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 Tagged With 'Performance+Measurement'

Date Author Category Title
Summer 2006
Les Silverman & Lynn Taliento
Nonprofit Management What Business Execs Don’t Know—but Should—About Nonprofits [Free!] Business leaders play vital roles in the nonprofit sector – as board members, donors, partners, and even executives. Yet all too often they underestimate the unique challenges of managing nonprofit organizations. In this article, 11 executives who have played leadership roles in both for-profits and nonprofits reveal the critical differences between the two, and suggest ways that business and nonprofit leaders can use this information to create a more effective social sector.
Winter 2007
Noah Weiss
Nonprofit Management • Government Government by Numbers

How CitiStat’s hard data and straight talk saved Baltimore.

Spring 2007
James A. Phills, Jr.
Economic Development • Education • Social Entrepreneurship 15 Minutes with Kevin Johnson [Free!]

SSIR Academic Editor Jim Phills sat down with former NBA superstar Kevin Johnson to discuss how he’s revitalizing his old inner-city neighborhood.

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
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. 

Winter 2008
Paul N. Bloom & J. Gregory Dees
Economic Development • Social Entrepreneurship Cultivate Your Ecosystem

Social entrepreneurs not only must understand the broad environment in which they work, but also must shape those environments to support their goals, when feasible. Borrowing insights from the field of ecology, the authors offer an ecosystems framework to help social entrepreneurs create long-lasting and significant social change.

Spring 2008
Alex Neuhoff & Robert Searle
Nonprofit Management More Bang for the Buck [Free!]

In virtually every for-profit industry, success hinges on producing more goods or services at a lower cost without compromising quality. But increasing productivity can work in the nonprofit world, too, as an examination of three healthy nonprofits shows.

Spring 2008
Jane Wei-Skillern & Sonia Marciano
Nonprofit Management • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing The Networked Nonprofit

Management wisdom says that nonprofits must be large and in charge to do the most good. But some of the world’s most successful organizations instead stay small, sharing their load with like-minded, long-term partners. The success of these networked nonprofits suggests that organizations should focus less on growing themselves and more on cultivating their networks.

Summer 2008
Alex Counts
Economic Development • Social Entrepreneurship • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing Reimagining Microfinance [Free!]

Critics of microfinance institutions (MFIs) ask them to choose between helping the poor or making money for investors, but this is a false choice. MFIs can have their impact and profit, too, says the author, the CEO of the Grameen Foundation. He sketches a new vision of microfinance as a platform, not a product; one that relies on high volumes, not high margins, and that uses limits on private benefit, holistic performance standards, and third-party certification to help MFIs meet both their bottom lines.

Spring 2003
Jeffrey L. Bradach
Nonprofit Management Going to Scale [Free!]

The challenge of replicating social programs.

Spring 2003
Jan Masaoka
Nonprofit Management • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing The Effectiveness Trap

Funders, government agencies, and donors
get lost on the labyrinth.

Summer 2003
Sacha Litman
Arts, Culture, and Religion • Nonprofit Management The Peer Yardstick

Measuring success in franchise nonprofit organizations.

Summer 2003
SSIR editors
Health Care • Nonprofit Management 15 Minutes with John Seffrin

CEO of the American Cancer Society.

Winter 2003
Tony Proscio & Clara Miller
Arts, Culture, and Religion • Nonprofit Management Steppenwolf’s New Stage

A theater ensemble transforms into a company with a bottom line.

Winter 2003
Steven A. Schroeder
Philanthropy & Responsible Investing Resisting Temptations

Lessons on grantmaking.

Winter 2003
Ted London & Dennis Rondinelli
Nonprofit Management • Corporate Social Responsiblity Partnerships for Learning

Managing tensions in nonprofit organizations’
alliances with corporations.

Spring 2004
Jerry Porras & Tom Vander Ark
Education • Nonprofit Management The Path of Change [Free!]

Jerry Porras and Tom Vander Ark
discuss how leadership, vision, and competition
will determine the future of education.

Spring 2004
William F. Meehan, Derek Kilmer, and Maisie O'Flanagan
Nonprofit Management • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing Investing in Society [Free!]

Charitable donors should think of themselves as “investors” – and should expect returns, just like a stock market investor would. But too often, givers don’t see themselves this way, contributing to an inefficient “social capital market.”

Spring 2004
Kimberly Solheim
Health Care • Nonprofit Management A Healthy Advantage

Nonprofit providers are more cost-effective.

Spring 2004
Gregory Dees & Beth Battle Anderson
Nonprofit Management • Social Entrepreneurship Scaling Social Impact

Strategies for spreading social innovations.

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