEW IDEAS: A DESIGN WORKSHOP Ready to brainstorm new ways to serve your community? This methodology and set of related exercises are tailored to spur creative new thinking about how your community philanthropy organization can do its work. It will equip you to run your Continued LANDSCAPE MAPPING: UNDERSTANDING WHO’S DOING WHAT IN YOUR Curious to see which roles other community philanthropy organizations are (or aren’t) playing in your community? This exercise provides a structured process for understanding the shifting landscape of community philanthropy in your area. Investigating the broader set of actors who Continued WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 essays, tools, exercises, and provocations aimed at helping community foundations and other community philanthropy organizations begin to challenge old assumptions, understand the full menu of options that are available to them, and generate new thinking so thatthey can
WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 13 Global Data Generated Annually8 (Zettabytes — estimated) 0.8 1.9 7.9 35.0 0 10 20 30 40 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019 With the rapid growth of mobile devices and online access, the amount of WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 18 Source: Pew Charitable Trusts Adult Income Distribution of U.S. Children Born into the 2 Lowest-Earning Quintile3 43% =70% 27% 17% 9% 4% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 2 This exercise is designed to help you better understand your local community philanthropy landscape. This exercise provides a structured process for helping community philanthropy leaders better understand the local philanthropic context WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 PROTOTYPING SOLUTIONS: A collaborative exercise Overview Prototyping is a way of quickly sharing and testing new ideas. Even after you’ve surfaced interesting new ideas for serving your community, it can be difficult to figure out how to move forward. WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY 1 WHAT’S NEXT FOR COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY: Notes on the Canadian Landscape This document is intended as an addendum to the core toolkit of the What’s Next for Community Philanthropy initiative. MONITOR INSTITUTE BY DELOITTE Monitor Institute by Deloitte - Articles and insightsCookie Notice
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