It’s time the sector stopped huffing and puffing and bit the bullet. The public has no easy way of knowing whether a charity is spending enough of its income on its mission, nor whether that money is doing a good job.
Joe Saxton
Want charities to be an open book? Or do you a rebel against this cause? Leave a comment below.
Open book PLEASE.
Open book PLEASE.
I have direct debits giving smallish monthly payments to five charities.
Previously,I contacted the five to enquire exactly what percentage of donations went to the good cause.
I can't quote the exact replies but,bar one,they all seemed OK to me and I continued with the DDs.However,they may have been fibbing or been economical with the verite.
Unlike you,I am not prepared to scour through annual accounts.
Perhaps your organisation could compile these statistics!
Thr "bar one" org. was Amnesty International and I accept that it is very difficult to quantify exactly what goes in "charity".Most would obviously go on "Admin" in their case.
regards,
Bernie
I contacted www
I contacted www.standup2cancer.org asking if they have a position on funding research using live animals, as I will not fund such archaic research. As expected they will not give me a straight answer so I will not support them. Charities funding animal research are commonly less than open about their willingness to fund painful animal experiments.
Absolutely agree, Joe.
Absolutely agree, Joe. Without open book, we are allowing the expectations to be set erroneously, as your data suggests. What surprises me is that the FR departments of many charities reject putting simple 'percent of income spent on charitable activities' declarations on their material today, when they are so much lower than the 39% - or even the 17% - you state above! Yes, it is complicated to create a perfect solution, particularly on a sector wide basis; but 'fit for purpose' solutions at an individual organization level can and should be deployed NOW. It may not be the reason why donors will support your sector, but it could certainly be powerful in ensuring they support/continue to support a specific charity.
First define Admin! SORP has
First define Admin! SORP has been helping us argue for years that unless our costs are related to Governance or Fundraising they are Charitable Activities. So is Admin the same as Governance or is it the same as Support Costs allocated to Charitable Activities.
I'm not arguing here for Opaqueness, my approach when teaching (having written the guidance in Inputs Matter in 2003) is to be clear and enable the track from functional expenditure to SOFA category to be capable of following by most people.
When I'm asked what my charity's admin costs are, my reply is "define admin". In most cases what people mean is Governance costs, usually costs which are externally imposed, so then the answer comes to "about 5%".
From a common sense point of
From a common sense point of view, transparency has to help. But so will a level playing field... For example (as far as I'm aware) Comic Relief still communicates that 100% of the money it raises goes to support its causes but I know people who work there so who pays their salaries if it receives no other external funding?
Powerful and persuasive marketing from the big boys and girls isn't helping us all to be transparent (if transparent means honest too...)
That's an easy one. Comib
That's an easy one. Comib Relief pays all of its costs from the interest it earns on the money raised. They invest that until it is drawn down by recipients. That is easily seen from their accounts.
Great info about Comic relief
Great info about Comic relief, thanks for sharing... but if interest earned is from donations in the first place, shouldn't this - in the spirit of the claim that all money donated goes to the causes - also be used to support projects?
Is it a question of the spirit versus the letter?
I'm not decrying the work, just pointing out that as in all walks of life, reporting via external communications can and does imply one set of circumstances when readers may perceive it to be something else...
I wonder if a definition of overheads for marketing and communications purposes would help?