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Editor’s note: This post first appeared on Sasha’s personal blog. We cross-post it here because of its clear implications for Acumen Fund, our community and the non-profit sector as a whole.

Matt Flannery, the CEO of Kiva, wrote an excellent post on nonprofit overhead over on the Social Edge blog. Kiva has been a game-changer in the poverty alleviation space: they use Kiva.org to connect donors to microfinance loan recipients in the developing world. What’s important is the loan part — rather than getting a grant the borrower has to pay back the microfinance organization, which in turn pays back the funder. Conceptually, this is similar to Acumen Fund, where I work - we raise philanthropic donations and then make debt and equity investments in enterprises that serve the poor in the developing world. When we’re paid back, we recycle that capital into new investments.

One of the challenges that Acumen Fund and Kiva both face is that our models - focused on innovation, accountability, investment, and better leverage for each philanthropic dollar - are in direct opposition to the traditional metrics that rate nonprofit efficiency. This is because invested capital (loans and equity), unlike grants, don’t factor into ratio of “overhead costs as a percentage of total cost.” It just stays on the balance sheet but is not part of the annual budget.

The conventional nonprofit wisdom is that “best in class” nonprofits will spend no more than 20% on “overhead,” breaking down roughly to 10% on fundraising and 10% on administrative costs.

As Bridgespan, one of the leading consulting organizations to the non-profit sector, reports, “Many organizations and their funders are locked in a vicious cycle in which nonprofits are pressured to under-invest in overhead and to under-report their true overhead costs, even when those costs are still below what their senior managers feel is needed.” Worse still, Bridgespan reports that “The majority of nonprofits [75-85% they studied] under-report overhead on tax forms and in fundraising materials.”

If we’re going to break the cycle, we have to uncover how flawed the underlying logic is. Here’s where the logic falls apart:

    An example:

Both the Grameen Bank and BRAC in Bangladesh are world-class organizations that have changed the lives of tens of millions of poor people (mostly Bangladeshi women) through the provision of microfinance services. Both organizations were founded by visionary leaders upon whose shoulders my generation stands in our work to bring an end to global poverty.

Yet, if forced to choose, I would argue that Grameen had the greater impact on the world because Mohammed Yunus, Grameen’s founder, won the Nobel Prize. This was a major marker that “mainstreamed” microfinance and allowed the world, and not just the development community, to understand that lending money to poor people could change their lives in new and exciting ways. The result was a huge influx of commercial capital, and significantly more growth in the sector - ultimately leading to millions more served.

    My question is:

in the 30 years prior to Yunus receiving the Nobel Prize, does it sound right to you that every meeting Yunus had with a world leader, a powerful donor, or a leading journalist would have been counted in Grameen’s “overhead” cost, as separate from the “program” cost of delivering microfinance services to Bangladeshi women? Should Grameen have “stuck to its knitting” in delivering microfinance services and not wasted money on all the “overhead” of external communications and building a community of friends, advocates, advisors, and supporters, which ultimately led to a global movement in support of microfinance? (and yes, I know it wasn’t all Yunus, but without him, I don’t think we’d be where we are today).

    My point is:

it’s not just a little wrong to try to separate out “program” from “overhead,” it’s an outdated (or maybe it was never right) mode of thinking that is based on the premise that nonprofits are primarily delivery mechanisms for pre-determined services. In reality, nonprofits play an active role in shaping our collective understanding of how to solve important social problems.

    And getting back to Kiva and Acumen…:

There’s a whole new segment of hybrid organization - encompassing the likes of Kiva, Acumen Fund, Root Capital, E+Co, Agora Partnerships, sitawi, and others - that deploy mostly non-philanthropic capital for social ends. Much as we’d like not to worry about the conversation, people do often ask about “overhead ratios” when making philanthropic decisions.

In closing, here are four (more or less related) thoughts:

- Until “social investors” like Acumen et al. can develop a common vocabulary to assess how efficient and effective we are (or are not), we will be at a disadvantage in the philanthropic marketplace

- The nonprofit sector as a whole would be significantly stronger, and better positioned to weather economic downturns, if nonprofits didn’t rely on annual funding cycles. But raising money over 18 months to pay for costs over 5 years requires an upfront investment - one that will look “inefficient” based on traditional ratios

- If you care about fundraising efficiency, ask how much it costs an organization to raise a dollar, not how much they spend in total on raising money.

- Even when asking this question, take the answer with a HUGE grain of salt - raising money, teaching, inspiring people, changing attitudes, motivating people to act….there’s huge overlap in these activities. If you don’t agree, please read my NonProfit CEO Manifesto and let me know how we can all do this better.

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Editor’s note: This post first appeared on VisionSpring’s Business in a Bag blog. Acumen Fund is an investor in VisionSpring, having made them a $500,000 loan in 2006. Thanks to Miriam Stone for giving us permission to cross-post this on the Acumen Fund blog.

BRAC, the largest non-profit organization in the developing world, is a dream partner for a small organization. But landing the partnership is only the first part. What happens next is where it gets interesting…VisionSpring’s Franchise Partner Manager Lalit Kumar reports from the field.

By Lalit Kumar

We often joke here at VisionSpring that working with BRAC is like landing a contract with Walmart. It’s the kind of opportunity that every small NGO dreams of – BRAC is known for its massive scale and incredible efficiency. This partnership will allow us to reach a huge new market of people in need in a time frame that would have previously been impossible. Now we just have to deliver!

We’ve been working with BRAC for two years now. For the last six months, we’ve been selling about 500 glasses per month by empowering BRAC’s network of Shashto Shebikas (community health volunteers) to sell our eyeglasses. Now, with our new plan to scale up, we will provide affordable glasses to almost ten million people in Bangladesh over the next three years.

Our biggest challenge by far is managing the inventory that BRAC needs. At the moment, we’re delivering about 30,000 pairs of glasses every four months, but soon we will need to deliver 30,000 every month. We are mainly focused on getting the glasses into Bangladesh, a complicated process involving multiple inspection agencies. A 2006 Doing Business (http://www.doingbusiness.org) report from the World Bank notes that when a Bangladeshi company imports goods, it has to prepare 16 types of documents and obtain 38 signatures, and that the whole process takes 57 days. I can tell from our experience that it hasn’t improve much in the last few years.

For example, we received a Letter of Credit from a bank in Bangladesh that was valid only from April through June. Simply getting it updated meant that we had to get signatures from BRAC’s bank in Bangladesh, VisionSpring’s bank in New York, VisionSpring’s offices in India and New York, and our vendor and inspection agency in China.

We at VisionSpring are working hard to understand the whole process and constantly improve our delivery time. The first order took us more than 9 months to clear customs and make it in to Bangladesh, and the next order took about 6 months. Our goal is to get the process down to 3 months, which we are able to achieve in other developing countries where we work. We are certainly going through a period of adaptation, but it has been a very exciting time and I look forward to making more leaps of improvement.

After business school at the Institute of Rural Management Anand (IRMA), I was surprised to find that the challenges we face are the same as private sector businesses, only we are addressing them in some of the most challenging markets in the world. There is a reason that most private-sector companies haven’t tried to reach rural markets in Bangladesh; the start-up and logistics costs are simply too high. However, if our partnership with BRAC is successful, we will be able to provide affordable glasses and business opportunity to millions of people in Bangladesh. For us, it is well worth the struggle.

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