Managing Your Nonprofit’s Rating
Advice to nonprofits on managing their ratings, and commentary on the impact of the raters as a whole.
Six tips to manage your nonprofit’s ratings.
Just two weeks after we published our review of Charity Raters, an unusual three-some of Guidestar, Charity Navigator and the Better Business Bureau issued an unexpected but welcome joint statement denouncing the overhead ratio as the sole measure of nonprofit performance.
The statement also defends overhead to an extent: “Overhead costs include important investments charities make to improve their work: investments in training, planning, evaluation, and internal systems — as well as their efforts to raise money so they can operate their programs.
When we focus solely or predominantly on overhead… we starve charities of the freedom they need to best help the people and communities they are trying to serve.”
Despite getting widespread and welcome play in the nonprofit press and blogosphere, the Overhead Myth campaign seems to have gotten little traction in the mainstream press and its intended audience. And the campaign is almost impossible to find on either the Charity Navigator or the BBB’s Wise Giving site; one might almost think they are burying it on purpose.
Even more importantly, Charity Navigator has not said it will change its proprietary (and secret) formulas for analyzing a nonprofit’s finances.
Overhead Myth campaign
The Overhead Myth campaign does not address the profound flaw in all the rating sites: none of them focus on impact or effectiveness. And when they do mention effectiveness, they see it almost exclusively through a lens of factories producing human services.
We believe that effectiveness is also about long-term advocacy campaigns, strengthening community institutions, prevention of harm, and the inspiration of the spirit: all goals that resist results metrics just as surely as time resists the metrics of weight or inches.
We applaud Guidestar for making data available and letting readers apply their own assumptions, and we applaud GreatNonprofits for giving a vehicle for ordinary people to speak out about a particular nonprofit.
The net on the rest: the rating sites are here to stay, and they will continue to perpetrate untested assumptions that inappropriately hurt individual nonprofits and the nonprofit community as a whole.
We all have a responsibility to raise questions about them publicly and in our boardrooms and newsletters. And at the same time, we each have to protect ourselves in their arenas.
Why should you pay attention to your own rating?
We couldn’t find good data on how many people or who is using the rating sites. It’s generally thought that the large brand-name nonprofits such as the Red Cross or the Heart Association are most frequently viewed on the rating sites. (Most of the sites tend to rate only larger or only national nonprofits.)
Journalists reporting on a nonprofit will often look up what is said about it on the rating sites — after all, it’s an easy way to get information. The ostensible purpose of most sites — to inform donors — probably only “works” when a donor is already interested.
For example, a person who receives a mail appeal from, say, Partners in Health or OXFAM, and who feels inclined to make a donation, might look them up on one of the rating sites before doing so.
What’s wrong with the financial metrics used?
Almost all the sites rely heavily on analysis of financial information found on Form 990, there are some serious drawbacks to doing so:
- Form 990 does not allow inclusion of non-cash (in-kind) donations as income, although such donations are allowed in audited statements if certain guidelines are followed. As a result, nonprofits such as UNICEF, food banks, hospices and community theatres that obtain great amounts of donated food and services appear to be “inefficient” or as having overly high overhead on Charity Navigator and other sites.
- Generally Accepted Accounting Procedures (GAAP) allows allocation of joint costs on items such as newsletters that contain both educational material and a donation form. Charity Navigator re-assigns 100% of such joint costs to fundraising, making many nonprofits appear to spend far more on fundraising than they do.
- The 990s are important but flawed sources of data. As just one example, one study showed that 50% of 990s had mathematical errors of greater than $5,000.
What’s wrong with the rating sites as a whole?
When a nonprofit is extremely badly managed or is run by crooks, the charity raters are typically the last to know. Paradoxically, the raters wait for the New York Times to identify bad apples, and then they jump in to call the apple rotten.
The Central Asia Institute (Three Cups of Tea) was found to be crooked by 60 Minutes at a time when it boasted four star ratings (the top available) from the raters. Susan G. Komen for the Cure had only the highest ratings on Charity Navigator — and still does — because pinkwashing, elimination of funding to Planned Parenthood, its widespread reputation as an exploitive and mean-spirited place to work, and the strong scent of private benefit are not part of Charity Navigator’s metrics.
