nonprofit

Mar 7, 2008

READY TO LEAD? Intergenerational alliances for nonprofit leadership

First, the good news. There are plenty of young, ambitious and talented people eager and ready, or almost ready, to take leadership roles in the nonprofit sector.

The large pipeline of younger leaders should help mitigate fears that organizations that provide crucial services and social support could be crippled by a “leadership deficit” in the next decade as members of the baby boom generation change gears, according to a new report conducted by CompassPoint Nonprofit Services, Idealist.org, the Annie E. Casey Foundation and the Eugene and Agnes E. Meyer Foundation.

Now, the bad news. Many of those potential leaders are leaving the nonprofit sector because of pay, long hours and what they perceive as limited chances for training and promotion, according to the report, “Ready to Lead? Next Generation Leaders Speak Out.”

Mar 4, 2008

GENERATIONAL CHALLENGE: 10 million person-years of talent and experience

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Marc Freedman, author of Encore: Finding Work That Matters in the Second Half of Life.

Baby boomers know and fear that they are part of the first generation in American history in danger of leaving the world worse than they found it, writes Marc Freedman in the lead editorial in the March 3 issue of The Chronicle of Philanthropy.

“At the same time, the nation — and the world — today face serious problems that need to be reversed in the three or four decades the boomers have left,” says Freedman. “Our challenges in education, poverty, health, and the environment all require a massive infusion of human capital, experience and ingenuity.

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