THE VALUE OF PLANNING FOR YOUR CHARITY'S FUTURE
26 April 2018
Good planning involves knowing ‘your current strengths and capabilities, and what you might need to work on to achieve your long-term goal’ says Senior Advisory Manager, Steph Taylor.
My first job in the charity sector was as a Careers Adviser, where I supported young people to make plans for their future. Setting a goal, working out how to achieve it and then carrying out the right activity to do so, is a fundamental life skill – but is rarely taught with any conscious reference to its relevance in later life.
So most of these 14-18 year olds had no idea how to start, let alone how to monitor whether they were taking the right steps, adjust what they were doing, and evaluate whether their initial outcomes had been achieved. Helping them learn to plan, regardless of whether it led directly to their dream next step, always felt like a really important part of the process.
Somewhere along the way to adulthood, we all pick up planning skills and use them at home and in work to a greater or lesser extent. It’s certainly true that all charity leaders need to be masters of planning in a range of contexts and timeframes; planning being absolutely essential to making best use of the usually limited, and always valuable, resources we have at our disposal to create social change.
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