Stanford Social Innovation Review sums it up: “Our review of methodologies indicates that these sites [Charity Navigator and other quantitative rating sites] individually and collectively fall well short of providing meaningful guidance for donors. “
The major weaknesses are threefold:
- “They rely too heavily on simple analysis and ratios derived from poor-quality financial data
- “They over-emphasize financial efficiency while ignoring the question of program effectiveness
- “They generally do a poor job of conducting analysis in important qualitative areas such as management strength, governance quality, or organizational transparency.”
So given all this, what do we do?
Six tips to manage your ratings
1. Look up your organization on all the key sites. It’s important to know what they are saying about you, or that you aren’t listed.
(While you’re at it, set up a Google Alert with your organization’s name to get emails when something about your organization gets onto the web.)
2. If you think your rating is unfair and inaccurate, file a protest and ask for a correction. We’ve heard from some readers that they have gotten reviews revised after months and months of arduous efforts; some have never even gotten a response. But at least you have your protest letter. If a donor, board member or the press ask you about your poor rating, you have your protest letter to show them.
Post your protest letter on GreatNonprofits as well. Don’t forget that readers can click-through to GreatNonprofits reviews directly from the reviews on other sites.
And the raters should have to respond. All of them describe themselves as valuing accountability, so make them accountable to you.
3. Make a minor effort to keep your financial metrics within the conventional bounds. We often hear about the “charities with the lowest percentage of administrative costs.” Perhaps we should call them the “charities with the best accountants.” ☺
If you have an auditor, go over the system of allocation he or she is using. It may be a simple matter, for example of re-classifying the executive director’s salary from 100% administration to 50% administration and 50% program (which it probably is!).
If you don’t have an audit, talk with the person who prepares the Form 990. Discuss how functional expenses are reported (the functional expense section is where the raters take much of their “efficiency” data). Many smaller nonprofits mistakenly assume, for instance, that 100% of the executive director’s salary or the rent are “management and administration.”
In fact, you can allocate both partially to admin and partially to programs based on time analysis and square footage use.
4. Pay attention to the “Program Accomplishments” section of Form 990. With more people going to the 990s through Guidestar and the rating sites, it’s more important to use that space to talk about impact and effectiveness.
5. Make a minor effort to get some good reviews on GreatNonprofits. Ask your staff, board members, volunteers, audience members, and clients. If you have a gallery or a theatre, set up a table with a computer and ask people to take a moment and write a review. And if you are a client, audience member, or staff or board member, take a moment to help your nonprofit by writing a quick review.
6. Consider boycotting Charity Navigator and the other sites, even if you have a good rating. When you publicize your good rating, you add undeserved legitimacy to the rating sites.
If you feel you simply must have some kind of seal or official-looking medal on your site, use the one from Guidestar. It has a nice official look but it doesn’t state that it has rated you. We like Guidestar because it provides information about nonprofits and lets readers draw their own conclusions.
Finally
The good news is that donors rarely make a decision to give or not to give based on a charity rating. As evidence, just look at the two largest areas of individual giving: churches/congregations and universities. People give to their alma maters and their churches for reasons in a universe completely separate from the one where the charity raters reside.
And a last thought: isn’t it ironic that recent history has shown us that the much-vaunted rating agencies in the for-profit world not only failed to predict the failure of the the big Wall Street firms, but actually contributed to the onset of the great depression by misleading the market? And so why do we think rating agencies are a good idea for nonprofits?
Our thanks in particular to the many readers who posted comments to Part I of this article, to the readers who allowed us to interview them (anonymously), and to Gayle Gifford in particular.
See also:
- Part I of this two-part article, Charity Rater Reviews, where we summarized the features and criteria of Charity Navigator, Better Business Bureau, and others. Many readers added thoughtful comments and noted lesser-known raters as well.
