Make Nonprofits Profitable™ | For Nonprofit Leaders Who Want to Diversify Revenue, Build Capacity & Scale to Sustain Impact
You asked for a tire swing and ended up with a lazy boy hanging from two ropes. The goal was simple: build a tire swing. That was the vision. That was the dream. And yet, by the time that vision traveled from the person who imagined it, to the person who communicated it, to the person who analyzed it, to the person who built it — what came back was something completely different. The tire swing never got built. The original vision was never fully realized. The culprit behind failed initiatives and projects for nonprofit and for-profit organizations is not a strategy failure. It is an execution failure. Specifically the reason for the failure is the bridge connecting strategy to execution was never fully built. Project management is a leadership discipline — not just an operational one. Nonprofit organizations that consistently deliver are the ones where leaders ask the right questions, protect team focus, and remove barriers before they become blockers. The question is never whether you have a strategy. It is whether you and your team can execute it. In this episode of Make Nonprofits ProfitableTM, Tanja Horan opens the Strategy to Execution series with the leadership framing nonprofit executives need before a single initiative or project begins. Using data from the Project Management Institute which finds that only about half of all projects succeed and the Hershey's case study as a real-world anchor, this episode breaks down the four root-cause failure categories where good initiatives consistently fall apart: strategy, planning, leadership, and communication. Each one requires the leadership team first. Build the organization your impact demands. By being the business you are. Key Takeaways * Strategies fail because the bridge between strategy and execution was never built. * Connecting strategy and execution is a leadership discipline, not just an operations responsibility. * Leadership engagement and sponsorship is more important than any single executor — without it, the project and the organization are at risk. * Successful initiatives require teams understand the why behind strategy, aligned objectives and incentives, and a consistent prioritization framework to maintain focus. * Execution is a leadership discipline. Organizations deliver when leadership asks the right questions, uses data, protects team focus, and proactively removes barriers. Websites and Social Company Website: tacosa360.com Impact Catapult: www.impactcatapult.com YouTube: youtube.com/@Tacosa360 Connect with Tanja LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/tanjahoran Topics: nonprofit project management, closing the execution gap, why nonprofit projects fail, nonprofit strategy to execution, execution is leadership, nonprofit initiative failure, project management for nonprofit leaders, nonprofit leadership accountability, Make Nonprofits Profitable podcast, nonprofit executive strategy
15 episodios
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