The Private Equity Investing Model: Helping Leaders Build Great Nonprofit Institutions
By Mario Morino Venture Philanthropy Partners | November 29, 2006
In the early 1990s, I retired from business and became deeply involved in philanthropy. Initially, we considered various forms of social investing and "capacity building," which were then popular emerging trends. But after some initial experimentation and practical application, it dawned on me that what was really needed in the nonprofit and philanthropic sectors was an approach that I had lived for years in the private sector - that of growing my business in partnership with General Atlantic, LLC, a premier global private-equity investment firm.
I also concluded that the financing system for a class of nonprofits seeking to scale their impact was dysfunctional. And I asked myself how could we adapt the approach that General Atlantic used to help build successful companies to helping nonprofits in the area of social services build high-performing organizations to scale their impact for children and families.
When General Atlantic invested in my firm, they not only provided growth capital, but more importantly they provided "strategic assistance." Taking a long-term view, the firm wanted to help the CEOs in which they invested build great businesses, rather than replace them. They invested in leadership and great people as opposed to just products and markets, and preferred to influence you rather than control you. They gave me advice and opened up doors that allowed me to think differently, bigger and bolder. They often pushed me past my comfort zone, without breaking me or my firm. And, they helped me grow as an executive.
Today, in our work with Venture Philanthropy Partners (VPP), we seek to mirror that approach. VPP is a six-year-old philanthropic investment organization that has committed $29 Million in growth capital to 13 nonprofit organizations in the National Capital Region around Washington, DC. These organizations are growing stronger and more effective, serving tens of thousands of children better, and raising their expectations of themselves and of what is possible. In addition, they are leveraging - by a factor of two - our investment for new capital for themselves and the region.
The investment process is rigorous with the real work beginning after we commit the capital, working closely as a trusted advisor with each of our partners, providing advice, access to networks of people, expertise, and capital.
We have learned some important lessons about blending the private equity investment approach with the earned understanding of how nonprofits, public funders, and foundations function and exist in their communities. These include:
- "Place" is important. Just as "all politics is local," we found that the most effective nonprofit investing is local so we focus our investments in the National Capital Region.
- Investment organizations like ours need seasoned full-time executives having operational experience, who have been there, done that, understand the playing field - politically and socially - and who grasp the important cultural nuances in this space, whether around race, class, turf, or ethnicity.
- Leadership is even more important than we envisioned.
- There was much to learn from those who went before us. The lessons and knowledge from these individuals and organizations make it possible for us to learn and adapt our model for effective philanthropic investing.
- The ecosystem and resources for nonprofit leaders seeking to scale their organizations are at best frail, in many cases nonexistent, or, worse yet, populated by too many providers who are almost certain to be ineffective. As a result, expectations for what is possible are low.
- And, finally, our work has to advance innovative public policy and leverage public funding, not replace it.
Read more at www.venturephilanthropypartners.org.
November 29, 2006 |Tags: nonprofit management, private equity, social entrepreneur | TrackBack


Posted by: Doug Sudell on November 29, 2006 at 5:51 PM
Post a comment
© Copyright 2006 Sharing Witness. All rights reserved.


What a powerful idea, capital and experienced engaged advisors offering nonprofit leaders an opportunity to focus on strategic growth, rather then chasing dollars from a segmented funding market. There is a large constituency of organizations that could benefit from similar guidance. Now that VPP has created a success track record, I imagine others will enter the market with a similar regional focus in the coming years. This leads me to wonder how long will it take before private sector mergers and acquisitions idealist enter the marketplace and begin to consolidate the 1.2MM plus nonprofits in the United States.