- The Ratings Game, by Stephanie Lowell, Brian Trelstad, & Bill Meehan, in Stanford Social Innovation Review
You might also like:
- Treasurers of All-Volunteer Organizations: Eight Key Responsibilities
- The Ultimate Guide to Nonprofit Fundraising in 2025
- An Easy-to-Use Accounting Procedures Manual Template
- A Guide for Private Foundations: Tax Exemption and 990-PF Filing Requirements
- Why is it Hard to Give My Money Away? A Donor’s Perspective
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About the Author
Jan is a former editor of Blue Avocado, former executive director of CompassPoint Nonprofit Services, and has sat in on dozens of budget discussions as a board member of several nonprofits. With Jeanne Bell and Steve Zimmerman, she co-authored Nonprofit Sustainability: Making Strategic Decisions for Financial Viability, which looks at nonprofit business models.
Articles on Blue Avocado do not provide legal representation or legal advice and should not be used as a substitute for advice or legal counsel. Blue Avocado provides space for the nonprofit sector to express new ideas. The opinions and views expressed in this article are solely those of the authors. They do not purport to reflect or imply the opinions or views of Blue Avocado, its publisher, or affiliated organizations. Blue Avocado, its publisher, and affiliated organizations are not liable for website visitors’ use of the content on Blue Avocado nor for visitors’ decisions about using the Blue Avocado website.
We should tell journalists where they easily obtain the information we think they should have. That's the way to change the message they convey to the public. David M. Patt, CAE
Good article, and great timing for me. I will prepare my organization's first 990 report during the last quarter of 2013, and appreciate the advice on allocation of costs. The issue of measuring effectiveness and impact of nonprofits is an ongoing one, and my organization is beginning to have that discussion. Can you recommend useful guides literature based on the nonprofit sector? Lloyd Gardner, FDPI
Jan, A few comments and some specific tips for CFC charities, just as the 2013 Combined Federal Campaign is about to get underway (the CFC starts in September). Since the Combined Federal Campaign (CFC) does have approximately 3000 national and international charities and 22,000 local charities, it is considered by many donors to be a type of "Good Housekeeping" seal of approval. To illustrate what a CFC charity entry looks like, I pulled this one from the northern California CFC catalog for the Our City Forest charity: 77321 Our City Forest (408)998-7337 www.ourcityforest.org EIN#770371911Provides Silicon Valley neighborhoods, schools and agencies with a one-stop shop for tree planting, including free trees, technical assistance, tree care and environmental educational programs. 7.6% C The 77321 is the 5 digit code, assigned by the CFC and is unique to each charity. This code does not change and it is how the Federal donor specifies which charities they are pledging to. The phone number, URL and EIN are all self explanatory. The next part is the 25 word description which is written by the non-profit and included as part of the annual application. The percentage figure is the overhead figure which is calculated from two fields on the charities 990. The letter indicates which functional area the CFC charity is in and a charity can have up to three. (C is the taxonomy code for Environmental Quality, Protection and Beautification). While I agree that percentage overhead is a bad measure, the reality is that it is used by many donors as a criterion, and the research that has been done (it's unpublished, and by several different federations so I can't provide a link) shows that for Federal donors as long as the percentage is below 15%, there is no effect on giving, e.g. potential donors will rate a charity with a 7% overhead rate no differently than one with a 12% rate. t's when the overhead rates are greater than 15% that there is an impact on the level of giving. As as the number goes higher, the effect will increase, e.g. a charity with a 30% overhead rate will generate fewer gifts than one with a 20% rate, even though both are higher than the 15% threshold. Specific Tips for CFC Charities that will help your results: 1. Include the CFC logo and your code number on your home page. 2 When you submit your application, do not have your accountant write the 25 word description – it's your opportunity to tell thousands of potential donors what you do. 3 Be aware that overhead rates above 15% will have an effect on donations. Regards, Bill Huddleston, The CFC Coach billhuddleston@verizon.net MPA in nonprofit Management, George Mason University 703-434-9780
I thought you may be interested in the charities comparison that FindTheBest, a research platform, just launched. It contains the information on nearly 1.7 million charities. Each charity’s page includes a variety of data including mission statement, contact info, legal structure, and the charity’s 990 form data when available. Not only is this a great way to research individual charities, but it lets you compare multiple charities side by side. Here is the link if you are interested. http://non-profit-organizations.findthebest.com/ Best, David Schmidt Dschmidt@findthebest.com