Finance: Tools For Success: Doing The Right Things and Doing Them Right
Finance: Tools For Success: Doing The Right Things and Doing Them Right
Finance: Tools For Success: Doing The Right Things and Doing Them Right
6. Finance
What is financial management? >>3 Finance strategy >>4 Generating income >>5 Financial management system >>7 Internal environment >>14 Providing evidence of your achievements in financial management >>16 Signposts >>17 Links to PQASSO >>18
See Copeman C, Bruce I, Forrest A, Lesirge R, Palmer P and Patel A (2008) Tools for tomorrow: a practical guide to strategic planning for voluntary organisations (London: NCVO)
Finance Tools for success: doing the right things and doing them right
Generating income
Generating income is more than fundraising. It is about making your organisation sustainable by creating a range of funding (diversifying your sources of income), so you are not dependent on one source. Your income generation plan must ensure that: you are raising sufficient levels of income to enable you to deliver your organisations purpose; it must cover all costs incurred. you have taken into account any restrictions imposed by funders on how your organisation can apply the funds received (see tip box below) you have a sufficiently diverse source of income to avoid the high level of risk associated with depending on one source.
Finance strategy
Your finance strategy is a plan of how you will finance your organisation and its activities, what money you will need and where it will come from. Your strategy should describe how you intend to move from your current position to your intended position.
Funds received from funders for a specific purpose are known as restricted funds: you are legally obliged to use them only for the purpose for which the funder gave them to you. In contrast, unrestricted funds can be used for any purpose that helps you to achieve your charitable objects. The more unrestricted funds you have, the more freedom of action you have. You can for example, choose to cover costs that funders are reluctant to fund, like core costs.
The discipline is the same whether generating restricted and unrestricted income; funders will require the same financial information of you (see the checklist on p.6).
You can use this checklist to develop your finance strategy. The how will we get there question of your finance strategy is its central plank; it is about generating the income you will need to finance your strategy. We look at this in more detail on the next page.
Finance Tools for success: doing the right things and doing them right
See the Income Spectrum Tool developed by Mission, Models, Money on their website www.missionmodelsmoney.org.uk (click on Reports and tools). This tool offers a template for factoring in what resources need to be invested in order to generate different types of income.
See Introductory pack on funding and finance: guide to sustainable funding; downloadable free from the finance hub: www.financehub.org.uk Also visit NCVOs Sustainable Funding Project website at: www.ncvo-vol.org.uk/sfp
A good plan for generating income will aim to achieve sustainability by stabilising your funding base, in some cases increasing your funding and diversifying your funding sources. Sustainability ideally means managing your income streams in such a way that if/when one stream comes to an end, the work can be repositioned, making it suitable for funding by another stream. Opportunities available to diversify income streams range from donations and grants to service level agreements or contracts to deliver services, to trading in good and services.
Remember fundraising activity has costs associated with it, e.g. fundraisers time. It is important therefore that these are reflected in funding applications. Diversification also has costs associated with it, such as increased management effort etc. You must therefore recognise at what point the benefits of diversification are outweighed by costs.
See the revitalise guide for more information about developing a balanced portfolio, trading, contracts, grants, donations and repayable finance.
Finance Tools for success: doing the right things and doing them right
Underpinning all financial management systems is a series of financial polices and procedures which guide operations and lay out how your organisation uses and manages its money. A financial procedures manual brings all these together in one document. It helps establish financial controls within the organisation that ensure accuracy, timeliness and completeness of financial data. The manual is generally used by finance staff, but it can also act as a reference for trustees, managers and other staff. There is no one model of a financial procedures manual; yours will depend on the needs and structure of your organisation. Below are the content headings of each section of a typical financial procedure manual; they can act as the starting point for your own manual and can be adapted to cover the needs and activities of your organisation. Your manual may also need to include key elements of external financial regulations.
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Finance Tools for success: doing the right things and doing them right
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See Guidance CC8: internal financial controls for charities (downloadable free from the Charities Commission website: www.charity-commission.gov.uk) Also see NCVOs Sample contents of financial procedures manual at: www.ncvo-vol.org.uk
In addition to helping you to measure financial performance, budget management can: stimulate your planning, helping you to coordinate and control the use of your resources encourage realism so that plans are achievable within available resources help improve the quality of plans, as staff are helped to focus on and discuss service priorities
Budgets
A budget is the financial description of an action plan outlining how you will use your money, based on knowledge and assumptions against which you will measure your actual performance. It is important to be honest about what you can manage in income and expenditure, so that you develop a realistic budget that helps you weather the unexpected throughout the year.
