Monthly Archive for March, 2008

Reflections on NTC: Lost in [tech] conversation

Something that should be obvious about a conference for nonprofit technologists is that there was no lack of geeky conversation, ever, anywhere.  It was wonderful!  But, one thing that I thought was important to bring up and great that it was brought up in some of the sessions, was that we have to remember these few days of utopia are numbered, and normally we aren’t able to have the same kinds of conversations with the same kinds of vocabulary and assumed knowledge.

When we are working in offices at nonprofits or other philanthropic organizations, or consulting with these groups, we need to approach conversations in a different way, to avoiding losing people in our techie conversation.  How do you do that?

  • Don’t worry about avoiding conversations! Instead of agonizing over a conversation to leadership about needing $10k, find a way to start a conversation about how that investment can make the staff’s work more effective or efficient, or save money elsewhere.
  • Recognize the differences!  Talking to a fellow techie about new software, platforms, products, etc. can be great but so can conversations about those things with staff so long as you recognize the difference between features and benefits—tech people care about features, no one else does.  This goes for conversations with leadership, buy-in, training, etc.
  • Express what you want clearly! It is fine to ask for or recommend new budget items, upgrades, uses, or strategies; it’s more than fine, it’s your job!  But know your strengths and how to work within them so that what you are asking for and why is clear.
  • Don’t be a cheerleader for the accomplishment! You should, of course, always recognize accomplishments throughout your organization, including the technology department.  But, as a leader (and not just a techie) you should work to cheer on the people, the work and the tools instead of just the end accomplishments.  After all, it was the people, their hard work, and the tools chosen that got to that goal!

What kinds of conversations have you had as the “techie” (accidental or not!) and what results did you have?  How were you able to have the most “successful” conversations with your leadership or staff when dealing with technical matters?

Reflections on NTC: From techie to leader

One of the sessions I attended at NTEN’s NTC last week was about moving from the position as “the techie” in your organization to being a real “leader.” It was an interesting topic and I thought a very valuable issue. Linda Widdop, Dir. of Tech Services/Consulting, and Dean Graham, Manager of App. Services, both from NPower Pennsylvania, were the presenters and general motivators for the session.  Here are notes I jotted down from the session…

The true measure of leadership is influence - nothing more nothing less. - Maxwell

Large org = CIO
Medium org = someone in charge of tech
Small = accidental techie

Ineffective CIO: ED has business background; new position created (CIO), CIO attends executive meetings, no improvements seen by management, staff frustrated by tech

Ineffective IT manager: top management comprised of promoted social workers, advocates; IT manager not invited/included in exec meetings; budget developed and managed by CFO

Ineffective accidental techie: volunteer or overworked case worker who knows how to use a computer; few or minimal resources; react to crisis or programmatic changes

Understanding IT leadership: what was missing in our 3 examples? leadership. To be effective, you need to understand how to be a leader, no matter what role.

The NMA leadership model:
you can apply leadership principles to tech
set direction (tech planning), demonstrate personal character, engender organization capability (build teams), mobilize individual commitment for change (inspire teams)

5 key areas of tech leadership:
1 understand strategic tech planning
2 developing a vision for the org
3 building the team
4 communication
5 role models

1: Understand strategic tech planning
roadmap that aligns tech with mission and business goals
process to build buy in from stakeholders
a framework for decision making
tool for budgeting and fundraising
living evolving document

Where does IT leadership fit in? Broach the subject with management; understand and communicate the benefits; lead the effort; look to the future

2: Developing a vision for the org
What are your organization’s key strategic business goals over the next 3-5 years (increase services by 25%, start an after school program, double earned revenue, improve…)
THEN add tech

Where does IT leadership fit in? Get involved in developing your org’s business goals; fully understand all programs; ask about the big picture; share your ideas with other

3: Building the team
gain support and user adoption
budgets make more sense
input from all angles
smarter solutions
holistic approach

Where does IT leadership fit in? Ask for volunteers to join the effort; elicit input from all members; include other leaders; be open to many ideas; foster team communication; don’t let your expertise drive the process (it’s not all about the hardware side of technology!)

