Becoming Great
By Nell EdgingtonJim Collins, author of a pivotal business text Good to Great (about what differentiates companies that just survive from those that thrive and become great), wrote a short monograph on the social sector a few years ago called Good to Great and the Social Sectors. If you haven’t already read it, I highly recommend it. He clearly and articulately lays out what, he suggests, makes a great social sector organization. It is not, as many have argued in the last decade or so, that it becomes more like a business. Rather, as Jim writes, “Greatness is not a function of circumstance. Greatness, it turns out, is largely a matter of conscious choice, and discipline.” To be a great social sector organization you must be disciplined about the talent you hire, the decisions you make, the actions you take, the strategies you create, the results you attempt to achieve, the mission you seek. As Jim puts it, “To do the most good requires saying “no” to pressures to stray, and the discipline to stop doing what does not fit.” To be a great social sector organization you must focus on what you can be great at and create a disciplined strategy to get there. A really interesting read. Some excerpts are here.
No related posts.
No comments yet.
Leave a comment
Search the SV Blog
Facebook Like Box
Latest Tweets
Recent Posts
My Favorite Blogs
- A Smart Bear: Startups & Marketing for Geeks
- About.com Nonprofit Charitable Orgs
- Against the Grain
- Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits are Using Social Media to Power Change
- Dan Pallotta: Harvard Business Review
- Deep Social Impact
- Dowser
- Full Contact Philanthropy
- GuideStar: Bob Ottenhoff Blog
- Money and Mission
- New Philanthropy Capital's Blog
- NFF's Social Currency Blog
- Philanthropy 2173
- PhilanTopic
- SocialEarth
- SSIR Opinion Blog: Nonprofit Management
- SSIR Opinion Blog: Social Entrepreneurship
- Tactical Philanthropy
- UnSectored


Want to be on the cutting edge of social innovation for nonprofits?
Sign up for our monthly e-newsletter.