Join NPQ for a live case study based workshop!

Reframing Nonprofit Leadership Succession:

The Ultimate Strategic Hedge Against a “Bad CEO Hire”

For board members, nonprofit executives, and other staff

October 3rd, 2017 

2:00pm - 3:30pm ET 

In the past, nonprofit executive transitions have been hampered by a set of limiting assumptions that treat the leader like a stand-alone, all-important organizational component. The almost ceremonial act of choosing the new organizational hero has over and over again resulted in any number of problems that negatively destabilize the work of nonprofits. In fact, the problem of bad nonprofit leadership hires may not be in the implementation, but in the frame or ethos of the practice. 

There are alternative approaches that are more grounded and gradual, and therefore less likely to endanger the organizations our communities depend on. In this workshop, two of the field’s foremost experts and a panel of practitioners will present the new framework for a less risky and more robust leadership succession process.

NPQ is doing something different with this important session, in that we will run one workshop for nonprofit board members, executives, and other nonprofit staff on October3rd and another for consultants and funders on October 10th. In the latter workshop, we will explore how consultants and funders may be of greater assistance to nonprofits in helping to guide (or at least not stand in the way of) updated processes. You may, of course, sign up for either or both, but the content will be tailored to the specified audience for that date.

Our presenters are Jeanne Bell, Chief Executive Officer at CompassPoint and Karen Schuler, Managing Director of Search, Transition, & [and] Planning at Raffa, P.C.

They will be joined by panelists Jennie Lucca, CEO of The Children's Inn at NIH; Diane Baker, board member at Children’s Inn at NIH; and Susan Misra, Co-Director at MAG (Management Assistance Group).

You can send your questions to editorinchief@npqmag.org to have them answered during the web event.