Stanford Social Innovation Review

Stanford Social Innovation Review is an award-winning magazine covering best strategies for nonprofits, foundations, and socially responsible businesses. Published quarterly by the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Articles: Nonprofit Management

Date Author Category Title
Fall 2007
Alana Conner
Nonprofit Management The Sound of One Trap Flapping

How the vocal few can skew perceptions of public opinion.

Fall 2007
Paul Schmitz
Nonprofit Management • Social Entrepreneurship Worst Practices of a Social Entrepreneur

You can learn more from your mistakes than from your successes. Paul Schmitz, president and CEO of Public Allies, gives a sampling of classic foibles of not only social entrepreneurs, but leaders in general. 

Fall 2007
Mark R. Kramer & Sarah E. Cooch
Nonprofit Management • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing The Power of Strategic Mission Investing [Free!]

A growing number of foundations are offering low-interest loans, buying into green business ventures, and investing in other asset classes to advance their missions. To bring about real change, foundations need to make strategic mission investments that complement their grantmaking and leverage market forces.

Fall 2007
Alana Conner & Keith Epstein
Environment • Nonprofit Management Harnessing Purity and Pragmatism

As the wall between the nonprofit and corporate worlds crumbles, many social change organizations are asking themselves: Do we stick to our activist guns, or do we cross the divide and work with business? Research suggests that social movements need both kinds of organizations to make the changes they seek.

Fall 2007
Alana Conner
Nonprofit Management Give a Little Respect

How nonprofits win the dedication of their volunteers.

Fall 2007
Frances Kunreuther
Nonprofit Management • Government Review: The Trap

Where have all the public servants gone?

Fall 2007
Heather McLeod Grant & Leslie R. Crutchfield
Nonprofit Management Creating High-Impact Nonprofits [Free!]

Conventional wisdom says that scaling social innovation starts with strengthening internal management capabilities. This study of 12 high-impact nonprofits, however, shows that real social change happens when organizations go outside their own walls and find creative ways to enlist the help of others.

Summer 2007
Charles Conn
Environment • Nonprofit Management • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing Robbing the Grandchildren [Free!]

Human-caused climate change, sharply declining conventional energy sources, and population growth are threatening the very platform of human life. Yet only 5 percent of U.S. foundation spending goes to the environment, and a paltry 2.9 percent goes to science and technology.

Summer 2007
Alana Conner
Nonprofit Management • Corporate Social Responsiblity Putting Women in Their Place

Which woman is more likely to attract unpleasant sexual attention: the office sweetheart or the ambitious upstart? A new study by social psychologist Jennifer Berdahl points to the upstart. From her findings, Berdahl concludes that “men aren’t harassing women to get into their pants, but to put them down....”

Summer 2007
Suzy Oudsema & Rick Wedell
Health Care • Nonprofit Management Unselling Meth [Free!]

The Montana Meth Project’s graphic ads saturate TV, radio, billboards, and newspapers to portray the reality of methamphetamine use, in all its grit. Scabs and body sores are just the beginning. So far, the shock factor is working. 

Summer 2007
Alana Conner
Economic Development • Nonprofit Management Crushing Corruption

To find out how best to stem corruption in development projects, a Harvard economist conducted a sophisticated experiment in 608 Javanese villages. His results challenge current wisdom: Send in the outside auditors, rather than rely on local monitors.

Summer 2007
Alana Conner
Health Care • Nonprofit Management Stopping the Spread of Trauma

Many Iraq War veterans can’t shake the feeling of being constantly imperiled, and their therapists, in turn, may develop traumatic stress symptoms themselves. A new study tells how organizations can protect their frontline providers from psychic distress.

Summer 2007
Alessandra Bianchi
Arts, Culture, and Religion • Nonprofit Management Money for a Song

The Public Radio Fund gives investors a chance to protect nonprofit airwaves. With its help, KTOO-FM in Juneau, Alaska, recently debuted a 24-hour news show and two locally-hosted Alaska-flavored music stations. 

Summer 2007
Kevin T. Kirkpatrick, Denise L. Gammal, & Don Haider
Nonprofit Management The Merger Proposal

It’s summer. The wedding season is upon us, and many nonprofits are likewise feeling the urge to merge. But should nonprofits couple up, take the plunge, and get hitched? In this SSIR special, three articles explore whether, why, and how nonprofits should undertake mergers or other alliances.

Summer 2007
Judith Samuelson
Nonprofit Management Review: Made to Stick

Simplicity is the golden rule for getting messages across.

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