Why you should consider the charity sector as part of your Portfolio Executive workstyle
Charles McLachlan
CEO and Portfolio Executive development - MAKING YOUR FUTURE WORK with Freedom, Joy and more opportunities to offer Love to those around you.
Many of the people I talk to about their 2nd Half Careers are keen to make the second half count. They want to look back and see not only success but also significance for their lives, particularly their working lives. They are open to becoming a school governor, a charity trustee or volunteering for a worthy cause. A Portfolio Executive workstyle certainly creates the space for this.
However, I believe that you can benefit from taking on charity clients as part of your portfolio in a number of important ways beyond giving back.
Charities vs. the for-profit sector
But first you need to recognise that, compared to the for-profit sector, charities are an order of magnitude more complex and difficult to lead. When you run a business, you have simple goals of profit and shareholder value.
Imagine running a business in which:
- ‘Not for profit’ defines your sector
- Your customers don’t pay for the products or services they consume
- Your income comes from individuals and organisations who receive no direct benefit from your product or services
- You are unable to motivate most of your staff through payment or career progression
- You are not accountable to the owners of the business but to multiple stakeholders most of whom have no direct personal stake in the outcome (e.g. regulators, trustees, Charity Commission, donors, volunteers, grant makers)
- There are no widely recognised benchmarks for success
How charities add to your skill-sets
Working in the charity sector challenges your whole paradigm of business thinking and enables you to grow and develop new skills, capability and experiences which will also enrich your whole offer to the commercial market place.
You will need to learn how to lead and manage through influencing and not just directing. You will have to understand the difference between activity and impact. You will need to discover what it means to build sustainable growth in an organisation vulnerable to radically different pressures and concerns.
You will have the opportunity to find, within yourself, resources of compassion, respect and humility that can re-shape your attitude to colleagues, leaders and those beyond your immediate social circle.
Your expertise from the commercial sector will be enormously valued by the charity sector and you will often find the work incredibly rewarding in ways you could never have imagined.
You will also build relationships and networks that will enable you to find better portfolio executive roles in the for-profit sector. A charity can also be a great place to hone and develop your proposition in a less competitive but more challenging work environment.
Adjusting your fee expectations
You will need to reset your fee expectations - £350-£600 per day is a realistic range for most charities – but the benefits to you personally, relationally and professionally far outweigh the opportunity cost of spending two or three days a month at a lower rate.
I urge you to plan to engage a charity client early in the development of your Portfolio Executive workstyle!
Find out more about the Portfolio Executive route
The Portfolio Executive programme gives you a path to freedom where you’ll bring all your past skills and experience to create a way of work that works best – and continues to work – for you.
Founder, Friday Solved | Building scalable, predicable and sustainable sales engines inside your business
5 年I couldn't agree more - something I'm actively pursuing?
After a long career in consulting, I now teach business English to overseas professionals as a second language.
5 年As a trustee for one veterans' charity and a mentor for another, I feel a sense of purpose that was sometimes lacking in the corporate world. There is also a sense of giving back.
Helping good people to run fab businesses to make a positive contribution in the world | Marketing director, marketing strategist, strategic marketing consultant | Never knowingly under-tea’d
5 年I became a charity trustee 4 years ago and it's all you say it is. Challenging, mainly since they have to find funding month on month to stay solvent. Been a really good way to develop board skills and work for a good cause! Charities are actively seeking good trustees so would encourage anyone to consider giving their time and sharing their experience.
The Art of the Joyful CEO.
5 年There was once two people I knew. One would take volunteers from whatever backgrounds and ask them to make the coffee and get interns to grow by giving the marketing, strategy and other projects. The accountants, lawyers, and consultants left their skills at work to volunteer. Another person, realised that someone in the city could easily transfer £50 to the charity, but if their gave their expertise at a sensible price such that the charity listens and makes it happen, each hour of their time was worth thousands. Would you give a coffee morning or transformation?