Relationships are the fertile soil from which all advancement, all success, all achievement in real life grows. -Ben Stein

4: Communication
all meetings must be attended by the team
share the team’s deliverables with other staff - execs or full staff
develop solid documentation
share your enthusiasm for the project with everyone

5: Role models
use your headquarters
investigate other ors that provide the same services
investigate other orgs that communicate in the same way
research and adopt tech best practices

It is easy to be a leader to those “under” you but it is very hard to be a leader for your peers.

Role model - be one:
continue to provide thought leadership within the organization
keep up the communications
join and attend nonprofit technology groups
provide info to other orgs
collaborate when possible

So, are you being a techie or a leader in your organization right now?  What are you going to do tomorrow to become more of a leader?  What are you going to work on over the next month to become more of a leader?

LIVE from NTC: E-advocacy

One last live blog from the NTC here in New Orleans. Click on the link below if you want to follow along with (or read the archive of) E-Advocacy: Mission over Membership with Charles Lenchner, Colin Delany, Jonan Compitello, Farra Trompeter:

Click here to follow the live blog!

LIVE from NTC: Targeting your message

I am going to live blog another session from today’s NTC here in New Orleans. Click below to follow along live (or read back from the archive) of Targeting Your Message: Values-Based Segmentation and Communication Strategies for Nonprofits with representatives from McQueen Morrow Associates:

Click to follow the live blog!

LIVE from NTC: Online community building

I am going to try out the newly released tool CoverItLive to cover what should probably be a terrific panel here at NTEN’s NTC. If you would like to follow along live with me or read back over the live transcript of the Building, Growing, and Sustaining a Vibrant Online Community - How to Reach Beyond Traditional Tools into the Web 2.0 Sphere with Beth Kanter, Susan Tenby, Keith Morris and Abby Sandlin, click here:

Watch the live blogging now!

NTEN’s NTC: Day 1 lots of humans

Here I am at NTEN’s NTC in New Orleans. It was a HUMONGOUS hassle trying to get out here as the flights from everywhere were delayed, canceled, and rerouted because of the weather in Texas (the major hub most of us were connecting through), but we all made it and are so excited to be here. Yesterday, was a lot of social gatherings and meeting people in person.

IN PERSON! We are not all, apparently, just 200×200 pixels it turns out. We are humans. :)
Some of the wonderful people that I have talked, linked, followed, blogged, twittered, and otherwise been with online that are now three dimensional people in my life include:

Some special notes:

  • Kari was with me for much of my airport woes and we had an awesome time bonding over the lack of sleep and free wifi. But it was still fun!
  • Peter and I have had some great conversations and I’m so glad he was able to make it down from Montreal. I just voted for his mashup and encourage you to check it out and vote, too. I have also voted for others—you can do more than one—so, go vote now! (Voting ends tomorrow!) EDIT: Voting has been extended for the NTEN community until Monday!
  • I am looking forward to many more connections and conversations and all the terrific workshops in the next couple days, so leave a message or connect with me on twitter to help me find you!

Social Innovation Review’s newest blogger: Me!

The Stanford Social Innovation Review has a corps of bloggers that post ideas, conversations, and thoughts on philanthropy and the nonprofit sector. It is a wonderful place to listen to great thinking, read through the comments, or become part of the conversation. I have been following their bloggers for a while now, and am now part of their ranks! The first post is already up, in which I more clearly express the ideas blogged about the other day of the technology gap and leadership gap could work themselves out together.

You can read the blog here!

Let’s connect in New Orleans!

