Next book

THE LITTLE BOOK OF NONPROFIT LEADERSHIP

AN EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR'S HANDBOOK FOR SMALL (AND VERY SMALL) NONPROFITS

A wide-ranging and compelling explanation of what it takes to do a nonprofit executive director’s job well.

A comprehensive guide to managing and leading a small nonprofit organization.

The latest book from Hanberg, the director of audience development for KNKX public radio in Tacoma, Washington, is aimed at a small and very well-defined readership: present and prospective executive directors of small-to-middling nonprofits. He sets the tone early, noting that the typical experience of running a nonprofit is one of running desperately from one crisis to the next, trying to put out fires. Hanberg has had two decades of experience dealing with such crises, and he imagines that he’s writing his book for that younger version of himself, just starting out. He begins by defining basic terms: What does an executive director do? How do they interact with what the author sees as the three key elements of all nonprofits: mission, people, and money? Along the way, the author draws a crucial distinction between being an employee and being a leader: “Did you actually work to make something different and better (a leader) or did you sit back and take what was given, even if you thought there could be a better way (an employee)?” Hanberg advises his readers that good executive directors must have a wider vision for a nonprofit, lead with that in mind, and not get caught in day-to-day squabbles on an operational level: “The more you can extricate yourself from the daily operations of your nonprofit,” he writes, “the more the real work of your job can begin.” Sometimes, according to Hanberg, that real work will eventually shape the nonprofit itself. “The nonprofit will start to look like you,” he writes. “Because everyone is taking their cues from you.”

Hanberg is a highly engaging writer, and he shows himself to be adept at shifts in pacing that make for fluid reading—and which are generally rare in leadership-related books. He enlivens the narrative with stories drawn from his own long experience and also with a protracted but useful hypothetical situation involving a nonprofit executive director who faces pretty much every problem and complication that any of Hanberg’s readers are likely to see. On the surface, the book’s ambit seems dauntingly narrow; its broader application comes from the fact that its author never loses sight of the fact that his real subject is leadership in general. He delves into the specifics of nonprofit activities, such as building memberships, establishing new streams of income, and modeling efficient budgets, and he spends a good deal of time discussing boards of directors—often the bane of a typical executive director’s existence. But his primary focus is how to manage the mission, the money, and the people that get the job done: “Even if you have a new staff hungry for a change,” he writes, “it's best to showthem the changes you want to make later, not just vaguely tell them about it on your first introduction.” These leadership principles are broadly applicable and not simply visible in the nonprofit spectrum.

A wide-ranging and compelling explanation of what it takes to do a nonprofit executive director’s job well.

Pub Date: Feb. 15, 2021

ISBN: 979-8704833055

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Self

Review Posted Online: Sept. 17, 2021

Next book

THE SECRETS OF MONEY

A GUIDE FOR EVERYONE ON PRACTICAL FINANCIAL LITERACY

Useful, credible and smart.

A handy guide to personal finance and a convincing argument for improved financial literacy.

Secrets is a near-encyclopedic compilation of financial advice from Mincher, a self-made multimillionaire. (He made his first million by the age of 25.) And though much of his wisdom derives solely from his own experience, the seven-figure investment portfolio that backs it up is difficult to deny. In many ways, the story of how the author made his money is as interesting as the financial counsel he provides. A born businessman, he formed his first company in high school and won awards as a young entrepreneur. He earned his fortune as the owner of a charter-bus service and, later, as a regional telecom baron. Mincher offers brief chapters on just about every conceivable area of financial inquiry, from credit checks to buying a car to investing in the stock market. His volume works more effectively as a reference than a how-to to be read in a few sittings. But as such it is very valuable indeed; clearly organized and helpfully broken up into bite-size sections, the information is easy to digest. Underpinning it all is the author’s fervent belief that most people need to know more about their money. Mincher has an autodidact’s ambivalence toward traditional education; a college drop-out, he preaches “street smarts” and inveighs a bit too frequently against odd targets like high-school calculus in his introduction. Nonetheless, his call for more and better financial education rings true, especially as subprime lenders have recently wreaked havoc on world economic markets by preying on the financially non-savvy.

Useful, credible and smart.

Pub Date: Nov. 26, 2007

ISBN: 978-0-9797003-0-9

Page Count: 426

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: May 23, 2010

Next book

MONSTER TRUCKS & HAIR-IN-A-CAN

WHO SAYS AMERICA DOESN'T MAKE ANYTHING ANYMORE?

A random walk through the entrepreneurial outskirts of postindustrial commerce and show biz with a tour guide whose spiel has a nasty edge to it. Drawing on stories he has reported as a CBS TV correspondent, Geist (Little League Confidential, 1992, etc.) offers a discontinuous series of short takes on offbeat enterprises that have yielded the venturesome Americans who launched or embraced them modest amounts of fame and fortune. Cases in point range from the leading breeder of racing pigs through the inventor of the car- crushing leviathans known as monster trucks and Florida's top vendor of recycled golf balls to the two struggling illustrators who created Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Covered as well are the proprietors of nail-care salons, traffic-safety schools, and the seemingly endless parade of lurid talk shows on daytime television, plus the resourceful aerospace engineer who first thought of blasting bullet holes in wearing apparel as a lucrative fashion statement. In most instances, unfortunately, the author goes beyond poking gentle fun at his subjects and their antics; indeed, he invariably holds them up to gratuitously savage ridicule. Nor can Geist resist any opportunity to show what a clever fellow he is, even when a straightforward account of junk entertainment like ``American Gladiators'' could speak for itself. All too often the effect is akin to the tedious pall cast by a stand-up comic who, bedazzled by his own wit, can't bear to leave the stage. While the author closes with backhanded homage to Judge Roy Hofheinz (builder of Houston's pace-setting Astrodome), a start-to-finish audit of his other vignettes reveals that they reach no particularly startling conclusions about the latter-day US or any other substantive matter. Sporadically amusing but wholly dispensable.

Pub Date: Nov. 9, 1994

ISBN: 0-399-13883-8

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Putnam

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 1994

Close Quickview