Preparation
Calculating Negotiating Revising Agreeing
Control
Checking Investigating Projecting Action
There are three key questions that underpin budgetary control: 1. How are we doing? 2. How much of the budget is left? 3. What will it look like at the end of the year?
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Finance Tools for success: doing the right things and doing them right
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See Introductory pack on funding and finance: guide to financial management downloadable free from the finance hub: www.financehub.org.uk
See Guidance charity accounting and reporting: the essentials; downloadable free from the Charities Commission website: www.charity-commission.gov.uk Also see NCVOs Understanding SORP at www.ncvo-vol.org.uk
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Finance Tools for success: doing the right things and doing them right
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Internal environment
You can achieve effective financial management only by establishing a suitable internal environment. To a large extent this depends on the size of your organisation. If your organisation is without paid employees, you will probably rely heavily on volunteers and trustees to undertake financial management; in larger charities this work will be undertaken by paid staff. Good financial management assigns discrete responsibilities to people within the organisation; the larger your organisation, the more scope there will be for people to play different roles. It is therefore essential that you plan ahead, so that as your organisation grows a structure develops in which it is clear who does what.
See Guidance CC3: the essential trustee: what you need to know; downloadable free from the Charities Commission website: www.charity-commission.gov.uk
Day-to-day responsibility
As the Board of Trustees only meets a few times a year it delegates authority for the day-to-day management to the director/chief executive (CE) who it has appointed. The role of the CE is to support the development of a strategy and implement it, once it has been agreed by the Board. The CE with the staff is responsible for converting the Boards intentions in to action and for managing the systems and procedures needed to achieve results. While it is acceptable for the Board to delegate authority, it can not delegate total responsibility. The Board must therefore set up monitoring mechanisms to ensure its instructions are being carried out.
Effective financial management is dependent on the constantly evolving relationship between: financial strategy financial management systems capable trustees, managers and staff (including nontrustee volunteers)
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Finance Tools for success: doing the right things and doing them right
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Signposts
Publications
Palmer P (2005) The good financial management guide (London: NCVO) Poffley A (2002) Financial stewardship of charities (London: DSC) Sayer K (2007) A practical guide to financial management (London: DSC)
Websites
The Finance Hub has developed a series of guides: Introductory pack on finance and funding all downloadable free from their website: www.financehub.org.uk The Charity Commission guides on SORP and financial management are also downloadable from their website: www.charity-commission.gov.uk KnowHow NonProfit combines expert knowledge with real-life experiences on all aspects of financial management for charities: www.knowhownonprofit.org/organisation/budgets
Courses
Cass Centre for Charity Effectiveness offers training in many aspects of management including basic financial management and basic income generation: www.cass.city.ac.uk/cce/courses/shortcourses The Directory of Social Change runs a range of short courses on fundraising techniques: www.dsc.org.uk
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Finance Tools for success: doing the right things and doing them right
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Links to PQASSO
PQASSO is the practical quality assurance system for small organisations designed by Charities Evaluation Services. Independent data suggest PQASSO is by far the most widely-used quality system in the voluntary and community sector (VCS). For more information, see www.ces-vol.org.uk Following this guide will help you to meet several of the indicators of
PQASSO quality area 7 (Managing money) in the second and third
editions of the framework.
1. Introduction 2. Self-assessment 3. Compliance 4. Governance 5. Direction 6. Finance 7. People 8. Operations 9. Networks 10. Revitalise
Charities are increasingly operating in a rapidly-changing competitive environment. If you are going to survive, you will need to ensure the best and most efficient use of your financial resources. This guide aims to help you to do this.
copyright Cass Centre for Charity Effectiveness published June 2009 ISBN 978-0-9560543-0-2
Centre for Charity Effectiveness Cass Business School 106 Bunhill Row London EC1Y 8TZ Tel: +44 (0)20 7040 8667 Email: CassCCE@city.ac.uk www.cass.city.ac.uk/cce