Are you headed to the NTC? NTEN’s Nonprofit Technology Conference is this week, March 19-21, in New Orleans. There will be a multitude of conversations and connections in addition to the fabulous line up of panels and workshops. I’m thrilled to be headed down tomorrow, in time for the Day of Service program where conference goers are matched up with local nonprofit organizations for free consulting and strategizing! It’s going to be a blast!

What would make it even better, for me, is if I could connect with all of you who are going! You can contact me via Twitter, find me in Facebook or LinkedIn, or leave me a comment below!

I can’t say it enough: I’m really looking forward to meeting you all in person and experiencing what is the NTC! :)

How to close the gaps: leadership and social media

Recently, Inside Philanthropy, the blog for the Philanthropy Journal, posted about a fairly popular conversation topic: The nonprofit leadership gap. Research is coming out that predicts a large depression of leaders in the nonprofit sector as the baby boomers go into retirement. There have been many confirmations of this and less strong, concrete ideas for “fixing” it. What does the leadership gap mean for technology and social media adoption and usage for organizations?

As has been discussed online and offline, the perception (for better or worse, true or false, etc.) is that youth are the ones using social media tools personally and that if an organization wants to incorporate some of those tools in its outreach, fundraising, events, or communications strategy, they need to hire a young person to do it. I think we all know, though, that people are not dogs and we can all learn new tricks.

Often, “young people” are the ones with exposure and experience using these tools because they are at a college campus with easy access nearly 24/7 to computers and friends and friends on computers. They also have had much less of their life away from computers compared to older generations/peer groups. They don’t know the tools because they are the only ones who can understand them; they just happen to have had a great opportunity to play around with a lot of them already.

So, as I see it, there is the leadership gap which is a top down direction and the technology gap which is a bottom up direction. How can these two hands hold on to each other?

Social media tools need to become integrated, slowly and logically, into organizations’ communication/outreach/development strategies AND into the internal staff processes that are shared with all staff. This means strategies like choosing a set of tags for your organization and getting everyone using del.icio.us for sharing news, reports, information, etc. Say you work for the “Portland Children’s Affairs Counsel” (I don’t think that exisits, I’m just making it up), and you want to have tags for your staff, your board, and for general news that you could link to on your website. So, you use PCACstaff, PCACboard, and PCACnews to tag organizations, news articles, reports, or anything else you come across on the web. Then, board members know to keep an eye on items tagged with PCACboard to see interesting things happening in the field or with organizations relevant to the organization’s work, etc. Staff know to watch for items tagged by other staff instead of keeping track of so many emails with one link to a news story, etc.

Staff can begin to upload photos from events or around the office to Flickr as a way to get familiar with the tool and then publicize the group or tag for the organization on the site, encouraging others to post photos they take at events or with the staff.

Slowly integrating these kinds of tools will make for better adoption because people will have personal experience and familiarity with each tool as it is integrated instead of throwing many tools at the organization at once and causing a sink or swim atmosphere.

But, back to the original question, how do these two issues come together? It’s simple. If social media tools are introduced that enable more sharing of information across the organization and build a cohesive team around projects and campaigns, then it can be easier to train and foster staff into leadership positions. Using technology tools to streamline work and to integrate online and offline parts of campaigns/projects (which usually involve completely separate teams of staff) means that staff will be integrated and really facilitating each other’s work instead of working autonomously.

I hope to write more about this later but wanted to get the thoughts out before I forgot them. :) I would love to hear what you think and how the two “gaps” have shown themselves or not in your organization. How have you seen it play out?

Flickr for nonprofits!

Flickr and TechSoup Stock have teamed up to offer Flickr pro accounts to nonprofits!

I have blogged before about ways nonprofits can use Flickr and it was a topic of great discussion when I have thought about social media implementation with folks at organizations like the Cendar Sinai Park here in Portland. It is a great tool for bringing in some smiling faces to your website, print materials, and connecting supporters online that attend events or volunteer for your organization.

Read more on TechSoup’s site to get additional details on qualifying!